Well, he did say "STI set" (i.e. combined brake/shift lever set) not "shift lever" or "Rapidfire trigger set" etc. Taking that at face value, the only obvious "mounting bolt" (singular) is the large one that attaches the unit to the handlebar. Still, he'll know whether or not my reply was any use to him. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't.IbocProSX":p0scnovj said:Martin has not confirmed which unit we're talking about.
Those Rapidfire units use a standard M6 mounting bolt, as shown in the Shimano tech documents.In the for sale section is the picture below
Well, you might be right. I don't own any 952 STI units any more, but my memory is that they used the same M8 fine thread clamp bolt as the M950 brake lever. Certainly, the 950 and 951 units do, as does the 960. Still, without one here to measure I can't confirm, but Martin will be able to figure out which is correct, I'm sure. If an M6 is obviously too small, it must be M8.and FWIW I don't think the M6 is a typo.
one-eyed_jim":7997d3jf said:I'm pretty sure it's an M8 fine thread bolt, the same as on the M950 brake lever.
http://www.paul-lange.de/produkte/shima ... L-M950.pdf
the ST-M952 pdf at the Paul Lange site shows an M6 bolt, but I think that's a typo.
http://www.paul-lange.de/produkte/shima ... T-M952.pdf
In that case, M8 x 1mm. It's the same thread as a standard chainring bolt. Some granny ring bolts are just about long enough to work as replacements for the pukka XTR item.Martin":3ry95rcr said:Thanks I meant the one of the second thread, nr 11
Feast your eyes!(how do you all people own that kind of sheets...)
You see, to a pedant like me, there are brake levers with BL part numbers, shift levers with SL part numbers, and integrated (STI - Shimano Total Integration) levers with ST part numbers. If it isn't integrated, it isn't STI.IbocProSX":2gsnbddy said:I dug out my Sti (without the brake levers)