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
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
John Bailey is having a lot of trouble with his MKS touring pedals:
Both pedals started having a "clicking" sound. I took them apart and
loosened the adjusting nut 1/4 turn. That seemed to fix the problem. Then
the left pedal seized up. I took it apart, clean off the old grease and
repacked the
Hi all,
I'm having a lot of trouble with my MKS Tour pedals on my new A. Homer
Hilsen. First, both pedals started having a "clicking" sound. I
didn't really know what I was doing, but I took them apart and
loosened the adjusting nut 1/4 turn. That seemed to fix the problem.
Then, the left pedal