Technical & Reference Section > Tech and Restoration
14mm axle for 10mm
Wayne Ryder:
Takes a while to get it nice & flat, and the second side HAS to line up, but I've filed a couple of 14mm axles to fit 10mm forks. Only the part that fits into the dropout, so it looks like they've got sort of a flat channel about 10mm wide.
No problems from either wheel, and no work required on the forks. It also means they don't turn when you put the nuts onto them, which is a pet gripe.
motomagII:
as wayne says file then flat on 2 sides to 9.5 mm so they fit into the 10mm forks works treat
TwoBobRob:
Be very careful not to file any thread down that the wheelnut wants to sit on - you'll very likely end up stripping wheelnuts when you do them up......
Philbert:
find yourself a nice friendly machine shop that will flat them down!
i got some done a few years ago and it only cost me a fiver per axle.
and its unlikely you'll be able to step an unsealed hub down as the bearing runner's on an unsealed hub are often part of the shell. bigger bearings to step it down won't fit
vdubferret:
Machine shop idea done with me. Another potential issue is getting larger wheel nuts onto frame partic at rear. On 14MM my axle nuts were too big to get past the framework of a Haro FST & have had to tighten wheel up further forward than would like...so anyone know if a KMC K710 100 link chain (with a splitter) can be shortened further??
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[*] Previous page
Go to full version