Robbied196
Senior Retro Guru
Re:
I saw your latest post and was hoping I was going to read that you'd got it out, but it sounds well and truely seized I've cut out a few seat posts and a couple of stems and it always works and with no stress to the frame or paint damage.
You can probably calculate how much of the stem is inside the steerer tube so you can gauge how much you'd have to cut. It is a slow job, but usually one cut and a squueze in a vice will release them. If you are especially unlucky you'd need to cuts a few mm aparts and knock out the cut piece. Then squeeze in a vice.
I must admit I've never tried to cut an aluminium stem from an alumiunium steerer, although I did have a Mk1 979 and I'm fairly sure it was a steel steerer.
I posted this on the CTC forum if it helps:
http://forum.ctc.org.uk/viewtopic.php?f ... ts#p539358
Good luck
I saw your latest post and was hoping I was going to read that you'd got it out, but it sounds well and truely seized I've cut out a few seat posts and a couple of stems and it always works and with no stress to the frame or paint damage.
You can probably calculate how much of the stem is inside the steerer tube so you can gauge how much you'd have to cut. It is a slow job, but usually one cut and a squueze in a vice will release them. If you are especially unlucky you'd need to cuts a few mm aparts and knock out the cut piece. Then squeeze in a vice.
I must admit I've never tried to cut an aluminium stem from an alumiunium steerer, although I did have a Mk1 979 and I'm fairly sure it was a steel steerer.
I posted this on the CTC forum if it helps:
http://forum.ctc.org.uk/viewtopic.php?f ... ts#p539358
Good luck