,.. They are pretty deep so I think I will need the FR1.3 tool.
The picture in the Park Tools video showed the FR-1.3 tool being used for a freewheel that looked like yours, with the hex nut inside the freewheel.
Hopefully the freewheel will thread on to your new wheel?
I'm just guessing that the freewheel will have the same thread diameter, number of threads, thread pitch, and so on.
I would think that the threading would be standard and not be changed over the years?
Check to see if the splines inside the freewheel spin along with the freewheel as the freewheel spins.
If they do spin with the freewheel, you'll need a chain whip to hold the freewheel while you turn the FR-1.3 tool.
A cheapie for that tool should be fine.
This is the chain whip and freewheel tool I've got. Note the black paint that I scraped off the the tool.
I just noticed that the chain whip has the notch in it to operate as an HCW-17 tool.
I got a whole kit for $20 CAD. (I already have a chain breaker, so I didn't need a kit with one.)
It's all junk but I think everything will work without breaking, except the freewheel remover?
Thanks again for your tips. Much appreciated.
Your welcome.
I learned about this stuff from
@Fred
I remember taking a freewheel apart when I was a kid.
I just MacGyver'ed it off with a hammer and a flat head screwdriver.
EDIT: Hopefully the hole in the end of the FR-1.3 tool is big enough to fit the motor cable connector through it to feed it on to your axle?
My Das-Kit motor has the motor cable coming out the other side, so it wouldn't be in the way of the tool.
I remember reading where someone tried to replace a freewheel with a cheap tool and it broke, so he has to get the Park Tool version.
The problem with a broken tool is that the splined part can break off inside the freewheel and get jammed in there because of the soft metal deforming. Then you have to try to get the damn thing out somehow with almost no clearance to get in there.
I don't think that there even is a cheap version of the FR-1.3 tool though. The version that I have is kind of the standard and knockoff versions are readily available.
Installing your freewheel on the new wheel is easy (assuming that it fits.)
You just thread it on by hand and snug it up. Riding the bike tightens it up as you pedal (sometimes REALLY Tight, that's why they can be seized on to the hub.)