Hey thanks. I will pick up some grease and give it a go.
K
On Oct 3, 11:42 pm, Ian Dickson wrote:
> I would take Ryan's advice and overhaul the pedals. Several times
> I've had MKS pedals start clicking on me after not too many miles.
> Your own grease/adjustment job will last a lot longer tha
Great article about this on EcoVelo not too long ago
http://www.ecovelo.info/2010/05/27/click-click-click/
And the link referenced with the blow by blow of how to do it,
different kind of MKS pedal but I think the process would be roughly
the same for your sneakers
http://stankertanker.blogspot.co
I would take Ryan's advice and overhaul the pedals. Several times
I've had MKS pedals start clicking on me after not too many miles.
Your own grease/adjustment job will last a lot longer than the factory
job. Also, it's an easy, low-risk maintenance project that's worth
doing just to know how.
D
Okay. Great thanks. I will check and see if I can tighten the pedal
and if that helps...If not I will give greasing the bearings a go.
How much grease do you put in there ?
Keely
On Oct 3, 9:12 pm, Philip Williamson
wrote:
> Buy some grease. Get into the pedal and put a lot of grease on the
Buy some grease. Get into the pedal and put a lot of grease on the
bearings. Put it back together. There's a little bit of a learning
curve on 'how tight is too tight,' but if you go 'hey, that's too
tight,' just back it off a bit.
Fai Mao is correct, though - clicking usually indicates looseness.
I would wait till they sober up a bit before feeding them anything.
You give em a good spin while sideways, you could end up cleaning puke
off your shoes.
Seriously, I had some sneaks and greased them new from someones
recommendation. They were quiet for some time, but after a wet ride
started squ