How do I know they’re the issue?Shimano BBs are in-expensive. No big deal to just replace them. (usually under $30)
Is there real benefit to going up in specification? As in the 800 series vs 500 series?
How do I know they’re the issue?Shimano BBs are in-expensive. No big deal to just replace them. (usually under $30)
Actually I did. It’s just a shallow scratch.Not to be a pest, but I would disassemble it again and have a very close look at that scratch/crack. it travels into the tube welds toward the rear triangle and could spell trouble.
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I’m kind of surprised that the park took wrench would be finished so rough. Maybe it’s a counterfeit?They do make aluminum sockets that won't mare up your bottom bracket like the laser cut plate version you have. Plenty of options on Amazon.
No, don't take it out. The problem is likely more related to the frames bottom bracket threads than to those on the BB itself. Consider changing it after the clicking comes back, in a year or so. And have the threads in the frame chased.I took my kids to and from swim practice tonight on our bikes. The bike was smooth and quiet, like new. So I can validate that it was something related to the greasing of the threads of the bottom bracket. They were suitably tight. And it wasn’t the crank arms.
Since I had so much trouble threading it in, does anyone thing I should proactively replace it? Not that it doesn’t spin smooth, it spins fine. But should I put a BB MT800 in there perhaps as an upgrade? Not sure that I’ll notice a spinning difference, nor the few ounces… but I’m not a fan of how the original one felt threading in…
It ain't broke, don't fix it. It will never be perfect and a higher quality BB is a waste of time & money on that kind of bike (not an insult, just a fact). Smooth and silent is good enough!I took my kids to and from swim practice tonight on our bikes. The bike was smooth and quiet, like new
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Since I had so much trouble threading it in, does anyone thing I should proactively replace it? Not that it doesn’t spin smooth, it spins fine. ...
True, the press-fit BBs seem to be more prone to this problem. Yet as this thread shows, even a threaded BB can squeak or click. And any kind of frame, threaded or press-fit, can have problems with alignment and tolerances. It's a general quality issue.... It’s the press-fit BB30/PF30/BB86/BB386/BBRight/OSBB in carbon frames that squeaked. ... The tolerances on a carbon frame vary.
True, the press-fit BBs seem to be more prone to this problem. Yet as this thread shows, even a threaded BB can squeak or click. And any kind of frame, threaded or press-fit, can have problems with alignment and tolerances. It's a general quality issue.
Conversely, neither approach, press-fit or threaded, is perfect. Both rely on proper alignment & tolerances, and both work without squeaking or clicking when done properly.
Yep, it's not always the BB. That's why in my advice back in post #7 I mentioned several common ways old bikes start to creak. They are all fixable, but you gotta make sure you are barking up the right tree.Even with an "everything is right" bike, after mileage, age, weathering, sweat, etc, bikes are prone to creaking. Headset, stem, seat post saddle clamps, are the same. Bicycles are not maintenance free.