larry-new
Active Member
Ahhh...no. That this even happened once is weird, doncha think?Agree totally.
My note was in response to his original note, wondering if he needed to keep an extra pair on hand.
Ahhh...no. That this even happened once is weird, doncha think?Agree totally.
My note was in response to his original note, wondering if he needed to keep an extra pair on hand.
Ahhh...no. That this even happened once is weird, doncha think?
Crank threads stripping out is a very common post on the Sondors owners Facebook page. Over 8,000 members showing the results of heavy fat tire EBikes, with cheap alloy cranks, and DIY assembly and poor maintenance.My point exactly Larry. Therefor no need to keep an extra set of anything in stock.
Not true, The natural pedaling rotation will still only want to tighten the pedals on to the crank arms. If the pedal bearings seize you just will not be able to rotate the cranks with the pedals but you will still be trying to tighten them. You will only be able to theoretically unscrew the pedal if you pedal backwards and the free wheel is seized.I would have agreed that the threads have a natural tightening action to them until a few minutes ago. I was mulling this over after Larry's note above, and thinking he's on to something. If the pedal bearing were to seize up, our natural pedaling motion is going to UNscrew that pedal, no?
So said I, until I was asked to visualize it, then the walls fell.Not true, The natural pedaling rotation will still only want to tighten the pedals on to the crank arms. If the pedal bearings seize you just will not be able to rotate the cranks with the pedals but you will still be trying to tighten them. You will only be able to theoretically unscrew the pedal if you pedal backwards and the free wheel is seized.
No, R on right side, L on leftOne side is right thread, one side is left thread, is that the problem? Pedals are made for a certain side.
I actually purchased a pedal wrench and a torque wrench for the crankset and pedal install. I don't know, it's possible it came loose on the very last ride, but I constantly checked it, it wasn't loose from what I could tell, but hey, maybe just tight enough after riding and slowly loosening to point it came off pretty quick. On that trail there are a lot of winds, up and down and I lean into it on the turns and when pedaling.What kind of wrench are you using to secure the pedals to the crank arm? Even though pedals are threaded in such a way as to promote them staying on, pedals need to be tightened properly from the get-go. Shimano recommends a minimum of 35 Nm of torque. If you use a small wrench, like a 6" adjustable "Crescent" wrench, you need to tighten down hard to get to that amount of torque.
It tightens because you've simulated the scenario of the failed bearing.Here proof in a more concrete form: Put your bike on its stand. Loosen either pedal with a wrench, and keep the wrench on the pedal.
Now rotate the crank in reverse, pedalling backwards, letting the pedal and crank rotate, but not the spindle and your wrench.
Voila! The pedal tightens!
It can't tighten if the bearing is working. It can't tighten because it's the wrong direction.It tightens because you've simulated the scenario of the failed bearing.
When bearing works, pedaling backwards loosens pedals and pedaling forward - tightens.
If everything works, it will tighten when you pedal forward.It can't tighten if the bearing is working. It can't tighten because it's the wrong direction.
This was the most head-scratching thing* for me about the pair of bikes I bought a couple months ago: why didn't they include a small tube of grease? I mean, they literally supply you with everything else you need to assemble the bike -- right down to the tools! I even sent a message to Radpwoer suggesting it....much softer so it is also a good idea to put a little grease on the threads before threading them in.
Ok, take a loose pedal, hold it against the crank arm, and simulate pedalling forward...let me know when it tightens. I will not hold my breath awaiting your sucess.If everything works, it will tighten when you pedal forward.
Ex, clockwise rotation of the right crank transfers the effort to the spindle in the same clockwise direction - i.e. tightening.
You may repeat the same experiment as above, only without holding the spindle immobile relatively to the pedal, and watch the relative movement of the parts.
BUT, if pedal bearings seize, pedal loosens when pedaling forward. (I agree with Alaskan that you most likely would stop pedaling in this case). Gotta love this throttle
Edit-PS: when spindle is not sitting properly, i.e. already loose or cross-threaded, then in addition to "pure rotation" you're getting lateral movements and lateral forces trying to break the pedal off, and then anything can happen. Don't know how likely it is to loosen then, more likely it will destroy the threads and seize even more - or just break.