I recently bought a gently used, not super well maintained Columbia 3-speed bike from some time in the 80s. It has an internal hub - the dreaded Shimano 333. My eventual plan is probably to convert it to single-speed, but I'm not quite ready to buy new wheels yet. (Yes, there are probably other ways to do it, but that's out of scope here anyway.) In the meantime, I'd like to put the internal hub in 2nd gear ("neutral") and leave it there permanently.
It should have been an easy operation - just shift into 2nd and then stop shifting! But I was out riding last weekend and I suddenly found I was trapped in 3rd gear. Couldn't shift down for love nor money. When I got home, I found this:
I've never dealt with an internal hub before so please bear with me for not knowing the vocabulary. I gather that the back of bit A is supposed to be a kind of bracket that holds the pin in bit B in place, creating a hinge that lets the cable tension do its work. It's a bit tough to see in the photo, but the back of bit A crumbled off in my hand when I went to put it back together. So I can put the shifting mechanism back together, but it doesn't stay together under tension.
No problem: I wanted to remove the shifter and cable eventually anyway. All would be well if I were trapped in 2nd gear. But I'm trapped in 3rd. I'm not completely sure what the ratio is but it's much too high a gear for single-speed use. So, thanks to this guide I've started to work out how this hub works. I've gotten as far as removing the bell crank and have found the push rod, which slides easily in and out, with the expected resistance at the "in" position. What I haven't yet figured out yet, though, is:
- How do I determine what position the push rod needs to be in for second gear?
- How do I hold the push rod in the correct place to keep the hub in second gear indefinitely?
- Bonus question: assuming this is possible and I manage to get it done, how will this arrangement change the maintenance requirements of the hub?