Seatpost sizes!

cellleader

Old School Hero
Imagine this - you buy a new 26.8mm seatpost for your frame which takes a 26.8 seatpost but it only goes in about 3 inches and no more despite grease of the slippery and elbow kinds. What is going on - I've measured it with a micrometer and everything checks out - I'm stumped - help :?
 
Corrosion in the frame further down? Seat tube not properly reamed? Major misalignment in the seat tube?

Any marks on the 'post from your attempts at insertion?
 
The only marks are on the back of the post - I prevented any more from appearing by opening out the slot in the frame. I think maybe your corrosion idea is the most possible corduroyboy - any idea what to do?
 
Get an old, much narrower seatpost or any other appropriately siazed tube, wrap some not-too-fine sandpaper around it (sand side out!) and work it round the inside of the seat tube - if there is any corrosion (or build up of crap) then the sandpaper should remove it. Hope this helps!
 
what seatpost & frame is it? I had 1 of the last US made yeti arcs around 05 & the RF XY post just wouldnt fit. measuring the post with verniers the paint massively changed in thickness. sanded the post & all was well (sold the arc a year later, lovely frame, just dented too easily)
 
It's an old peugeot black mamba - steel (531) - for winter commuting. Trying to squeeze in a tioga t-bone 26.8. Verniered the inside of the seat tube giving 26.8! Maybe a 26.6 is the way to go?
 
cellleader":18qgpif6 said:
It's an old peugeot black mamba - steel (531) - for winter commuting. Trying to squeeze in a tioga t-bone 26.8. Verniered the inside of the seat tube giving 26.8! Maybe a 26.6 is the way to go?

I'd try it before I forced the 26.8 or tried to somehow make the 26.8 fit. The 26.6 will only slip around a bit if it's wrong, no harm done, then you can make the 26.8 work if you need to step back up to it.
 
you cannot measure a bore with a vernier caliper! you need to use a bore gauge,a completely different instrument.the top of a seattube will be squashed in,the only bit you can try and measure with a vernier.where the seattube meets the top tube is the true size,this is why you need a bore gauge to reach further in.

Diatest_BoreGage.jpg
 
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