Bilunt
Claud Butler Fan
It’s been very frustrating trying to find a set of suspension forks with 1” steerer at a price I can afford—I think I found the end of the internet the other day…
However, a lovely bloke in the U.S. has posted me a very reasonably priced, good quality crown with 1” steerer and (handily) stanchion clamps so that I can easily fit my (reasonably good quality) Suntour “bottoms” which are currently undergoing an overhaul.
Getting the stanchions out of the their original non-clamp crown was the next hurdle.
Any percussive force was immediately removed from the equation, as was pulling, pushing, twisting and my old stand-by—cursing with clenched fists directed at the offending part.
I will say at the outset that while this process doesn’t look pretty, it was undertaken with the utmost care. I spent a quarter of an hour on each stanchion, gently and gradually shaving away the crown alloy until there was less than a millimetre between the bottom of the groove I’d cut and the stanchion—at which point a couple of twists of a large bladed screwdriver split the crown leaving the stanchion to pretty-much fall out, completely uncompromised by the process.
It’s important to note that this painstaking process would have been pointless had I not found myself a crown with clamps rather than the usual press-fit.
However, a lovely bloke in the U.S. has posted me a very reasonably priced, good quality crown with 1” steerer and (handily) stanchion clamps so that I can easily fit my (reasonably good quality) Suntour “bottoms” which are currently undergoing an overhaul.
Getting the stanchions out of the their original non-clamp crown was the next hurdle.
Any percussive force was immediately removed from the equation, as was pulling, pushing, twisting and my old stand-by—cursing with clenched fists directed at the offending part.
I will say at the outset that while this process doesn’t look pretty, it was undertaken with the utmost care. I spent a quarter of an hour on each stanchion, gently and gradually shaving away the crown alloy until there was less than a millimetre between the bottom of the groove I’d cut and the stanchion—at which point a couple of twists of a large bladed screwdriver split the crown leaving the stanchion to pretty-much fall out, completely uncompromised by the process.
It’s important to note that this painstaking process would have been pointless had I not found myself a crown with clamps rather than the usual press-fit.