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Do you loctite chai...
 

[Closed] Do you loctite chainring bolts??

 S_J
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[#1967022]

I'm Just in the process of changing the chainrings on my XTR chainset for the first time, and noted there was a lot of thread locker on the bolts. I don't normally bother with anything other than a dab of grease but I have had bolts come loose before. I've also heard people say that they NEVER go near it for chainring bolts. Any comments?


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:15 am
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grease.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:16 am
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I don't bother but if you got it to hand you may as well use it?


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:18 am
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coppaslip / grease.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:20 am
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Not so bad for the small ring bolts, but for the others it's difficult to "grasp" the nut by it's slot, even if you have a proper tool. So no, just a little grease and nip them up in a pattern going around. I started carrying a spare bolt in my pack - toolkit.

A "hot" tip I was given about loctite-stuck bolts is to heat them with a lighter which softens the loctite.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:41 am
 S_J
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The factory fitted bolts took some real effort to get off actually, which I guess should be a warning. At least XTR bolts are Torx both sides, much easier to get decent purchase.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 10:48 am
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I am from now on!

lost two and cracked my only front chainring 4 miles from the car on Sunday. 'Scooting' home soon became tedious only out weighed by over taking people on the downs with no gears ;o)


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 11:06 am
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yes ever since having one come loose many years ago.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 12:17 pm
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Haven't previously, only as I hadn't got any thread-lock, but now I have some, everythings going to be threadlocked! Admittedly with the low strength 222 stuff, not the full strength stuff.
Why? Cause I've lost chainring bolts before now, and destroyed a nicely expensive Middleburn middle ring due to it.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 12:27 pm
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Coppaslip everytime here. No probs in years of use.

On this subject though - and not wishing to hijack the thread - why oh why did Shimano switch to Torx bolts after years of 5mm allen heads? I understand the point above about potentially better purchase etc but it's an odd sized Torx (T30 if I recall?) and no multi tool manufacturer I knew of at the time had a T30 on their tool. If you don't overtighten a 5mm, they're just fine. T25 I could have lived with being the same size as disc bolts, but T30 just pissed me (and I'm sure, plenty of others) off.

(Admittedly, I was doing the Transalp that year & it was just one more tool I didn't want to pack every day!)


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 1:25 pm
 S_J
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You need a T30 & a T40 for the main bolts! I had to buy a set from homebase as I didn't have any either. Whilst it's a pain if you dont have the tools, I do feel that it's a much better system that the chainring tool plus 5mm allen bolt.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 1:56 pm
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"why oh why did Shimano switch to Torx bolts after years of 5mm allen heads?"

T27 on XT I thought - yes it hacks me off too.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 3:12 pm
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No. But a dab of Tippex on all critical bolts as witness marks. Only takes a quick glance before each ride to make sure that nothing is getting loose.


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 3:24 pm
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Not anymore, after undoing them and trying to do them up again...

The loctite stayed on the bolts and made them difficult to tighten - they just rotated even though I have the special Shimano pin tool 😥


 
Posted : 07/09/2010 3:28 pm