Forum menu
discovered that my £5 tip purchase Marin has an integrated mech hanger.
It is bent in a little, its a hefty bit of steel to have to try and bend?
adjustable spanner
"Best" is a mech hanger straightening tool.
an LBS should have a tool that extends into a great long bar to make minor adjustments easier.
If diy at home, then a vice and bend slowly...adjustable spanner can also work...
don't have a bench or vice unfortunately
will find out my biggest adjustable, i'm assuming a lie it on the floor, stand over it, feet on opposite seat stays type scenario?
will find out my biggest adjustable, i'm assuming a lie it on the floor, stand over it, feet on opposite seat stays type scenario?
😀 you're not building the Titanic. If you've got a decent size asjustable, it should bend pretty easy.
😆 believe me I'm like the Stan Laurel of Bike Maintenance!
Well, I reckon you might be best putting a rear wheel in it and clamping it up to keep everything in place. Then you know it's just the hanger you're bending.
....that's a good idea.....I'm glad I thought of that.... 😉
Integrated? Not replaceable in any way? Would be odd as the whole point of them is to be sacrificial and replaceable to avoid more costly damage.
[quote=deadkenny ]Integrated? Not replaceable in any way? Would be odd as the whole point of them is to be sacrificial and replaceable to avoid more costly damage.
Common with steel and Ti frames
Usually steel frames are non-replaceable.
Ah right. So dropout would be steel (for a steel frame), less risk of snapping if you bend it back I guess?
Aye.
Depends on age of frame...replaceable dropouts didn't really start appearing until 2000 and then became standard about 2005/6...
Aedjustable spanner will bend it but chances are, you're going to bend it squint. Have you got an old cup and cone wheel? The axle on those is usually the same thread as the hanger. You can use a whole wheel- it's way easier to see what's straight and what's not- or you can pull the axle and lay a straight edge into the dropout and see it that way. It makes a good bendin' handle too. You'll get it 100% straight every time, as long as you're at least slightly ept.