Chain installation
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Chain installation
Can anyone tell me how I would go about putting a cahin together without a chain tool?
Its not a clip linked one just the rivets.
Its a 530 DID chain by the way
Thank guys
Its not a clip linked one just the rivets.
Its a 530 DID chain by the way
Thank guys
Matt
- ty
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AFAIK you can't.
If you have a rivetted chain you need a chain tool to press the link.
I'm sure one of the bush mechanics he'll will respond if i'm wrong though
ty
If you have a rivetted chain you need a chain tool to press the link.
I'm sure one of the bush mechanics he'll will respond if i'm wrong though

ty
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Never argue with an idiot. He'll drag you down to his level, then beat you with experience.
Never argue with an idiot. He'll drag you down to his level, then beat you with experience.
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the chain tool is the way to goty wrote:AFAIK you can't.
If you have a rivetted chain you need a chain tool to press the link.
I'm sure one of the bush mechanics he'll will respond if i'm wrong though
ty
but it can be done without it....
your really need 2 people
a cupla sets of Multigrips or pliers to squeeze the rivet joint together
and also to squeeze the link pin thru
and some engineers hammers (a small and large one)
to pein the link over....
while the joint is held in place
and
you will only do all of that in an emergency
expect blood loss as well

cheers
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Mmm you could visit the bike shop and ask for a 'loan' of their 'link presser togetherer thingy' or do it your self!
As stated above expect blood loss and purple to black finger tips. You can use above tools as mentioned above to hold the link tight in place and round the edges off with a hammer. Some joining links have a small hole on two of the connecting pins. This is so that it can be round off to hold the plate against the 'O' rings and to keep the chain on.
Problem here is that you have to have the second person brace the chain from the other side to stop it from bouncing away from you when you round off the pins. A piece of timber pushed from the other side is good to hold it but the pliers/multi grips get in the way..........very difficult! Down side is that if you miss you could end up putting some nice dimple marks on the swingarm.
Not good.
If you want to do it a home join the links up and rotate the rear wheel so the joining link is about
3 oclock on the rear sprocket. A piece of decking timber placed down behind the link so it sits tight in the groove were the cush drive is and pull towards yourself to bring pressure against the link and the sprocket. (Saying this you can clamp the link with a tool and then use the timber to 'brace' each hit).
Remember you are only rounding off the head of the pins to get the 'O' rings to seal and to make sure the plate dosn't pop off. A chain pulls in 2 directions, forwards and backwards. Not sideways.
A punch with a small rounded head to sit in the small holes to mushroom the pins is the best way then finish with the ball hammer. Slowly making sure you have completly rounded off both heads.
At no time at all is beer to be consumed proir or while this takes place.
"wow that link went on easy, a bit tight but we got er on mate"......."man the beer tastes cold, want another"
" um, hey did you get spare 'O'rings with the chain"
NNNoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
snr
As stated above expect blood loss and purple to black finger tips. You can use above tools as mentioned above to hold the link tight in place and round the edges off with a hammer. Some joining links have a small hole on two of the connecting pins. This is so that it can be round off to hold the plate against the 'O' rings and to keep the chain on.
Problem here is that you have to have the second person brace the chain from the other side to stop it from bouncing away from you when you round off the pins. A piece of timber pushed from the other side is good to hold it but the pliers/multi grips get in the way..........very difficult! Down side is that if you miss you could end up putting some nice dimple marks on the swingarm.
Not good.
If you want to do it a home join the links up and rotate the rear wheel so the joining link is about
3 oclock on the rear sprocket. A piece of decking timber placed down behind the link so it sits tight in the groove were the cush drive is and pull towards yourself to bring pressure against the link and the sprocket. (Saying this you can clamp the link with a tool and then use the timber to 'brace' each hit).
Remember you are only rounding off the head of the pins to get the 'O' rings to seal and to make sure the plate dosn't pop off. A chain pulls in 2 directions, forwards and backwards. Not sideways.
A punch with a small rounded head to sit in the small holes to mushroom the pins is the best way then finish with the ball hammer. Slowly making sure you have completly rounded off both heads.
At no time at all is beer to be consumed proir or while this takes place.
"wow that link went on easy, a bit tight but we got er on mate"......."man the beer tastes cold, want another"
" um, hey did you get spare 'O'rings with the chain"
NNNoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
snr
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Is that with the back wheel off..........don't think the chain twists that much hit it on a flat surface. Can do that if you have the swing arm off!
snr
At a loss, please explain!mrmina wrote:mate on the chain pin there should be a mushroom end and a normal round end.
1. insert pin.
2. place mushroom end down on a hard surface.
3. Use a punch set to flat the other end. Note: not too rough
4. File the punched to make it look neat.

snr
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Worked for me when I was in a pinch just before the island. Got the link in a good spot on the rear sprocket, then used a g clamp with a hollow boot to squeeze the outer plate on. Then found an old punch to mushroom the pins, and kept grinding the punch down to get a bigger face to open the hole.SNR wrote: If you want to do it a home join the links up and rotate the rear wheel so the joining link is about
3 oclock on the rear sprocket. A piece of decking timber placed down behind the link so it sits tight in the groove were the cush drive is and pull towards yourself to bring pressure against the link and the sprocket. (Saying this you can clamp the link with a tool and then use the timber to 'brace' each hit).
A punch with a small rounded head to sit in the small holes to mushroom the pins is the best way then finish with the ball hammer. Slowly making sure you have completly rounded off both heads.
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ok guys got the chain together... used a blocksplitter and a hammer...
blocksplitter to brace the chain against then hit it with the hammer till the pins popped out then banged em flat... the look like all the other rivets so cant be too bad i guess..
now that its mobile again for some reason the top of the brak pad rubs more than the bottom and makes a griniding noise like you'd expect from the pad rubbing the disc... dont know why...
any chance the pad will wear into the new position and will be fine?
blocksplitter to brace the chain against then hit it with the hammer till the pins popped out then banged em flat... the look like all the other rivets so cant be too bad i guess..
now that its mobile again for some reason the top of the brak pad rubs more than the bottom and makes a griniding noise like you'd expect from the pad rubbing the disc... dont know why...
any chance the pad will wear into the new position and will be fine?
Matt
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plenty *good
* advice out there about chains .......
a small G-clamp is the safest and easiest bet to squeeze the outer plate back on.....
but as you have it sussed now, thats good.
Uneven pad wear like that suggests to me that either
(a) your rear wheel is out of alignment ( maybe too much pressure with the block splitter ??
) or
(b) - pistons jamming in caliper ??
the grinding noise is probably the inside of the caliper wearing away on the disc ( how do I know this
well, its a long story
)
Don't rely on the pad wearing *in*, if it is sitting in the wrong position it will just wear out quicker - either pull it all apart yourself and fix, or take it to the shop.....
Good Luck


but as you have it sussed now, thats good.
Uneven pad wear like that suggests to me that either
(a) your rear wheel is out of alignment ( maybe too much pressure with the block splitter ??

(b) - pistons jamming in caliper ??
the grinding noise is probably the inside of the caliper wearing away on the disc ( how do I know this


Don't rely on the pad wearing *in*, if it is sitting in the wrong position it will just wear out quicker - either pull it all apart yourself and fix, or take it to the shop.....
Good Luck

".....shut the gate on this one Maxie......it's the ducks guts !!............."