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#166
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That was the first failed shimano crank that the shop had seen. |
#167
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i sweat like a freaking sauna but I don't ever recall seeing my cranks get salty....headsets yup but seems like there would be some strange things going on if the cranks were getting soaked...
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#168
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I had a pair where the threaded pedal eyelet came loose. It never fully came out but gave the pedal a lot of float in a direction it never had before.
![]() After the warranty had expired....of course. Tim |
#169
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I've had Ultegra 6800 on 2 bikes since 2016. I looked them over very closely and have taken one to the shop where I work. Nothing to indicate any imminent failure.
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Contains Titanium |
#170
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Some real world data:
I took my bike with 9100 cranks into a major Trek dealer today. The kid at the front desk checked to make sure my crankset had the affected code (OH in my case), and told me they'll ship it off to Shimano and expect a new crank in 2-3 weeks. There was literally no inspection or questioning at all. It seems like Shimano is just going to warranty all affected cranks without inspection, no questions asked. We'll see how accurate this timeframe is. |
#171
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This is 100% the right move. Your local mechanic isn't a scientific examiner of metallurgy. If it darkens your door, warranty it. You can't push responsibility for this back at the retailer without a significant influx of $$$. As it is, there's no financial compensation for the dealer to even get involved
If it's "inspected" and fails...someone gets hurt? Not wanting to risk that conversation Quote:
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#172
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#173
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so, question.. I've read through this entire thread and the BRAIN article that has the Shimano bulletin attached and I'm not 100% convinced the cranks HAVE to be on the bike.. there was one reply in the thread where someone's LBS told them the cranks have to be on the bike.. the bulletin says to bring the bike in if your cranks fall under the recall, but does not say anything about if the cranks have to be on the bike.. I know we have some shop folks in here, anyone have anything more definitive? I ask because I have a set of 6800 that fall in this recall that is currently "between bikes".. I guess it just makes no sense that it would matter if the crankset is on the bike or not.. the inspection is on the crankset, not the bike..
for reference- the article with the attached bulletin.. https://www.bicycleretailer.com/reca...4-500-incident https://bike.shimano.com/en-US/infor...ll-notice.html
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Be the Reason Others Succeed Last edited by fourflys; 09-23-2023 at 06:21 PM. |
#174
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I don't think it matters. Easier to "inspect" off the bike
Any one I see is going back to shimano if the date codes are correct Quote:
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#175
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that was my thought.. I'm basically saving the shop a bit of time in my mind..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#176
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Pretty long thread- do affected date code cranksets have to be removed and sent in (no biking? for 2-3 weeks)?
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#177
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And that's NOT what Shimano is doing..replacing them all outright.
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#178
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BUT, if ya gotta ask, the choice I would make is pretty obvious. ![]()
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#179
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Grumble.
I have these cranks on three bikes. What annoys me is the need to go through a dealer, and the need for the inspection. Shimano basically is saying they have thousands of cranksets out there that may fail, but... Just wait until they start to fail to take action.
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#180
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I have a crank that is on the recall list. If the dealer that inspects it determines that it passes the Shimano inspection procedure, and if I feel that I would rather have it replaced, I will write to the dealer and ask them to place in writing that the crank is "safe for continued use". If the dealer refuses to do so (and I could not reasonably imagine any dealer who would ever provide such a letter) I would then thank them and write directly to Shimano-contacting them may prove a challenge. Is David Pfieffer still President?. Does anyone have direct email address for top/ key executives at Shimano USA? I have seen the video that Shimano has provided its dealers- a detailed, daunting, inspection procedure. It clearly appears that the onus placed on the dealers is too high and unfair. Shimano should simply provide any customer the option of having their crank replaced- if that is what they prefer. This is best for the dealer, the customer, and the Shimano brand- long and short term. I could not see car dealers inspecting a component that is on a recall list and then saying to the customer" We could not find any definite fault, go ahead and drive your car, you'll be fine". The approach Shimano is taking is incredibly short sighted, negligent, and just plain dumb.
Last edited by Forza20; 09-24-2023 at 08:06 AM. Reason: amended |
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