Bought an Easton EC90 SL 1" steerer. My front brakes (Campy) has a brake bolt that won't fit all the way in. Any suggestions?
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View attachment 97958
Good point. Based on OPs description and picture, I took the problem to be a too long bolt not a too narrow hole.C-40 said:The problem is not that the bolt is too long, the hole is too small. It's not unusual to find some paint or epoxy build-up that's causing a problem. Quite often the shank of the bolt will go in, but the head hangs up. A little clean up with a small round file or a 5/16 inch drill bit will fix the problem. If the head hangs up, a little touch-up with dremal sanding drum might be required.
Yout get a nut for the mounting stud with the brakes. Some forks have such a long length of engagement that they come with their own their own special nut.Ken said:Does Shimano differ from Campy in regards to brake bolt dimensions or are they both the same?
I am not sure how the stock hardware compares, but there are several lengths available to accomodate different fork depths. Often a CF fork will require a longer recessed nut -- what kind of fork did the EC90 SL replace? It could be that a longer nut was required for the previous fork than will fit in your new fork.Ken said:Does Shimano differ from Campy in regards to brake bolt dimensions or are they both the same?
From the link you provided to LooseScrews I found the next length down is the 30mm one. What I think I'm going to do is go through the LBS where I got the fork and have him contact Easton and get the complete low-down.:idea:C-40 said:That's an extremely long nut. Stock nuts are in the 11-14mm range. Put the brake on the fork, screw the nut on about 8 turns and try to measure from the under side of the head to the recess that the head seats against to determine how much excess you have.
If the fork did not come with a special nut, then most likely a stock one will do.
Don't have any other bikes around with a nut you can steal?
I had no idea the nut was 30mm long! A shorter nut is indeed the fix. I've added the suggestion to merely cut the nut shorter. Simple solution, since most of these nuts are full threaded.PeanutButterBreath said:Good point. Based on OPs description and picture, I took the problem to be a too long bolt not a too narrow hole.