Originally posted by laxincubus311 i have the 1.5 one on my turner and it feel somewhat rough when i turn the fork. im pretty sure i put it together right, any ideas?
I have ridden several cane creek 1.5s and they all had 'notchy' feeling bearings. If you can't figure the problem out, it might just be worth gettin a new headset, like the pig.
Originally posted by The Kadvang I have ridden several cane creek 1.5s and they all had 'notchy' feeling bearings. If you can't figure the problem out, it might just be worth gettin a new headset, like the pig.
i dont think they make a pig for a 1.5. Ive ridden the cane creek on both of my bikes for over a year now and they felt good until recently. I think my bearings are shot now and just need to be replaced. I just recently replaced my XXC Cane Creek with the e.thirteen reducers with FSA bearings and I am loving the low stack height and the way the headset feels.
Originally posted by The Kadvang I have ridden several cane creek 1.5s and they all had 'notchy' feeling bearings. If you can't figure the problem out, it might just be worth gettin a new headset, like the pig.
The bearings on mine definitly do not feel notchy, so they're not all like that. Seems silly to get a new headset when plenty of people are running them with no problem.
My guess is setup issue, as mentioned above, probably preloading the bearings too much.
Originally posted by The Kadvang I have ridden several cane creek 1.5s and they all had 'notchy' feeling bearings. If you can't figure the problem out, it might just be worth gettin a new headset, like the pig.
Do a search.. it's been the target of pages of discussion.
In a nut shell, the reducer cups press directly into the headtube, and the integrated/zero stack bearings press into the reducer cups. The "headset" (that is, the normal headset cup) doesn't press into the reducers, just the bearings.
edit: It's $50 for the cups, plus about $25 for bearings, or more depending on which bearings you buy, so it's more expensive than a cheap headset (like an FSA Pig), but about the same price as a mid range headset. Considering the general quality of E.13's stuff, I think you get a pretty high quality headset for the price.
Originally posted by binary visions Do a search.. it's been the target of pages of discussion.
In a nut shell, the reducer cups press directly into the headtube, and the integrated/zero stack bearings press into the reducer cups. The "headset" (that is, the normal headset cup) doesn't press into the reducers, just the bearings.
edit: It's $50 for the cups, plus about $25 for bearings, or more depending on which bearings you buy, so it's more expensive than a cheap headset (like an FSA Pig), but about the same price as a mid range headset. Considering the general quality of E.13's stuff, I think you get a pretty high quality headset for the price.
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