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Snapped fork steere...
 

[Closed] Snapped fork steerer - anyone ever seen this happen?

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Big George wondering how he's gonna tell Lance about breaking on of his bikes...


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:00 pm
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Too many pies โ“


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:02 pm
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ti_pin_man, you've been Paced by any chance?


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:27 pm
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northwind - - and the prize goes to ... your good self


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:32 pm
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Sigh - looks like we all need 1'5 steerers now - where's my credit card....


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:35 pm
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Some of us never gave up on the 1.5" steerer... the industry will come back round to it in a while ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:46 pm
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2005 Enduro Elite came with 145mm Nixons fitted


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 3:53 pm
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I've a set of forks with the steerer quite scored all the way round it , I was a bit concerned but it seems ok touch wood , its pretty thick steel but this makes me think ๐Ÿ™


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 9:43 pm
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It's definitely a sticker.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:01 pm
 kevj
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This happened to me with a set if manitou skarebs. I pulled a little jump over a log in Chopwell carpark while waiting for the rest of the lads to arrive and the steerer snapped. I bailed off (as you would). As I stood up very perplexed about what had just happened, one lad said he thought I was practicing falling off. Spoilt my ride that did.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:10 pm
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If you have a good macro lens a close up of the fracture surfaces would be very useful to provide some clues as to the reason of the failure

Probably won't be powerful enough to tell you anything useful, other than a possible initiation site, although people often identify the intiation site pretty much as far away from where it really was. We normally look at fracture surfaces with an optical microscope and then an SEM to find potential microstructural flaws that might lead to a failure.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:12 pm
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Did he buy it from uk bike store?


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:19 pm
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nah, if he had, he wouldn't have been riding it last weekend to snap it, as it would not have arrived yet.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:20 pm
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What should we be torquing our steerer bolts up to then?
I always do it as tight as possible. Never understood why steerers and stems aren't splined.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 10:56 pm
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I'm not sure that it is established in fact that "overtightened" stem bolts or steerer bolts have caused this, so if I were you I would carry on using the manufacturers recommended settings.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:03 pm
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ti_pin_man - Member

you were lucky. My alu steerer tube snapped 10mm up from the fork crown within the headtube, I have a false tooth and about 48 stitches because of this, about 25 inside my mouth and the rest on my face. Plus a hatred of a certain fork manufacturer.


He looked like this
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His forks looked like this
[img] [/img]
Even his Oakley's were from the new blood lens range
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:12 pm
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I'm finding a safer hobby.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:19 pm
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Thanks mr overshoot for dragging up my old scars. I haven't seen that picture for a while and it nearly put me off me dinner...

Bigjim - I'm still riding, gotta be done, cycling is just part of who I am, I guess we're all the same otherwise we'd be on knittingtrackworld right now! Lol.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:29 pm
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To be fair Joe ,you looked better after the accident tbf ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:36 pm
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Seriously dudes.. I'm surprised none of you have got what caused it..!

It's caused by bimetallic corrosion of the inside of the steerer due to intimate contact with the star nut.

The star nut scrapes the anodising away when it's bashed in, and gets a fair amount of spray up from the wheel in winter, with lots of yummy salt. The steerer has eroded away from the inside. It's the same with those pace forks. Look at how rusty that crown race seat is.

It's best to take the top cap off occasionally and squirt some spray grease round there, or better still, never use a star nut in the first place on an aluminium steerer. Hope head doctors rule.

Go now and take your top cap off and have a look... You'll be appalled at the state inside!


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:40 pm
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Well said Ti Pin Man. Myself I'm two clavicles, four vertebrae, one humerus, one wrist and multiple soft tissue injuries into my cycling odyssey.


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:41 pm
 XXX
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It aluminium, the more you use it the weaker it gets and they look like old forks. Headset, starnut, spacer etc were probably more the straw that broke the camels back. loads on top and bottom of the tube will be high.
good effort sir...


 
Posted : 24/01/2013 11:47 pm
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Enough to make me swap my SFN's to those long Ameoba headlock things. At least if it goes the bolt will holdit together.

I snapped a BMX stem once, landing a jump. Bars went forward leaving jagged stem that ripped in to my chest, face hit the tyre & rubbed along it for few secs. Tried to grab the fork legs to right my self but knuckles ended up skinned by Skyways. Managed to roll off sideways.
Not a good day. I looked a state. Managed to ride home no handed holding the severed bars.


 
Posted : 25/01/2013 1:36 am
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Big George wondering how he's gonna tell Lance about breaking on of his bikes...

True and dull story: I was sitting in a bar in Roubaix when that happened, watching on the telly, and Roger Hammond's missus was there too, having wandered up the road, found the bar, and found us chatting in English. What I learned that day: Having a significant other racing in Paris Roubaix is a nerve wracking experience. When his teammate's bike explodes, you go a very pale colour


 
Posted : 25/01/2013 6:44 am
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I got what caused it. They werent that old when they snapped, maybe a couple of years old, but in the UK winters parts can quickly look scruffier quickly. My own 'snap' did happen some time ago and these are old pics. Not sure when the OP's snap occured. Allegedly we should 'service' rigid forks annually... this really surprised me, everybody I rode with at the time (many on rigid SS) and all the road guys I've ever ridden with. I think a few nervous checks were performed by all afterwards. ๐Ÿ˜‰

my next purchase after the snap was some ti forks. ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 25/01/2013 12:03 pm
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[url= http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8502/8414064900_e957b9480f.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8502/8414064900_e957b9480f.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/90489422@N06/8414064900/ ]Broken shivers[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/90489422@N06/ ]Alpine160[/url], on Flickr

Old Shivers on friends bike a few years ago.
Cwn carn downhill track. Last run of the day. On the section where there are 3 steps a bit after the tunnel.


 
Posted : 25/01/2013 1:11 pm
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