Torque talk…bolting and tools this time, not performance
Posted: Wed Jun 24, 2015 3:49 pm
The other day I fitted bar risers to one of my bikes.
Being the good boy I am
, especially at following instructions
, this time I used the torque wrench due to the alloys involved.
When removing the manufacturer installed bolts, I used the torque wrench (set at the figure supplied for the new bolting), and just as I was applying the farce the existing bolt moved.
“that was not as tight as I expected†went thru my mind…then the other three bolts moved with similar effort, all before the wrench clicked.
When fitting the new bolting, screwing in to finger tight, then nipped up before applying the final farce, the wrench clicked just slightly above the effort required for undoing, but not much.
Then I got to thinking about last year when fitting a bike rack to the tow bar of a car, again I was a good boy and followed guidance by using the torque wrench at the specified setting, and again it clicked far too easily.
But that time I disregarded the torque wrench and got the big bar out and put in the “proper†farce. That was when I had spare bolts, and the farce was going onto a nut, not a machined component.
Recently I read that some of the bolting on my bike are “one use aluminium boltsâ€â€¦another good reason to do a bit of research and read instructions.
Tip from this post…follow the instructions supplied when tightening up fixings
Being the good boy I am


When removing the manufacturer installed bolts, I used the torque wrench (set at the figure supplied for the new bolting), and just as I was applying the farce the existing bolt moved.
“that was not as tight as I expected†went thru my mind…then the other three bolts moved with similar effort, all before the wrench clicked.
When fitting the new bolting, screwing in to finger tight, then nipped up before applying the final farce, the wrench clicked just slightly above the effort required for undoing, but not much.
Then I got to thinking about last year when fitting a bike rack to the tow bar of a car, again I was a good boy and followed guidance by using the torque wrench at the specified setting, and again it clicked far too easily.
But that time I disregarded the torque wrench and got the big bar out and put in the “proper†farce. That was when I had spare bolts, and the farce was going onto a nut, not a machined component.
Recently I read that some of the bolting on my bike are “one use aluminium boltsâ€â€¦another good reason to do a bit of research and read instructions.
Tip from this post…follow the instructions supplied when tightening up fixings