Have questions or want to discuss cycling? Join Now or Sign In to participate in the BikeRide community.

New: Take Part in the September Giveaway to Win the Luckeep X1 Pro ebike


Sugano Chainring bolts for old bike - place to source?
#1
I have an old bike with Sugino crank and have lost two bolts and bolts, on the bolt thread 8 mm long and then has a 3.5 mm larger bulb the width of the head is 7.9 to 8 mm. Any ideas on where I can source?
  Reply
#2
1. Check with a bike shop. They may be able to identify what you need or figure out a substitute that would work

2. Google "Sugino chainwheel bolts" and see if you get a match (add the model name/number if you can determine it). If not you could try calling one of the suppliers that comes up in a search to see if they carry what you want.

3. If there's a bike co-op or used bike shop locally see if they have compatible parts

No matter what it's time to check the other chainwheel bolts for tightness, as well as other securing bolts on the bike before you loose more. There would have been symptoms (clicking, rattling, chainwheel wobbling) before you lost the bolts. Anytime a bike starts to be noisy it needs to be investigated before becoming inconvenient and expensive to repair.
  Reply
#3
Thank you my son had bike as transpiration in Chicago and brought home missing bolts he said someone took but I don't know.

We just started our quest yesterday. I hoping to source somehow on line.

We did go to Erik's a bike chain store in MN who do a great job they pulled bolt and gave us the measurements but told us we would have to find somehow on line.

Like the bike Coop idea.

Have also checked several groups that make bolts.

I am wondering if we can't find bolts are the cranks interchangeable? Can I just buy and insert a new crank and Chainring? They look to be around $35?

Thanks for your help and ideas.



(05-24-2014, 01:48 PM)cny-man Wrote:  1. Check with a bike shop. They may be able to identify what you need or figure out a substitute that would work

2. Google "Sugino chainwheel bolts" and see if you get a match (add the model name/number if you can determine it). If not you could try calling one of the suppliers that comes up in a search to see if they carry what you want.

3. If there's a bike co-op or used bike shop locally see if they have compatible parts

No matter what it's time to check the other chainwheel bolts for tightness, as well as other securing bolts on the bike before you loose more. There would have been symptoms (clicking, rattling, chainwheel wobbling) before you lost the bolts. Anytime a bike starts to be noisy it needs to be investigated before becoming inconvenient and expensive to repair.
  Reply
#4
Cranks are of varying designs, so have to have a specific length of BB spindle. An older bike is likely to have a crankset that takes a much different spindle length than current equipment. It's usually simplest to order the spindle and cranks as a unit or at the same time.
  Reply


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread
Author
Replies
Views
Last Post
 
20,717
11-25-2009, 02:44 AM
Last Post: Joe_W

Forum Jump:

[-]
10 Latest Posts
Why Do My Cycling Stats Feel Inaccurate ...
Today 12:37 AM
Shimano Deore cassette with SRAM Apex me...
Today 12:35 AM
Change comes hard in the cycling communi...
Today 12:29 AM
Pogacar wins UCI Road Bike World Champio...
Today 12:26 AM
How to keep your bicycle safe?
Today 12:23 AM
Northeast of India or Myanmar rides
Yesterday 02:15 PM
1 New Knobbly Tire... Front or Back?
10-01-2024 08:06 PM
MTB Night Lighting - What are recommenda...
10-01-2024 07:59 PM
COLNAGO SUPER (unknown year)
09-29-2024 07:29 PM
Any other Bridgestone Picnica OneTouch r...
09-28-2024 07:30 PM

[-]
Join BikeRide on Strava
Feel free to join if you are on Strava: www.strava.com/clubs/bikeridecom

[-]
Top 5 Posters This Month
no avatar 1. Jesper
20 posts
no avatar 2. Flowrider
17 posts
no avatar 3. GirishH
17 posts
no avatar 4. rydabent
15 posts
no avatar 5. meamoantonio
12 posts