It shouldn't do this. Wrenchboy Hubby says to take it back to the shop. No Loctite because you'll never be able to get them back off. Pedals self-tighten so Loctite should not be used.
It shouldn't do this. Wrenchboy Hubby says to take it back to the shop. No Loctite because you'll never be able to get them back off. Pedals self-tighten so Loctite should not be used.
Another idea: take both pedals out and compare the threads. If they are threaded the same way, somebody took a right pedal and forced it into the left crank, cross-threading it.
I can't remember, but I don't think Crank Bros are marked L and R so you'll have to compare threads.
Do the bearing feel OK?
Wrenchboy just asked if you drive a lot with the bike on top of the car. If the pedal is backspinning (backwards to the way you pedal) and if it is not tight enough to begin with, it will loosen.
It should be installed with grease and snugged down tight. It should not back out if it is tight enough.
Definately something weird happening there. I agree with SadieKate on all points. I've never had a problem with my Candies. Even if you didn't screw them in tight enough they should tighten as you pedal. Sounds like a trip to the LBS to figure out what is wrong so you don't strip out the threads. You can also e-mail Crank Brothers, they are good at responding to questions.
Some more thoughts, is it possible that the spindle gasket got jammed inside the bearing race? When you're pedaling do you notice any kind of hesitation or roughness in the pedal? If you take the pedal out and hold the spindle in one hand and spin the pedal, do you feel any roughness in the bearings?
If you get any kind of binding in the bearing, even for a second, you can get a force that will want to unscrew the pedal.
If this is the case, you may just need to do some servicing and lubing.
Let's see, I don't ever put the bike on top of the car to transport, so backspinning is not the problem. I know the pedal is screwing in "lefty-tighty" like a left pedal should, so that's not the problem. The left pedal on Candys has a "ring" around the shank (forgive my lack of pedal anatomy) so I know it's the left on the left crank.
I removed both pedals and they are absolutely threaded in opposite directions. Neither has any "gritty" feeling or hesitation when I rotate them. I didn't see any evidence of a gasket or anything else caught inside the crank hole - it all looks clean once I wipe it off. The threads on the pedal itself look flawless but the threads inside the crank have a tiny spot of "chewed" look at the very outside edge of the threading. I wonder if this is the problem... oh, no, not a new crank!!
Thank you, thank you, thank you for spending brain power on this problem. I'm going to contact the Eggbeater folks if I can't come up with anything else. At the very least, I'll check the tightness each time I set out because it's taking many miles for the pedal to work itself loose. My only other puzzlement is the very small black debris I initially saw when it first worked loose. And yet the threading on the pedal looks perfect - could this be the gasket you spoke of? Well, anyway, thanks again!
Can you tell we like the challenge? Let us know what Crank Bros has to say so we can add it to the collective TE Knowledge Base.
Here's the prompt and courteous reply from Jason at Crank Bros.:
And, I think he's right. The threads on the pedal are fine, so somethin' funky must be going on inside the crank. These old eyes couldn't see inside there very well - it's off to the LBS, I guess.If the pedal threads are fine, I would check the cranks, they might be thin in the threads. I would also have a bike shop check it out to make sure everything is safe.