Forum menu
Where to get top qu...
 

[Closed] Where to get top quality hex type bolts.

 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I'm sick of expensive bikes being cheapened by rounded off heads.

Just a selection for bottle cages and stems etc.

And I do use a torque wrench!


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:05 am
Posts: 52609
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Better bits for the torque wrench.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:08 am
Posts: 2254
Full Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Rusty bolts a prob here.....


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:26 am
Posts: 12315
Full Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I've bought small volumes of e-bay before. If you search for cap head hex bolts, (but you actually want set screws as bolts have an unthreaded shank, but that tends to be longer ones than you'll need for a bike) and make sure they specify A2 grade or even better A4 they'll be decent enough.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:27 am
Posts: 1283
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

http://www.westfieldfasteners.co.uk/


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:29 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I usually just get ‘em off eBay.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 9:34 am
Posts: 11637
Full Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

[url= https://www.pro-bolt.com ]Pro-Bolt[/url]


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 12:09 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I've used this kit below for stems and brakes etc. I purposely tried to round one off as a test and couldn't.

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/215-PIECE-HIGH-TENSILE-M3-M4-M5-M6-SOCKET-CAPS-KIT-SELF-COLOUR-HIGH-TENSILE-HT-/191053969921?hash=item2c7bb43a01

I think they do a mushroom-head set as well.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 12:10 pm
Posts: 467
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

If you're replacing you may as well put stainless one. There is a potential issue with tensile strength, but for accessories such as bottle cages, racks, derailleurs, bar mounted accessories etc it is not significant. I'm not even sure that else where on a bike the difference in tensile strength would be an issue.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 1:01 pm
Posts: 33
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Halfords stainless steel.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 1:03 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Better bits for the torque wrench

I just got some teng bits. Bolts are soft though.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 3:02 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I've used this kit below for stems and brakes etc. I purposely tried to round one off as a test and couldn't.

That looks a good shout.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 3:04 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Halfords stainless steel.

That looks interesting.

I went into Halfords and couldn't find any. Are they web only?


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 3:05 pm
Posts: 6480
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

[url= http://www.blacksocketcaps.com ]http://www.blacksocketcaps.com[/url]


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 3:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Stainless will rust in this type of use on a bike. Look up crevasse corrosion, it's a problem anywhere stainless is starved of oxygen. Better off with aluminium or ti for the bike.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 4:41 pm
Posts: 16383
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Stainless is theoretically harder but the cheap stuff on eBay rounds pretty easily, especially in small sizes. If you want properly strong then anything with a rating (eg 8.8 or 10.9) will be pretty decent. Also ditch the torque wrench and learn to do it by feel but that may be too controversial.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 4:47 pm
Posts: 8527
Free Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Stainless will rust in this type of use on a bike. Look up crevasse corrosion, it's a problem anywhere stainless is starved of oxygen. Better off with aluminium or ti for the bike

Crevice corrosion usually happens with gaps that have stagnant moisture, not generally stainless. Think you're thinking of galvanic corrosion, where two dissimilar metals are in contact.

As said before, decent quality bits, and also appropriate lube/threadlock on threads will do the trick.


 
Posted : 24/09/2017 4:57 pm