Repairing Old French Threads

If your older French bike has damaged threads, you have a problem. French parts are becoming hard to find, and not many bike shops will be able to retap your pre-1982 threads on your bottom bracket shell and fork steerer to the same specifications. An older French headset and bottom bracket has a threading of 35mm x 1mm, which is now called “obsolete”. As is the old Swiss standard. So this means that tools like the Park Tool BTS-1, for example, can’t be used to repair your old French threads, if you want to keep them. “Better”, many bike shops will say, “to retap your threads to the standard 1.37″ x 24 tpi”. Seems true.

 

A French Threaded Locknut on a Standard Steerer

 

Having to Buy New Parts

 

If you do get your French fork or bottom bracket retapped to standard threading, you have to be aware that you will require new parts that fit on your new threads. Naturally, I wanted to keep the pressed-on races that were part of the original French headset that was on my frame. Pressing on new races requires a professional tool that I don’t own. For curiosity, I tested my French threaded locknut on my newly retapped steerer, and it would only turn on the first thread. At that point, it would stiffen and if forced to rotate, would start damaging the threads. So a complete new headset was required, so I was told by three different bike shops. But that isn’t entirely true.

 

The Identical Races

 

 

Some French Parts are the Same as Standard

 

When I looked at the pressed races on my Jacotey headtube, they looked identical to the standard cups of a British headset I had just bought. You can see from the picture above, they seem identical. This made me rather skeptical when bike shop owners were telling me “oh mate, you’ll have to buy a complete new headset; the old French one won’t fit”. None believed you can “mix and match”, as it were. They predicted, if I kept the French races, a gap in the races, ball bearing problems and other horrors. But they were wrong. Here’s the fact:

 

  • The upper headtube race and lower headtube race are exactly the same size as standard races.

 

 

A Washer with Stub for Standard Headsets

 

An Older French Washer with Flat

 

Watch Out for your Washers!

 

Another difference between French headsets and standard ones is a small one, but typically important and annoying: the washers they use are different and are not interchangeable. This is because older French steerers were made with a small flat, which the matching headset washer fitted. Standard steerers, by contrast, have a “grooved keyway”, which meant that the matching washer had a small stub to slide down the steerer. In my case, I had neither; my new fork column was without flat nor grooved keyway, so needed just a round washer.

 

Not What I Asked For..

 

Ebay Mistakes and Further Complications

It was very frustrating when I received my new British threaded, 1 inch headset through the post from an Ebay seller. As soon as I opened it, I could see immediately the job of installing my new forks was delayed. The Ebayer had sent me a threadless headset instead of a threaded one. Typically, this happened on a Saturday. I had to wait all weekend to send it back to him, but fortunately the seller made amends quickly and sent me the correct headset, which arrived on the Tuesday. So now I just needed the locknut, adjustable race and bearings from it to install my forks, right?

 

Length of Steerer is Crucial

 

It’s Not Over Yet..

Here is something else I didn’t consider when I had a new column fitted to my forks: the steerer column length. Doesn’t it make a lot of sense?? It must be crucial to have the steerer column of similar length to the original. This completely bypassed me in my enthusiasm to get this bike on the road. The upshot was, when I finally started screwing on the adjustable race and locknut of my new standard headset on to the new steerer, I realised the column was slightly longer than the old column. This meant that I needed more washers to stop the steerer sticking out of the headset! What’s more, I required washers that had no flats or nubs in them.

 

The Headset Fitted

 

Grinding

 

Unless you have some headsets washers lying around that perfectly fit your steerer, you can solve the problem of an ill-fitting washer by grinding it. I took a French washer with its small flat, and ground this flat down with a small file, allowing it to fit onto my steerer. Even though the French washer was made to fit smaller French steerers, which are 22mm, a little filing around its diameter will easily help it slide on to the larger standard 22.2mm. I did the same with an standard washer: grinding off the nub for my round steerer helped it slip on and helped secure the headset without any steerer protrusion.

 

Grinding the Washer

 

Dimensions:

 

French Cups: Outside Diameter:                 30.2mm    

 

Standard Cups: Outside Diameter:                 30.2mm    

 

French Crown Race Diameter:                    26.5mm

 

Standard Crown Race Diameter:                    26.4mm

 

French Steerer Outside Dimension:               25mm

 

Standard Steerer Outside Dimension:                  25.4mm

 

French            Steerer Size:                                 22mm

 

Standard            Steerer Size:                             22.2mm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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