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cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

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16 posts • Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2

cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Wed Feb 22, 2012 12:26 am

hi i have a set of alloy wheels that i want to make skiptooth but the number of teeth dont work out in my favor any ideas .PLEASE HELP......... THANK YOU :? :? the brake arm has the words falcon...sha ..cf-E 11 on it what brand is it and or can i get a skiptooth sprocket that will fit ?
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Wed Feb 22, 2012 6:55 pm

any ideas ??
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby Bendix on Wed Feb 22, 2012 9:01 pm

a Falcon coaster brake probably uses the same sprocket as KT, Shimano, etc. Buy one with an even number of teeth and grind down every other one. There are a several posts on here somewhere relating to that, it comes up fairly often... :)
Oh boy!

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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Wed Feb 22, 2012 9:32 pm

Bendix wrote:a Falcon coaster brake probably uses the same sprocket as KT, Shimano, etc. Buy one with an even number of teeth and grind down every other one. There are a several posts on here somewhere relating to that, it comes up fairly often... :)

thank you i will look in ebay for a sprocket
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cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby Critter1 on Thu Feb 23, 2012 11:54 am

If the sprocket on your hub mounts with the three tabs and a snap ring (like Shimano) then you should just buy one of these.

http://item.mobileweb.ebay.com/viewitem?itemId=330691590312
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby Bendix on Thu Feb 23, 2012 1:23 pm

Critter1 wrote:If the sprocket on your hub mounts with the three tabs and a snap ring (like Shimano) then you should just buy one of these.

http://item.mobileweb.ebay.com/viewitem?itemId=330691590312


+1

sweet, i did not know anybody was doing that. 8)
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Fri Feb 24, 2012 1:37 am

Critter1 wrote:If the sprocket on your hub mounts with the three tabs and a snap ring (like Shimano) then you should just buy one of these.

http://item.mobileweb.ebay.com/viewitem?itemId=330691590312

thank you i sent the guy a e mail
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Sat Feb 25, 2012 3:02 am

scott brownsey wrote:
Critter1 wrote:If the sprocket on your hub mounts with the three tabs and a snap ring (like Shimano) then you should just buy one of these.

http://item.mobileweb.ebay.com/viewitem?itemId=330691590312

thank you i sent the guy a e mail

i sent him a e mail he said that it wont fit know i dont know what to do now
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby gcrank1 on Sat Feb 25, 2012 8:46 am

You have to have an even number of teeth on a sprocket you want to remove every other one for a skip tooth. Im sure, if yours is an odd number, that somewhere is a replacement in even. After you have it comes the work of cutting off teeth, both front and rear. Typical chain on new cogs with every other tooth off still isnt what the original skip tooths were (so you cant use an original cog front or rear with a new one modified), but it will sort of emulate the look, and it will load each tooth, and chain more due to fewer load distribution points.
It has been done here......I know Ive read about it; maybe someone will have the link(s) for you.
So many bikes, so little time.......
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Sat Feb 25, 2012 10:45 pm

gcrank1 wrote:You have to have an even number of teeth on a sprocket you want to remove every other one for a skip tooth. Im sure, if yours is an odd number, that somewhere is a replacement in even. After you have it comes the work of cutting off teeth, both front and rear. Typical chain on new cogs with every other tooth off still isnt what the original skip tooths were (so you cant use an original cog front or rear with a new one modified), but it will sort of emulate the look, and it will load each tooth, and chain more due to fewer load distribution points.
It has been done here......I know Ive read about it; maybe someone will have the link(s) for you.

i have the front 1 the bike was a orginal skip i just want to use alloy wheels on it for the look im after the wheels r real wide with 26x2.350 tires the look so sweet i want the skiptooth look its a 20s elgin
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby gcrank1 on Sat Feb 25, 2012 10:57 pm

Were it me, Id use a std. set of sprockets and chain, holding the skip in reserve until I found the rear (and chain, if you dont have one). Eventually the bits will be acquired and you can make the swap, meanwhile you can be ridin'.
So many bikes, so little time.......
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby scott brownsey on Tue Feb 28, 2012 1:48 am

gcrank1 wrote:Were it me, Id use a std. set of sprockets and chain, holding the skip in reserve until I found the rear (and chain, if you dont have one). Eventually the bits will be acquired and you can make the swap, meanwhile you can be ridin'.

yes i think im just gona wait n c at a later date :roll:
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby mos6502 on Tue Mar 13, 2012 6:55 pm

I cut off every other tooth on a sprocket once, then dremeled the stub smooth.

Image

Can't really see it in the photo, but it was for a 1942 Columbia which came with a bizarre 27" wheel size that only Columbia used for a couple of years before WWII. So I got a 1970s Schwinn wheelset to use on it.
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby gcrank1 on Wed Mar 14, 2012 8:18 am

When you remove every other tooth on a non-ST cog the remaining teeth are still evenly spaced apart, but with an original ST chain, dont you still have the issue of the varying link length? Because the rear is small dia, and the teeth perhaps worn, it kinda fits itself over the teeth, but really the load is taken by only a couple that are fully bearing on the thrust surface. I think that unless you use a modern chain and modified front and rear sprockets, you set yourself up for breaking that hard to replace chain.
So many bikes, so little time.......
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Re: cut teeth on rear sprocket to skiptooth

Postby mos6502 on Wed Mar 14, 2012 12:15 pm

gcrank1 wrote:When you remove every other tooth on a non-ST cog the remaining teeth are still evenly spaced apart, but with an original ST chain, dont you still have the issue of the varying link length? Because the rear is small dia, and the teeth perhaps worn, it kinda fits itself over the teeth, but really the load is taken by only a couple that are fully bearing on the thrust surface. I think that unless you use a modern chain and modified front and rear sprockets, you set yourself up for breaking that hard to replace chain.


The teeth on an inch pitch cog are evenly spaced though. The only appreciable problem is that the cog is not as thick which does mean (theoretically) that less of the chain bears on it, so (theoretically) there will be more wear to the chain and cog. For a trip around the block every now and then the difference is probably negligible though.
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