I am trying to get it from the motor up the down tube to by the head/steer tube and out the port there. But there is an internal lip and I just cannot get it with shift cable and magnets. When I do I can chop the connector of the 4mm display wire and pull it down to solder it in the motor. I am going to yank the motor and take another way because I am too impatient. This is a totally cool Felt GRX gravel bike that I am setting up for Mexico. I also need to mix the seaweed green metallic touch up paint because I scratched this brand new bike while removing the two piece BB/crank set.
 
The problem is when you have to "push" the cable through.
I've used coat hangers for feeding things though other things, cuz you can bend and steer it as it's pushing through.
Maybe you could find a used colonoscopy machine somewhere.

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😄
 
It is that darn internal lip. Don't give me no lip! There is a regular exit hole at the bottom of the down tube at the BB but I filled it with a rubber mounting grommet. So, I need to remove the motor and partially unblock that. But now I found out that there is live rock/reggae on the water for free from 1-7 so I will get some cold ones and go with a friend. The music caries across the water very well. I wonder if I died; no living person should have this much fun.

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There is a regular exit hole at the bottom of the down tube at the BB but I filled it with a rubber mounting grommet.

I had enough room to remove my grommet from the frame hole and slide it up the cables to get more room and get rid of the 💋


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Maybe you could find a used colonoscopy machine somewhere.
😄

You don't need nuthin fancy.
I bought a couple for five fiddy each,..

Screenshot_20250712_152238_AliExpress.jpg



I only bought it for the variable brightness.

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I attached it to my reading glasses,..

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The camera is a scam.
It uses software that is Play Protected but it updates from a third party to turn it into a spy cam.

I've thought about downloading the software, updating it, then stuff the camera up my ass,..
Let them take a look at that !@ 😁

That's worth the five bucks.
 
Just be sure no one’s finger is in the string on the other end.
Even worse is down in a man hole dragging out 4" conduit that got filled with water. You can hear the tsunami rumble just as it arrives 🌊

The problem is when you have to "push" the cable through.
I've used coat hangers for feeding things though other things, cuz you can bend and steer it as it's pushing through.

It's always a good idea to use the old cable to pull the new cable or a string through, but when you have to push something through, it gets tricky.
That's where a little lube goes a long way... Never put it in dry
 
You don't need nuthin fancy.
I bought a couple for five fiddy each,..

View attachment 196773


I only bought it for the variable brightness.

View attachment 196774


I attached it to my reading glasses,..

View attachment 196775


The camera is a scam.
It uses software that is Play Protected but it updates from a third party to turn it into a spy cam.

I've thought about downloading the software, updating it, then stuff the camera up my ass,..
Let them take a look at that !@ 😁

That's worth the five bucks.
I have one and it was actually pretty helpful a few times.
I put it on an old phone that only has the app and Chinese porn 🤣
 
The live music on the water was so fun. It started in the pandemic lockdown as a way people could safely gather and have fun since all the venues were shutdown. I was able to see three bands in four hours. It is so much fun that like outdoor dining it is now a tradition.
Maxon Crum, the cartoonist Robert's younger brother, was known for eating string. The 1994 documentary Crumb featured Maxon swallowing a piece of rope to "cleanse his intestines," a ritual he performed every six weeks. This behavior was an externalization of his attempts to deal with childhood trauma and repressed sexual desires. It would take a couple of days to eat it until it came out his butt, then he would pull it. If he had a long enough camera wire he could have used it to fish the camera through and that would better than a shop vac.
 
I used a tubing pipe cutter to shorten a bar by 30mm per end. It is much better than a hacksaw: Less pain, straight, fast. The ends will need chamfering before fitting end grips. They are like $7 at Harbor Freight. If I use it six times it is worth it. It could last for 100 bikes. I will just keep it lubed.
 

some bike-tool companies have them in their offering. I do have a few of m, works fine on handlebars and steel steerer tubes. For Carbon we use a saw and guide.
 
I used a tubing pipe cutter to shorten a bar by 30mm per end. It is much better than a hacksaw: Less pain, straight, fast. The ends will need chamfering before fitting end grips. They are like $7 at Harbor Freight. If I use it six times it is worth it. It could last for 100 bikes. I will just keep it lubed.
I don't think I've ever done it any other way... even though I've installed miles of steel and aluminum pipe and have a Milwaukee variable speed portable band saw.
Then I clean it up with a rat tail file and an inner and outer chamfering bits. Finally touches with an aggressive dremel nylon polishing bit. Screenshot_20250713_170304_Photos.jpg
 
I used a tubing pipe cutter to shorten a bar by 30mm per end. It is much better than a hacksaw: Less pain, straight, fast. The ends will need chamfering before fitting end grips. They are like $7 at Harbor Freight. If I use it six times it is worth it. It could last for 100 bikes. I will just keep it lubed.
That's what I use, made by Ridgid. You can get replacement wheels for it.
 
