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An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

 
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Old 20-02.-2008, 10:57 PM   #1
BicycleTutor
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Default An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

In my first bike shop job, I learned a nifty trick to easily assess
the condition of the bike's bearings without having to overhaul them.
I thought I'd share it with the group:

http://bicycletutor.com/check-bearing-wear/

It's been a busy week - I managed to get two other tutorials done as
well:

http://bicycletutor.com/lube-brake-shift-cables/
http://bicycletutor.com/cartridge-bottom-bracket/

I hope you find them useful. Comments, requests and suggestions are
always appreciated!

Alex
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Old 21-02.-2008, 01:57 AM   #2
jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

Alex BicycleTutor writes:

> In my first bike shop job, I learned a nifty trick to easily assess
> the condition of the bike's bearings without having to overhaul
> them. I thought I'd share it with the group:


http://bicycletutor.com/check-bearing-wear/

I think this approached bicycle maintenance from the wrong end. The
bicycle is for riding and its bearings are there to serve the rider
rather than be a project of perfection. Therefore, leave them alone
unless they develop clearance or have perceptible drag, both things
that can be felt by hand. Acoustic purity is not a functional
concern.

Dimpled head bearings are best detected by bouncing the bicycle on its
front wheel while moving the bars on and off center. It produces a
noticeable chatter.

http://www.sheldonbrown.com/brandt/...d-steering.html

> It's been a busy week - I managed to get two other tutorials done as
> well:


http://bicycletutor.com/lube-brake-shift-cables/

If you wipe a coat of light grease over the cable when first
installing it in its housing, it needs no care after that. Adding
spray-on lubricants does not protect well against water intrusion in
the long run because they are volatile and don't lubricate the entire
length of the cable.

http://bicycletutor.com/cartridge-bottom-bracket/

I guess they weren't sealed after all or they would last as long as
the bearings in automobiles.

> I hope you find them useful. Comments, requests and suggestions are
> always appreciated!



Jobst Brandt
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Old 21-02.-2008, 02:16 AM   #3
russellseaton1@yahoo.com
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

On Feb 20, 6:57 am, BicycleTutor <bicycletu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> In my first bike shop job, I learned a nifty trick to easily assess
> the condition of the bike's bearings without having to overhaul them.
> I thought I'd share it with the group:
>
> http://bicycletutor.com/check-bearing-wear/
>
> It's been a busy week - I managed to get two other tutorials done as
> well:
>
> http://bicycletutor.com/lube-brake-...bottom-bracket/
>
> I hope you find them useful. Comments, requests and suggestions are
> always appreciated!
>
> Alex


From the website on lubing cables.
"Most brake and shift cables these days have a plastic lining built
into the housing, therefore eliminating the need for lubrication.
However, if you ride a lot in wet weather, or have an older bike
without the plastic lining, you'll want to lubricate the cables to
prevent rust. I personally believe that well-lubricated cables also
improve braking and shifting."

Why wouldn't you just buy stainless steel brake and shifter cables to
prevent rust? If you go into any competent bike shop, or order from
the web, you will get stainless steel brake and shifter cables. They
don't rust. Seems to me your tutorial or whatever is based on things
that happened 30 years ago. Or is written for people who never work
on bikes and will believe any drivel a bike shop will tell them so
they can sell stuff.
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Old 21-02.-2008, 02:23 AM   #4
datakoll
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

grease? Finish Line teflon with wax: dribble occasionally into the
housing ends where the lube dries first.

noise? wear ear plugs and butt your forehead (above your nose) into
the seat post

find a water pipe or tape cardboard tubes, paper towels, saran wrap,
together for a stethoscope

when bearings wear, bearings wear unevenly, lose sphericity becoming
elliptical.

adjusting tolerance for an elliptical shape is difficult. As the
shape(s) roll, shapes rool independently (I assume) giving different
tolerances forcing the bearing races apart.

wider bearing races increases wear pressures on a fewer bearing
increasing wear rate.

so when the wheel wiggles laterally at the tire, the bearings are
becoming or are elliptical.

throw the old ones away and repack with new bearings. Elliptical
bearings are unadjustable.
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Old 21-02.-2008, 03:25 AM   #5
Leo Lichtman
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.


"datakoll" wrote: (clip) find a water pipe or tape cardboard tubes, paper
towels, saran wrap,
> together for a stethoscope (clip)

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
One of the most (and least expensive) tools I own is a stethoscope. The
mechnic's kind, with a long slender metal probe--not the doctor's kind. It
will help you hunt down clicks, squeaks, rattles and other troubling sounds
on all sorts of machines, not only bicycles. Unfortunately, I have not
found a way of using it while riding :-)


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Old 21-02.-2008, 05:13 AM   #6
RicodJour
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

On Feb 20, 12:25 pm, "Leo Lichtman" <l.licht...@worldnet.att.net>
wrote:
> "datakoll" wrote: (clip) find a water pipe or tape cardboard tubes, paper
>
> towels, saran wrap,> together for a stethoscope (clip)
>
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> One of the most (and least expensive) tools I own is a stethoscope. The
> mechnic's kind, with a long slender metal probe--not the doctor's kind. It
> will help you hunt down clicks, squeaks, rattles and other troubling sounds
> on all sorts of machines, not only bicycles. Unfortunately, I have not
> found a way of using it while riding :-)


Using it while riding would help you hunt down the back end of a car.

