Jack or assorted bits of wood to hold the front off the ground once you've loosened the bolts a bit.
Allen key for the axle pinch bolt on the r/h fork leg.
Spanners, preferably the ring type for the brake caliper fixings and the axle bolt. Actually, a 6-point socket would be best for the brake bolts as the heads are made from brie.
I think 'lugs' is the preferred term, rather than 'dogs', or the 'sticky out things' if you want to get technical :lol
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
(02-03-13, 09:58 AM)Enceladus link Wrote: thanks
greasing the axle sounds like a plan.
regular grease or a bit of copper ?
You should consider getting yourself a torque wrench if you're gonna work on the bike yourself, because it's very easy to under/over-tighten bolts which can cause thread problems. I'd say it's more common to over-tighten stuff, which is why you get people on here with rounded allen key heads, or snapped bolts.
You'd be amazed how little force is needed for correctly tightening things up.
You really should use a heavy lithium based grease for the spindle, or what's more commonly known as 'axle grease' funnily enough!
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
Something like Castrol multi purpose grease will do fine. A light coating will be sufficient as it is only to stop it seizing in position.
(02-03-13, 10:41 AM)Enceladus link Wrote: thanks
got a torque wrench and plenty of grease as i used to live on a farm!
only tend to use the torque wrench as a guide though as most are poorly calibrated, even the expensive ones!
Probably not as poorly calibrated as some peoples strength when tightening stuff up!
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.