#1
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Star Nut Conundrum
I recently picked up a used frameset and discovered that the owner used a star nut instead of a compression plug in the fork steerer. Does anyone here experience with removing one? I’ve read all sorts of ways to remove it.
So far drilling out the center and letting the nut collapse in on itself is my most feasible option. I don’t want to hammer it further down into the steerer. There’s no apparent cracks in the steerer. |
#2
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Search my posts for a writeup on this.
In the meantime, I will try to find it. found it, also other tips in the thread. https://forums.thepaceline.net/showp...57&postcount=4 Last edited by Old School; 09-18-2024 at 12:00 AM. |
#3
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Quote:
2. If the fork is not designed for use with a star nut, get a new fork.
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"I used to be with it. Then they changed what it was. Now, what I'm with isn't it, and whats it is weird and scary." -Abe Simpson |
#4
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Photos please. I'd not want to ride any carbon steerer fork that's been ridden without a compression plug, ever. |
#5
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Call me Greg. |
#6
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My thought was the opposite...Drilling the center would potentially cause that star nut to spin, with possible disastrous consequences. Pushing it further down seemed to be the least damaging to the interior of the steerer tube...
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#7
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Agreed, some carbon forks such as 3T or Cervelo have a alloy insert and are designed around a star nut. Although mine fell out when I had the steerer cut and I now use a compression plug.
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#8
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Quote:
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#9
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I would check with the fork manufacture on that one. While it looks like a fork that should use a compression plug, the install of the star nut looks pretty clean so maybe it's an approved install? Definitely not a common install and perhaps it's new fork time simply because a failure would be catastrophic.
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#10
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I wouldn't do anything.
It's not like you're running a stack of spacers and need the compression plug to add stability. Use the star nut to set the headset and call it good. That project looks a lot like some of the ones I got into because "it wasn't right". Halfway through, it went sideways and I would have kissed a genie's @ss to put it back the way it was before I started messing with it. |
#11
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dremel with a carbon disc cutter.
get rid of the "leaves" and the centre should drop |
#12
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Pushing further down in the steerer and use the compression nut. It likes it would be usable as is.
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Cuando era joven |
#13
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THIS is the correct answer.
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Forgive me for posting dumb stuff. Chris Little Rock, AR |
#14
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You could ride it as is.
I don't think the location of the star nut will compromise the strength of the steerer. However, fork manufacturers usually suggest that a long compression plug is used so the steerer is not crushed when the stem bolts are tightened. I'd probably remove it and then use a compression plug. Removal would depend on which tools are available to you. The least risky method might be a set of needle files. They should be small enough to fit down the centre hole. You could then file a slot in the thread portion, and another slot directly opposite. Then tap it with a hammer/screwdriver, and it might release it. I have not tried this, but in my imagination it would work, and is not very risky. |
#15
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This has been covered in multiple threads over the years. I once removed a star nut from a Cannondale carbon fork (which was approved for their specific star nut). The previous owner had pushed the star nut down into the steerer tube and used a compression plug instead. Before building up the bike, I decided to remove the star nut and carefully inspect the steerer tube.
I secured the fork so that it could not move, then drilled out the star nut very carefully. The key was to NOT have the drill bit become stuck, spinning the star nut and ruining the fork. I started with a drill bit that was just slightly larger in diameter than the threaded center hole in the star nut. I then used progressively larger drill bits until the star nut fell apart. The process was quick, easy, and effective. The fork served me well for years to come. Greg |
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