rigid forks for a trek 820?

drteming

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May 9, 2005
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Can you post a picture of the headset and the stem so I can point you in the right direction?
 

drteming

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May 9, 2005
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Looks like a older quill stem with a threaded fork. I'm guessing the diameter of the steering tube is 1", though it may be 1 1/8". Search ebay for threaded mountain bike forks and get the one with the correct diameter. You should be able to cut it down to fit your headtube as the NOS forks come with at least 100mm of threaded portion.
 

alkemyst

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Feb 13, 2001
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Bump for a still valid question

There is a great chance that will work, but it's possible you have a 1" headset.

You have to measure it. If the diameter is 7/8" that's a 1" and if 1" that's the 1 1/8".

It's almost definitely threaded.

To others, many front suspension forks don't have a lock out. It's pretty inefficient for a commuter/road bike to have it that way.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
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What part am i measuring?

The headset tube. You could also measure your old fork tube.

Trek's came in 1" and 1 1/8" around that time. With your bike's serial number you could call Trek as well and they should be able to tell you.
 

Fayd

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Jun 28, 2001
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for an update to the thread:

looked like it would have worked for my application.

I just took the bike to a local trek dealer, and they ordered in a fork that looks exactly like that (with the dark blue paint job). Guess I wait a week till it arrives.

FWIW, I did contact trek's question form. automated reply said they'd get back to me.... last thursday. Haven't heard back yet.
 

Fayd

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Jun 28, 2001
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See this is why i hate "local X shop" that some assholes think we should support.

Said local trek dealer ordered me in the fork, said it'd take a week to get there. Took 2 weeks to arrive when they told me it'd take 1. okay, i can handle that...

I pull the existing fork, and test fit the new fork. problem. the steer tube on the new fork is around 10 fucking inches long, with paint the whole way. Steer tube on the old bike is around 4 inches long. This thing is absolutely fucking useless to me. It's going back tomorrow, and they've wasted my time.
 
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FleshLight

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Mar 18, 2004
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See this is why i hate "local X shop" that some assholes think we should support.

Said local trek dealer ordered me in the fork, said it'd take a week to get there. Took 2 weeks to arrive when they told me it'd take 1. okay, i can handle that...

I pull the existing fork, and test fit the new fork. problem. the steer tube on the new fork is around 10 fucking inches long, with paint the whole way. Steer tube on the old bike is around 4 inches long. This thing is absolutely fucking useless to me. It's going back tomorrow, and they've wasted my time.

That is how brand new uncut forks come. You can cut the steerer tube using a pipe cutter or through a variety of other methods.
 

Fayd

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Alright, yes you can. I lack the tools to do so. When I took the fork back to the bike shop, they looked through their system to find one with a steer tube length that was somewhere near correct, and failed to do so. They offered to cut and thread the tube I purchased, for $50 more. I balked at the price, returned the fork, and left.

for $78 (total cost they would have had me out), i could have bought a threadless fork and stem. ridiculous.

On a side note, this is the sound the crank set makes when I just spin it. (no chain, no load, no pedals even) Pretty sure it's toast, right?
 
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FleshLight

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Mar 18, 2004
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Check for play in the crank. If its properly torqued and the bearings are properly preloaded, it sounds like the bearings in the bottom bracket are toast. Swap out the BB for a newer one.
 

Fayd

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Okay, went to a local bike co-op, and the guy helped me pull the crank off. The assembly that came in the bike is a bb-ct92, 68x116.

I can't seem to find this anywhere online for sale. What are my options?
 

Fayd

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Jun 28, 2001
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Looking online, it seems impossible to find a match for the stock ball bearing.

looking at my options, I can probably just buy a new front derailleur. however, when I took a close look at my crank set, I noticed 2 broken teeth on the large gear, along with some deformation on the middle gear. this was at regular intervals, so I'm pretty sure it's made this way. however, in the lands of every tooth the metal is bowed inwards some. Is it worth it to replace the crankset as well?