For such inexpensive but otherwise very good pedals, I use this
method: Fill with Phil Tenacious Oil and ride until they are smooth.
It has worked for me.

Alas, I find them too narrow for my 10 Cs -- my bunion rubs the
crankarm; prefer the MKS Touring pedal.

On Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 1:07 PM, Robert F. Harrison <[email protected]> wrote:
> I love my MKS pedals, both the touring and grip kings...I have about a half
> dozen on 5 bikes with a spare or two. However they come from the factory
> very light on lubrication. The first set I owned clicked and sent a shiver
> through my Quickbeam's frame. I thought the bottom bracket was toast until I
> did a little research.
>
> So for the next 5 sets I bought I repacked them before I even put them on a
> bike and haven't had any trouble at all since then. It took me a couple of
> tries the first time around to get them back together and spinning smoothly.
> I'd either tighten them a bit too much or too little but once I got it right
> it I could tell and now it's just a few minutes work.
>
> This comes up quite often on the list.

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