#16
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I have as well, but it doesn’t always work as well.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#17
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Quote:
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#18
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A quick dip in liquid electrical tape is my preferred method.
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#19
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Alas, I am not a member of a TikTok generation. Imagine the fame and fortune that could have been mine. I coulda been an influencer!
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It's not an adventure until something goes wrong. - Yvon C. |
#20
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Good one!
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#21
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Ah that is where I went wrong I misunderstood they said I should be an influencer and I thought they said I should be under the influence.....crap..
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#22
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your bikes look perfect in every photo...keep using the crimps.
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#23
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Jobst Brandt's "The Engineered Skeptic" would have been the terror of PR depts. Back on topic, heat shrink tubing for cable ends. |
#24
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So much this. That visage, that helmet, that personality, that knowledge, that helpful smile? Slam dunk, game over, no contest. Cyclist emeritus.
In somewhat sadder news, I may die tomorrow. It's been like this for months, although it does look like I put a dab of glue or something on the end to prevent fraying. I guess I left it long in case I decided it needed further adjustment, and then just got lazy.
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It's not an adventure until something goes wrong. - Yvon C. |
#25
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Quote:
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#26
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With the water as an electrolyte, it's not corrosion, it's a battery! Enough to Di2 the front der?
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#27
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On the other hand, it looks like there's a market for a tiny torque wrench to properly torque these little buggers. I'm going to invent it, sell it on Pliq Ploq or wherever the kool kats do that ****, and retire early. Edit...I'm coming up with a dual version to mimic the truck ballz...I'm going to call them the tiny testies... Further edit....I need to get out for a ride!
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Colnagi Seven Moots Sampson HotTubes LtSpeed SpeshFat |
#28
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Quote:
I dislike waste, even a plastic zip-tie or even a cable crimp, so I have learned how to re-use the crimps without wasting so much time, crimps or zip-ties. Often the crimps have been sharply crimped using wire dikes. So first I use my pliers to more-fully crimp the crimp along the same "sides" of the crimp as the existing, sharply localized crimps, which in effect un-crimps the localized crimping. Then I can apply the plier at 90-degrees to un-crimp my previous crimp, which is highly effective almost 90% of the time. Noting here that my crimping is done using the corner of my regular pliers, so I can avoid the solid end of the crimp and the open end as well, to the extent that either end hasn't been crushed already. Done as described, these crimps can last through a few service cycles I would say. Occasionally I need to massage the opening of a crimp using a spinning action on my razor tool, creating more of a smooth funnel for guiding a gnarled cable into. I also have some XL crimps for handling the most jagged brake cable ends. Yet one more tip, when using my fingers to accomplish what was done in the video, I use a bit of back/forth bending action as I twist my fingers past the roughest spot along the cable, which helps the cable strands to align properly. Or I might even twist my pliers past such a crushed spot on the cable to better force the little wires into order. Broken strands can cause puncture wounds(!!), so I keep a careful eye out for them. Thicker-walled crimps that hold tighter seem like the best preventative for frayed cable ends, short of having to do soldering. Some of these require more of a muscular effort on the pliers to crimp fully, since I don't crimp them using wire dikes myself. I crimp using the corner of the plier jaws, then again with the lines on the plier jaw surface at 90-degrees (done from the other side, again without crushing either end of the crimp). The result is sort of a griddle-pattern "trademark", which later informs me if I am likely the last person to have worked on the cable or not (despite what I or the bike's owner might remember). Lastly, Campagnolo cables have for decades been reverse-wound compared to almost all other cables, which keeps me on my toes. |
#29
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I do find the comments about the environment and then soldering and super glue being funny. Nothing environmentally friendly about either.
Heck I bet some of my scrambled brains issues right now can be tied back to my early years in the Army soldering every day without even knowing what a fume extraction system was, LOL! I've never thought of using the tie wrap, always tried with my fingers. Not always with success or lack of blood. |
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