Comment by decatur
4 days ago
Now we need a tutorial how to take the pedals off the bike. So you do not damage the crank because of the opposite threading left vs right.
4 days ago
Now we need a tutorial how to take the pedals off the bike. So you do not damage the crank because of the opposite threading left vs right.
My mom bent a lug wrench trying to change a flat on my grandmother's car; apparently the nuts were reverse threaded on one side of the car.
That is definitely something to watch out for with cars from the 50s to early 70s. Often the studs will just snap and not bend the wrench though, which is fine since it is better to just replace them with right hand threaded studs.
I believe the idea back in the day was so lug nuts would want to screw themselves tighter if they were loose whenever you braked as a safety feature so the wheels don't fall off. In practice it isn't really effective at unless you are doing some crazy hard braking like in a race but they should never be anywhere near loose enough to start with for such a minor force to screw or unscrew them. Your wheels aren't really suppose to be holding you up through the shear force across the studs, but held by the clamping force friction between the wheel and the wheel hub.
Back off
Tutorial complete. You just have to keep those two words in mind.
That terminology might not be clear to a non-expert.
If your wrench/spanner is pointed straight up to the sky like a clock hand at 12, rotate towards the back wheel to loosen, and towards the front wheel to tighten. Important! When you put the pedals back on and rotating toward the front wheel isn't working, you've grabbed the wrong pedal. Use the other one.