I did this yeterday with a box cutter, and then a little superfine
sand paper to make the surface clean. It took about 10 minutes total.
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 3:48 PM, All Rounder 2000
wrote:
> Will be interested to read much more on this. I have the "traditional"
> Riv Cork Grips, with Elmer
I didn't glue mine onand glad I didn't cause I've already changed
the stem.
The bar end shifter stops them from moving backwards, the brake lever
stops them from moving forward and the groove/shifter cable housing
stop almost all of the rotation.
Angus
On Jul 20, 10:14 am, Ginz wrote:
> Ok,
I have done this a few times.
Like Joel, I got lucky exactly one time and the grip basically just
popped loose and came right off.
Every other time it's been a razor blade and some time to kill. I
found that using a window scraper type blade holder is helpful. Think
of it like cutting corn off th
I have done this a few times.
Like Joel, I got lucky exactly one time and the grip basically just
popped loose and came right off.
Every other time it's been a razor blade and some time to kill. I
found that using a window scraper type blade holder is helpful. Think
of it like cutting corn off th
Will be interested to read much more on this. I have the "traditional"
Riv Cork Grips, with Elmer's Ultimate, and I would like to remove the
grips sometime, to swap out the stem. :)
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I got real lucky once. Applying steadily increasing pressure twist
movement, the grip popped off in one piece with minimal muck on the
bar.
The other times, even lately when I used Elmer's wood glue, my luck
did not hold - rather the glue did. The grip broke apart leaving
chunks on the bar. Too