Mark,
I am correct in thinking that you picked up these cranks used?  and if you 
have a 113 bb spindle, new or in good shape, can you put the arms on said 
spindle out of the bike, so that the arms are across from each other, and 
torque down to spec of 30 ft lbs?  From there it should be easy to measure 
the Q factor with a tape measure or ruler.  I am wondering if the arms had 
previously been off and on, or run loose and the tapers are slightly 
buggered.  This could cause them to run up on the spindle tapers and give 
you a false impression of fit with a specified spindle.  This still puts 
you back at a point of trial and error to get them working.

My only concern is if you are needing a bb spindle that long it means you 
quite possible are having 14.5 mm of creep split up in some portion of each 
arm.  I am guessing these have the self extracting bolts, and yo may not be 
seeing how close these are to having the bolt bottom out on the spindle 
end.  You may get these to work on a longer spindle, but is the tapers are 
that far out of spec you may honestly want to start thinking about safety 
of use.  

That all said, even with the math WI recommends, a 36 inner ring is pretty 
big and may be a portion of the multi faceted problem.  First thing I would 
do is confirm Q on a known accurate spindle, and make sure you are remotely 
within tolerance.  From there if you want to use the cranks you will also 
have a new baseline for you calculations on where it all sits in space.

Another thing to consider is the differences between spindles.  I have 
installed the VBC on WI, SKF, Shimano and IRD 113 bottom brackets.  They 
are all close, but there is still a bit over a mm in spread of where the 
chain line ends up.  That said, once the chain is on and you are rolling it 
is all about the same.

Rob
(the only thing worse than professional liability for answering questions, 
is answering questions about used parts and stuff you talk about on the 
internet ;-) )
Ventura, Ca


On Thursday, May 22, 2014 2:50:59 PM UTC-7, Mark Reimer wrote:
>
> Realized after posting that you likely were referring to the 46/36 chain 
> ring sizes as being a road double, not the actual crank arms. My mistake. 
> Ride your bike!
>
> On Thursday, May 22, 2014 4:47:57 PM UTC-5, Mark Reimer wrote:
>>
>> The ENO crank is not a road double actually, it is a mountain double 
>> crank. VBC cranks are offered in two variations - road and mountain. ENO 
>> cranks are the single speed and mountain double arms. The cranks I have are 
>> designed with wide chain stays in mind, so this should work. I always knew 
>> the Atlantis had wide stays, but after seeing a few photos of this 
>> combination online, I wasn't expecting any troubles.
>>
>> The only reason this is getting complicated is because the instructions 
>> provided by White Industries themselves generated a BB length that simply 
>> made no sense - well over 140mm.
>>
>> So in some ways, I agree - my first step was to use the 
>> manufacturer-provided guidelines for calculating bottom brackets. This 
>> generated questionable results, so that lead me to option two: ask the 
>> owners group if anyone is running the same combination and can share their 
>> BB length. Since that didn't turn anything up either, I asked the 
>> manufacturer if I was using their formula correctly. And then, like you 
>> suggested, I'm on to option 3 - go to a shop, and trial and error. 
>>
>> I am well aware that bike shops charge for labour by the hour and it's a 
>> valuable service. I spend a significant amount of my money employing my 
>> local shops for this exact service, so there is no need to preach the value 
>> of paying skilled craftspeople to me. I am part of the choir. The reason 
>> why this thread has rambled on is that there never should have been a need 
>> to employ any skilled mechanic, much less go into a trail and error mode 
>> and waste money buying a bunch of cheap bottom brackets as a means of 
>> finding the right length, because calculating BB length is easy with some 
>> simple math. I've done it for all my bikes for over a decade. I pay my bike 
>> shop to do things I can't do, and order components locally whenever 
>> possible. I'm building the Atlantis myself because I enjoy it, not simply 
>> to save money or because I don't value skilled work. 
>>
>> I manage a graphic design studio and have the exact same understanding of 
>> the value of time as you do in architecture. That's why I came to an 
>> owner/enthusiast group first, which doesn't cost anyone anything, then 
>> contacted the manufacturer of the crank second (simply asking if I was 
>> using their published guidelines for calculations correctly) and only 
>> contacted Riv for advice after even my own local shop mechanics (who I pay) 
>> were scratching their heads. 
>>
>> Anyway, you may be glad to know I now have a pile of unused bottom 
>> brackets as well as a number of other components for the build purchased 
>> from my local shop (shop wins), some new, smaller white industries rings 
>> and BB on the way that will enable a much narrower BB (White Ind wins), 
>> already had ordered a number of the components for the Atlantis from 
>> Rivendell directly (Riv wins), and will soon be spending my time riding 
>> blissfully into the sunset instead of justifying my query here (we both 
>> win!)
>>
>> Problem solved, now lets go ride some bikes. 
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, May 22, 2014 4:04:37 PM UTC-5, bicyc...@gmail.com wrote:
>>>
>>> This is being over complicated. You are trying to equip a road double, 
>>> with way too high of an inner ring, on a bike with 60mm tire clearances. 
>>> You will need a crazy wide bb to do so. 125 isn't very long, old mountain 
>>> bikes with high profile cranks used them (early 80s mb-1s among them).
>>>
>>> The solution to bottom bracket issues is to, a) search for an answer b) 
>>> try out combinations. A bike shop, in which you pay for hourly rates of 
>>> labor, will have a variety of these bb lengths to try in order to find the 
>>> correct length for the application. If you are doing your own work, in 
>>> order to save money, don't expect that the answer will be there or that 
>>> paid craftspeople will be able to help you without you taking your bike 
>>> into a shop and allowing them to swap combinations (and hopefully, paying 
>>> for that work). This is part of the craft of the mechanic work you elected 
>>> to avoid by doing it yourself. DIY is often more expensive, when starting 
>>> out. 
>>>
>>> In architecture, we charge to answer requests for information from the 
>>> contractor, because it takes a lot of time (imagine answering the phone on 
>>> the thousands of custom setups that go out the door of shops like riv, 
>>> that's a lot of hours). I wonder what an RFI system would mean for shops, 
>>> but I digress.
>>>
>>> So, since your custom build means a) didn't work, you've finally arrived 
>>> at b) which was the place to probably start in the first place as all hand 
>>> made frames are slightly different. You will likely find that 36x48 works 
>>> ok with a 125mm bb, but that your chainline is pretty bad. This is why wide 
>>> range doubles, not road doubles, are what riv recommends and what the bikes 
>>> are designed around. Instead of returning those bottom brackets, keep them 
>>> for the next time you or your friends need to try out combinations. Super 
>>> cheap bb's make the world go round, and are used on all of my bicycles, 
>>> since this is a constant question for people who tweak their setups. Next 
>>> time, if you don't know, just go with a crank that is recommended or 
>>> prepare yourself for similar headaches.
>>>
>>> Not trying to run on about this, but at a certain point the answers are 
>>> only to be found in practice. Custom parts on custom builds = custom 
>>> headaches.
>>>
>>> Put on the 127.5 and ride your bike, it's working and you're on your 
>>> way. When you wear out those rings, drop down your sizing and put on a 
>>> smaller bb, or get a low profile triple if the 46 is important, or get a 30 
>>> if the 46 is important, or or or ad infinitum.
>>>
>>> e
>>>
>>

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