I've been watching Park Tools new PRS-30LB mechanical lift work stand since it was first introduced back in February. It wasn't widely available until June, and I was lucky enough to grab one before the initial run sold out.

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Yeah, it's pricey but this old back is getting tired of lifting 3 ebikes, plus my collection of conventional models, up onto a work stand for maintenance.

It's designed to be floor mounted but there is an optional base sold separately. I mounted mine to the leg of my workbench with an easily removeable bracket. It's operated with a crank, but an electric drill with a 10mm socket makes it even easier.
 
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I didn’t get a car until I was 49. Until then, I’d depended on BMW motorcycles. A BMW tool kit had a 12-point box wrench with 10 and 12mm ends. Its rigid connection let me clearly feel the change in resistance. When I torqued a cylinder head, I could tell when I’d taken up the elasticity of the gasket.

Threaded connections are designed with elasticity to hold everything tight. A steel car rim is an example. With a lug wrench, you force the steel under the nuts down to the hub, against the elasticity of the steel. It’s torqued when the steel under the nut bottoms out.

I couldn’t feel that point with a lug wrench. They’re pretty springy, and the ones I used had 6-point sockets. A conventional 6-point socket pushes on the corners of a connector, and the corners can flex. A 12-point socket pushes on the flats. With a good 12-point socket and a rigid 24-inch breaker bar, I could feel when a lug nut bottomed out. I proved it with a 1955 Pontiac, a 1973 Cadillac, a 1984 Nissan, and a 1995 Bronco. I’d torque by feel, use tape to mark the tire where the handle was, back off, torque to spec with a torque wrench, and put the breaker bar back on to see where the handle was. It was always over the tape.

BMW tool kits included Heyco 4, 5, 6, and 8mm hex keys, which also provided excellent feel. On my Aventon, almost every connector has a hex socket, but the folding key set was terrible. It was much too springy to feel what I was doing, and using one handle for all sizes wasn’t good.

I used bits with a 6” ratchet, a 3” ratchet, or a small screwdriver. The front axle was a problem. It was marked 8 to 10 Nm, and that was probably important. It was an alloy bolt with little thread engaged, so I didn’t want to over tighten. Under tightening could allow wobbling between the forks, which could be damaging.

With a bit and ratchet, I didn’t feel any elasticity. I’d never encountered a threaded fastener like that. Remembering how well Heyco hex keys had worked, I bought a set that seemed to meet ISO measurements. I used the H6 to tighten it, and found that I’d applied 9 Nm. I still didn’t feel it taking up elasticity.

I bought a torque wrench for that range. I showed it to a neighbor who’s a machinist. He examined it and asked what it was. He works for tool and die makers. Among mechanical engineers, they are like airline captains among civil pilots.They’d told him to torque by feel using Allen keys.

The point of torquing is to produce clamping force. To know what torque you need, you have to know the fastener’s friction under load. Tool makers can measure the torque necessary for a new fastener, but you can’t count on that fastener to have the same friction if you use it a second time. The change can be worse with stainless and aluminum alloys because they are subject to galling.

On an assembly line, fasteners are new and a machine can be set up to deliver a certain torque. A lot can go wrong if you service a bicycle that way. Lawyers seem to have brought the doctrine to bicycle maintenance.

I bought a set of Stahlwille keys that said DIN ISO 2936. What a difference! I could feel the axle bolt taking up elasticity. It doesn’t start until less than a quarter turn from fully tight, and it’s much less resistance than one would expect from a bolt that size. With a better hex key, I could feel it clearly.

The ISO spec calls for a Rockwell C hardness of 52, and these genuine ISO keys are more rigid than those I bought a few months ago. They’re almost identical to the Heyco keys that came with my motorcycle 55 years ago.

These keys come in a shirt-pocket sized set, especially without out the H10, which isn’t needed. Besides giving me a good feel, the handle lengths would in most cases keep me from over tightening. However, at some locations on the bike, there isn’t room to turn the short arm in a full circle in order to spin a screw out. I could have used a ratchet or screwdriver with bits, but I decided to try ball-end keys.

I bought AMTOVL, made of S2 steel. They feel as rigid as the Stahlwille ones. I was afraid I might over tighten with the longer handles. I tightened the axle by feel, backed off, and used a torque wrench to bring the bolt to the same position. I did it 5 times. Every time, it was within spec. I’m sold.
 
Maxon Crum, the cartoonist Robert's younger brother, was known for eating string. The 1994 documentary Crumb featured Maxon swallowing a piece of rope to "cleanse his intestines," a ritual he performed every six weeks. This behavior was an externalization of his attempts to deal with childhood trauma and repressed sexual desires. It would take a couple of days to eat it until it came out his butt, then he would pull it. If he had a long enough camera wire he could have used it to fish the camera through and that would better than a shop vac.
He really could do sh*t on a shoestring.
 
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