[CR]Re: Frozen seat post

(Example: Production Builders:Peugeot:PY-10)

In-reply-to: <OFA9217131.0B3C6EE4-ON8025749E.0059B5FE-8025749E.005BDB84@gsk.com>
References:
From: "Julie Cleveland" <juliecleveland@mac.com>
Date: Thu, 07 Aug 2008 15:17:41 -0400
To: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
cc: david.r.stacey@gsk.com
Subject: [CR]Re: Frozen seat post

Dear David: re seat post It's alloy, according to the specs I found online for this bike.

Does that mean I am stuck with a bike in which I can't lower the seat? That stinks! (I didn't of course think to ask these questions, stuff that seemed pretty obvious, when corresponding with the guy I bought the bike from on ebay).

I also don't have any of these chemicals, or a workshop, i'm just a pianist with a bike she wants to ride!

Thinking after getting all these replies maybe I gotta not "do it myself" and bring it back to the shop.

is this list for bike shop owners? I don't have any of the stuff people are mentioning, I'm just a humble, know-nothing newbie OTS rider, hope that's ok.

--Julie
On Aug 7, 2008, at 12:43 PM, david.r.stacey@gsk.com wrote:


>

>

> Dear Julie,

>

> Oh dear. This is a problem that often kills an old bike. Have a

> look on Sheldon Browns website for full details, but basically If

> you have a steel seat post, keep up the WD40 remove the seat bolt

> completely, use a screwdriver to gently open the frame and get a

> gorilla to twist the seat tube free.

>

> If however it is an alloy seat post, then the thermite reation has

> occured and the aluminium has reacted and fused together with the

> steel of the frame. It can be cut out, carefully, rolled up and

> pulled out, though I have never found this works. I have heard of

> someone using a threaded bolt as a puller braced against the frame

> and winding the seat tube out, this is gentler.

>

> The last straw is to use 5M sodium hydroxide solution (caustic

> soda). This will dissolve the aluminium alloy, but not the steel.

> It also, if you are sloppy strips the paint off your frame and

> dissolves skin and eyes (and dissolve rims and cranksets), but if

> you are careful (or a chemist like me) it works where all else has

> failed. You have to plug the base of the seat tube with clay or blu

> tack and fill with sodium hydroxide solution 40g/200ml leave it

> 24hours, flush it out with water and repeat until the metal is

> paper thin and can be removed.

>

> All this is quite extreme and I would ask around for some help with

> this if you are not familiar with using chemicals. Please be

> careful and remember, if you want to put the tube down and it is a

> plain tube type, ask an engineer to cut it shorter and reshape the

> top (I've done that the other way round for a longer tube). A good

> engineer can also drill/ream out an old seat post, but he'd have to

> be a good one.

>

> Good luck and be careful!

>

> Regards

> David Stacey

> County Durham, UK

>

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