there is a crown and steerer tube in the way. It's not going in vice.I’d use a dremel to cut it back to flat edges. Then I’d clamp it in the vice and slowly turn the fork until it’s loose enough to turn out.
1
there is a crown and steerer tube in the way. It's not going in vice.
before you try anything, make sure there is no pressure in the fork. granted the valve is mullered but hopefully you can get a pin down to release the pressure. once there is no pressure in the fork it will be easier to turn.
The fork will fight against you, you really need to clamp it across the crown, but that isn't easy. if you can, clamp it on the steerer (wrap it in something to stop it being damage by the vice), with the offending cap accessible. take a chisel (not a woodwork chisel, a big ass screw driver would do), hit it in line with the cap (if the fork was vertical I'd say straight down) to make a divit, then angle it over in the direction of the thread (leftie loosie) and give it a few good hits, hopefully it will start to turn. there's an o ring in there that will keep some pressure on the thread and make it turn harder.
theres enough meat there that you can do this well away from the crown. I suspect you'll have to do this a few times to get it off.
SRAM list the tightening torque as 12.5Nm, so it shouldn't be crazy tight, but who knows when it looks like that.
remember, nothing too sharp as it will just cut the aluminium instead of biting in to it and turning it.
1
there is a crown and steerer tube in the way. It's not going in vice.
before you try anything, make sure there is no pressure in the fork. granted the valve is mullered but hopefully you can get a pin down to release the pressure. once there is no pressure in the fork it will be easier to turn.
The fork will fight against you, you really need to clamp it across the crown, but that isn't easy. if you can, clamp it on the steerer (wrap it in something to stop it being damage by the vice), with the offending cap accessible. take a chisel (not a woodwork chisel, a big ass screw driver would do), hit it in line with the cap (if the fork was vertical I'd say straight down) to make a divit, then angle it over in the direction of the thread (leftie loosie) and give it a few good hits, hopefully it will start to turn. there's an o ring in there that will keep some pressure on the thread and make it turn harder.
theres enough meat there that you can do this well away from the crown. I suspect you'll have to do this a few times to get it off.
SRAM list the tightening torque as 12.5Nm, so it shouldn't be crazy tight, but who knows when it looks like that.
remember, nothing too sharp as it will just cut the aluminium instead of biting in to it and turning it.
I use the vice for far more than the average personAnd here the seed was sown for the 'bike parts in vices' thread!![]()