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Headset problems

Bicycles Asked on September 26, 2021

I was servicing my headset for the first time and I am now struggling to put it back together.
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I have tried in the order of 123, 321, 231, 132. It hasn’t worked. I know this as I have 4 spacers 3 below the stem and one above, and when trying these methods I am ending up with no more steerer tube to put the last spacer on. I am not 100% all these parts came from the top bit none will fit on the bottom, can someone please help me?


UPDATE I tried what you said and here are some photos,

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I put what I said was number 3 on first and then the number 2 – a rubber seal, and then number 1 and then 4 spacers which left me with the 3-5mm gap you were talking about, but maybe a bit too much, but I also wanted to ask if number 1 needs to be able to hold the fork in by itself, but more to the point is this right and if not what do I need to change?

One Answer

Number 3 appears to be the top cap assembly which goes on the installed fork steer tube after the top bearing is placed into the top bearing race or cup. It covers and helps seal the top headset bearings. The next thing that slides on the installed steer tube after the number 3, is a split ring, centering sleeve which will slide down and into #3. Combined with the actual topcap through which the preload bolt passes through, those parts make up the "topcap assembly." It's a bit unclear in the photo, but 1 and 2 appear to be spacers. These go on top of the centering sleeve, if necessary, and just prior to the stem so that there is about a 3-5mm space from the top of the stem down to the top of the steer tube. This gap is necessary so the preload bolt can tighten the system up appropriately when it is threaded down the star fangled nut installed within the steer tube. Alternative to the star fangled nut and necessary if the steer tube is carbon fiber, is a compression nut that serves the purpose of the star fangled nut to receive the preload bolt to bring everything together. In addition, the compression bolt unit serves as a solid backstop for the carbon steer tube against the force of the stem's clamping force when it's fixing bolts are done up.

You noted having a spacer on top of the stem. This serves as way to get the necessary 3-5mm gap the topcap-bolt requires to preload the bearings. As such (as well as good aesthetic's), the spacer above the stem is typically thinner--no more than 2.5mm looks best to me but some put a ridiculous amount of spacer height above the stem. Number 1 looks to be appropriately sized spacer for above the stem just prior to the topcap and preload bolt. This upper spacer position is unnecessary if, when the stem and spacers (if any) below it have sufficient height to get the necessary gap discussed above.

Incidentally, if you've replaced the fork that was originally mounted with a different fork that has a different length of steer tube, you won't require the same amount of spacers as the first, now uninstalled, fork. Obviously, if you're reinstalling the same fork unchanged or a different one that has identical dimensions of the steer tube as the first, the spacer set up (given the same spacers are used) should work the same.

Answered by Jeff on September 26, 2021

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