I think folks are putting single speed freewheels on hubs designed for 
multi-speed freewheels, then having difficult getting the tool over the 
axle.
David
Chicago

On Wednesday, November 18, 2015 at 1:15:29 PM UTC-6, Mark Reimer wrote:
>
> I'm a bit confused - I have two sets of Phil single speed hubs, both with 
> white industries freewheels on them, and I've used a plain ol Shimano BMW 
> freewheel remover to get them off. I remove the axle bolt, put the tool on, 
> and then thread the axle bolt back in to keep the tool engaged and not 
> slip. Works with hubs spaced 120 and 130. Is this the same situation? 
>
> On Tuesday, November 17, 2015 at 8:23:43 PM UTC-6, George Schick wrote:
>>
>> Curiosity got the best of me so I went down to the shop to take some 
>> actual measurements.  The opening on the FR-6 is 15.29mm; the PW axle cap 
>> diameter is 18.87mm.  So milling out the tool to about 19mm may not involve 
>> removing as critical an amount of material as I feared.  I think I might go 
>> after this solution.  BTW, from what little I know about machinist work, 
>> I'm thinking this would probably get done with a vertical milling machine, 
>> not a lathe.
>>
>> Thanks all for your suggestions.
>>
>> On Tuesday, November 17, 2015 at 8:07:05 PM UTC-6, George Schick wrote:
>>>
>>> Will - your advice is exactly how i do it.  Then, since the axle cap 
>>> can't be reinstalled with the BMX tool in there, I shore it up with a 
>>> couple of fender washers to support it on the DS.  I have also thought 
>>> about your suggestion to bore out the hole on the FR-6 tool to fit over the 
>>> axle cap (I have a machinist friend with the lathe), but I fear that it may 
>>> leave the remaining metal too thin to withstand the torque involved in 
>>> removing the freewheel.  Might be worth a shot sometime, though.  They're 
>>> not that expensive a tool…
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, November 17, 2015 at 7:57:18 PM UTC-6, William deRosset 
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Dear George,
>>>>
>>>> Can you pull the DS and leave the NDS (my non-track end-cap-swappable 
>>>> Phil hubs are in VT these days, or I'd check) in place to locate the QR? 
>>>> All the QR needs is to provide some preload to hold the splines 
>>>> prongs/splines in place until the freewheel shifts a bit. Alternatively, 
>>>> you could throw your freewheel remover on the lathe and bore it out a 
>>>> bit....
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>>
>>>> Will
>>>> William M. deRosset
>>>> Fort Collins, CO
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, November 17, 2015 at 5:32:08 PM UTC-7, George Schick wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Anyone out there know of a "BMX" freewheel removal tool that will work 
>>>>> well with a Phil Hub?  Unfortunately, the center hole on a commonly used 
>>>>> tool, like the Park FR-6, is not large enough to slip over the 
>>>>> larger-than-normal axle caps of the Phil hub.  This means that the axle 
>>>>> cap 
>>>>> on the drive side must first be removed, which is not only an extra PITA, 
>>>>> but then the removal tool has to sit against the notches on the freewheel 
>>>>> without benefit of the QR skewer to hold it in place, risking the 
>>>>> stripping 
>>>>> of the FW notches in the process.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>

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