R
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Old 21-02.-2008, 05:30 AM   #7
Brian Huntley
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

On Feb 20, 11:16*am, "russellseat...@yahoo.com"
<russellseat...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Why wouldn't you just buy stainless steel brake and shifter cables to
> prevent rust? *If you go into any competent bike shop, or order from
> the web, you will get stainless steel brake and shifter cables. *They
> don't rust. *Seems to me your tutorial or whatever is based on things
> that happened 30 years ago. *Or is written for people who never work
> on bikes and will believe any drivel a bike shop will tell them so
> they can sell stuff.


SS cables do, in fact, oxidize perceptively. But my problem with water
in the housing is more due to freezing instead. This time of year, I
have to remember to shift into a useful gear before parking for the
night, as I may have a single speed in the morning.
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Old 21-02.-2008, 06:04 AM   #8
BicycleTutor
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

Thanks Jobst,

I really appreciate your honest and critical assessments. At some
point I will be re-touching many of the tutorials using advice like
yours as a guide. Before Sheldon passed on, he was critiquing each of
the tutorials very bluntly and thoroughly, and I miss having that
level of expert input... yours is greatly appreciated!

Alex
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Old 21-02.-2008, 10:17 AM   #9
Leo Lichtman
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.


"Leo Lichtman" <l.lichtman@worldnet.att.net> wrote One of the most (and
least expensive) tools I own is a stethoscope. (clip)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I meant to say, "One of the most *useful* (and least expensive) tools I own
is a stethoscope."


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Old 22-02.-2008, 09:37 AM   #10
datakoll
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

On Feb 20, 3:04*pm, BicycleTutor <bicycletu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks Jobst,
>
> I really appreciate your honest and critical assessments. At some
> point I will be re-touching many of the tutorials using advice like
> yours as a guide. Before Sheldon passed on, he was critiquing each of
> the tutorials very bluntly and thoroughly, and I miss having that
> level of expert input... yours is greatly appreciated!
>
> Alex


looking over hub posts we find the question, "what do I do with the
bearings" asked frequently. Used bearings are elliptical,
unadjustable.
Questioner will go on into a serious hand wringing episode over the
expense of new bearings and will again ask, after screaming at him
that used bearings are no good, if he can use the old bearings, that
are what? unadjustable.
Several posters will then scream at the questioner: "DO NOT MIX
BEARING BATCHES" and off course that goes in one ear and out ? with
foresight to carefully segregate bearings on say a used and clean bed
sheet before one (one hahahah) rolls under the dishwasher.
Questioner will then rerun asking "the bearings all look the same, can
I use used bearings that all...
Some questioners will ask: I CAN'T AFFORD $4 FOR NEW BEARINGS. THE OLD
BEARINGS ARE CRACKED, ARE THE OLD BEARINGS OK...?"

A TUTORIAL SHOULD COVER THIS GROUND following those used bearings.
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Old 22-02.-2008, 09:40 AM   #11
datakoll
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

On Feb 20, 12:25*pm, "Leo Lichtman" <l.licht...@worldnet.att.net>
wrote:
> "datakoll" wrote: *(clip) find a water pipe or tape cardboard tubes, paper
>
> towels, saran wrap,> together for a stethoscope (clip)
>
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> One of the most (and least expensive) tools I own is a stethoscope. *The
> mechnic's kind, with a long slender metal probe--not the doctor's kind. *It
> will help you hunt down clicks, squeaks, rattles and other troubling sounds
> on all sorts of machines, not only bicycles. *Unfortunately, I have not
> found a way of using it while riding :-)


Leo, down at the music store there's an inexpensive guitar pickup once
called a Buffalo Nickel. Ask the music man if it plugs into a portable
recorder with monitor earplugs attached.
My work sounds like a old Sears steel cement mixer with steel drive
gears filled with 2B, water and no sand (fines) when tight!
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Old 22-02.-2008, 01:13 PM   #12
Tom Sherman
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

datakoll aka gene daniels wrote:
> On Feb 20, 3:04 pm, BicycleTutor <bicycletu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Thanks Jobst,
>>
>> I really appreciate your honest and critical assessments. At some
>> point I will be re-touching many of the tutorials using advice like
>> yours as a guide. Before Sheldon passed on, he was critiquing each of
>> the tutorials very bluntly and thoroughly, and I miss having that
>> level of expert input... yours is greatly appreciated!
>>
>> Alex

