When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: direction to remove bike pedals

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bicycle tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_tools

    A chain tool or chain splitter is used to 'break' a chain, in order to remove it from a bike or remove links, or to put a chain back together. A crank extractor is used to pull the crank off the bottom bracket spindle. A pedal wrench removes the pedals from the bicycle. It is also usually possible to use a common spanner in the correct size for ...

  3. Bicycle pedal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_pedal

    Simple platform bicycle pedal. The pedal is the part of a bicycle that the rider pushes with their foot to propel the vehicle. It provides the connection between the cyclist's foot or shoe and the crank allowing the leg to turn the bottom bracket spindle and propel the bicycle's wheels.

  4. Freehub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freehub

    As the bicycle rider pedals, the freewheel is continuously kept tight, as chain torque is in the right-hand direction. This becomes a problem when the freewheel needs to be removed. Having undergone high torque from leg muscles, it is difficult to loosen and remove the freewheels. A freehub, on the other hand, has cogs that slide onto an ...

  5. List of bicycle parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bicycle_parts

    Freehub: a ratcheting assembly onto which a cog or cassette is mounted that allows the bicycle to coast without the pedals turning; Freewheel: a ratcheting assembly that incorporates one or more cogs and allows the bicycle to coast without the pedals turning; Gusset: plates added to the outsides of frame tubes to strengthen joints.

  6. Freewheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freewheel

    This also explains why pushing the bicycle forward causes the pedals to rotate in the forward direction. Most bicycle freewheels use an internally step-toothed drum with two or more spring-loaded, hardened steel pawls to transmit the load. More pawls help spread the wear and give greater reliability although, unless the device is made to ...

  7. Crankset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankset

    Note that if a normal right-side-drive crankset is installed backwards to create a left-side-drive bicycle, the threaded pedal holes at the end of the crank arms would be reversed. In this configuration, precession may loosen the pedals over time, causing the pedals to become detached and/or damaging the pedal threading in the crank arms. A ...

  8. Retro-direct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retro-direct

    Only one freewheel is engaged at a time, while the other spins backward freely. Since the chain wraps around the second sprocket in the opposite direction to the first sprocket, the cyclist needs only to pedal backwards to engage it. The small amount of out-of-line required of the chain is easily accommodated.

  9. Fixed-gear bicycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed-gear_bicycle

    A fixed-gear bicycle (or fixed-wheel bicycle in British usage, [citation needed] commonly known in some places as a fixie [1]) is a bicycle that has a drivetrain with no freewheel mechanism such that the pedals always will spin together with the rear wheel. The freewheel was developed early in the history of bicycle design but the fixed-gear ...