Correct me if I'm wrong because I haven't owned a Clem, but aren't typical 
rack braze-ons M5?

On Thursday, June 7, 2018 at 1:22:13 AM UTC-4, LeRoy wrote:
>
> The trail that recently led me to this group began when I was Googling 
> information on repairing buggered braze-on threads. A post here entitled 
> *Stripped 
> CLEM dropout braze-on* was absolutely spot-on. My problem was stripped 
> threads on a couple of braze-on fittings on the rear drop out of my 
> new-to-me Clem Smith Jr. This couldn't have been a better match; the 
> collected wisdom in that post exactly addressed my questions and concerns. 
> So, of course, I needed to join up. 
>
> This preamble circles back to the point I suggest in the subject line: *When 
> bad fasteners happen to good bikes*.
>
> While many on this list have owned their bikes since new, others have 
> acquired them second- or third-hand, or some further multiple. Bikes that 
> have passed through numerous sets of hands often suffer from a lesser level 
> of care and feeding than a good bike deserves. What I came across on my 
> third-hand Clem was not just a couple stripped threads -- I've committed 
> that crime myself -- but true fastener innovation.
>
> Those of us whose thinking stays within the box typically use an M6 
> fastener in an M6 threaded hole. It seems to work well enough. But 
> innovative thinkers might consider the use of a vibration-resistant, 
> serrated-flange, self-piercing sheet metal screw in that M6 threaded 
> braze-on. While not an obvious solution, the advantage of this butchery is 
> two-fold. The integrated serrated flange ideally secures the looped wire 
> rod of the rear fender stay, while the self-piercing capability of the 
> thread cuts its own path in the braze-on regardless of preexisting M6x1.0 
> threads. Genius! This particular application deserves bonus points because 
> the perpetrator went so far as to paint the offending fastener in a very 
> close match to the Clem's green frame. It's not without a certain artistry.
>
> Apart from some understandable whining, my purpose in bringing up this 
> topic is to see what kinds of creative destruction others have experienced. 
> I'm throwing down the gauntlet. Can you top this?
>

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