>
> looking over hub posts we find the question, "what do I do with the
> bearings" asked frequently. Used bearings are elliptical,
> unadjustable.
> Questioner will go on into a serious hand wringing episode over the
> expense of new bearings and will again ask, after screaming at him
> that used bearings are no good, if he can use the old bearings, that
> are what? unadjustable.
> Several posters will then scream at the questioner: "DO NOT MIX
> BEARING BATCHES" and off course that goes in one ear and out ? with
> foresight to carefully segregate bearings on say a used and clean bed
> sheet before one (one hahahah) rolls under the dishwasher.
> Questioner will then rerun asking "the bearings all look the same, can
> I use used bearings that all...
> Some questioners will ask: I CAN'T AFFORD $4 FOR NEW BEARINGS. THE OLD
> BEARINGS ARE CRACKED, ARE THE OLD BEARINGS OK...?"
>
> A TUTORIAL SHOULD COVER THIS GROUND following those used bearings.


Do not used bearings work as sling shot ammunition?

--
Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia
The weather is here, wish you were beautiful
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Old 22-02.-2008, 02:50 PM   #13
jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

Aside from all the noise over worn bearings, let's be clear about
this. The only types of wear that affect a bicycle ball bearing is
rust and spalling.

Rust in a wet ball bearing being ridden will dry out and leave fine
rust that causes intermittent and random sharp cracking sounds. Such
bearings can be cleaned by wiping traces of rust from the races and
balls with a clean cloth before re-installing and oiling them. They
will work fine.

Bearings that have rusted at rest from water are another matter
because that causes eroded rust grooves at the edge of the wet
meniscus. The balls and probably their races are shot if this
condition developed over a few days.

The most common failing is spalling, in which the highly polished
surface of bearing balls and even races, flake off much like a pot
hole in a repaved street in which the top layer of pavement cracked
and got displaced from its place. These need replacement.

Other than that, bearing balls do not become oval or change their size
significantly without spalling. Therefor all the advice about oval
balls and undersized balls is imaginary. If you were to watch the
rotation of bearing balls in use, you would see that they spin about
an ever changing axis, causing uniform color and roundness. They do
not rotate about a fixed axis as the ovality folks visualize.

Jobst Brandt
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Old 22-02.-2008, 03:03 PM   #14
jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

Aside from all the noise over worn bearings, let's be clear about
this. The only types of wear that affect bicycle ball bearings are
rust and spalling.

Riding ball bearings when wet will dry them out and leave fine rust
that causes intermittent and random sharp cracking sounds. Such
bearings can be cleaned by wiping fine rust from the races and balls
with a clean cloth before re-installing and oiling them. They will
work fine.

Bearings that have rusted at rest from water are another matter
because that causes eroded rust grooves at the edge of the wet
meniscus. The balls and probably their races are shot if this
condition developed over a few days.

The most common failing is spalling, in which the highly polished
surface of bearing balls and even races, flake off much like a pot
hole in a repaved street in which the top layer of pavement cracked
and got displaced. These are also shot.

Other than that, bearing balls do not become oval or change their size
significantly without spalling. Therefore, all the advice about oval
balls and undersized balls is imaginary. If you were to watch bearing
balls in use, you would see that they spin about an ever changing
axis, causing uniform color and roundness. They do not rotate about a
fixed axis as the ovality folks seem to visualize.

Jobst Brandt
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Old 22-02.-2008, 04:58 PM   #15
jim beam
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Default Re: An easy way to tell if your bearings are worn out.

jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote:
> Aside from all the noise over worn bearings, let's be clear about
> this. The only types of wear that affect a bicycle ball bearing is
> rust and spalling.
>
> Rust in a wet ball bearing being ridden will dry out and leave fine
> rust that causes intermittent and random sharp cracking sounds. Such
> bearings can be cleaned by wiping traces of rust from the races and
> balls with a clean cloth before re-installing and oiling them. They
> will work fine.


not if they're stainless, and the high end bike bearings like dura-ace,
phil wood, etc. usually are.


>
> Bearings that have rusted at rest from water are another matter
> because that causes eroded rust grooves at the edge of the wet
> meniscus. The balls and probably their races are shot if this
> condition developed over a few days.


see above. stainless bearings are used for a reason.


>
> The most common failing is spalling, in which the highly polished
> surface of bearing balls and even races, flake off much like a pot
> hole in a repaved street in which the top layer of pavement cracked
> and got displaced from its place. These need replacement.
>


the races, notably the cones, usually deteriorate faster than the
bearing balls. pointless replacing one without the other.


> Other than that, bearing balls do not become oval or change their size
> significantly without spalling. Therefor all the advice about oval
> balls and undersized balls is imaginary. If you were to watch the
> rotation of bearing balls in use, you would see that they spin about
> an ever changing axis, causing uniform color and roundness. They do
> not rotate about a fixed axis as the ovality folks visualize.


this is true for as long as they are properly lubricated and correctly
adjusted. over-tightening and lack of lubrication can change that.
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