





500Pcs Assorted Loose Bicycle Bearing Balls 1/8, 5/32, 3/16 7/32 and 1/4
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Maryann Campbell
> 3 dayGood variety. Only needed 1 size. But was best value for what was needed
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A. Oltsch
> 3 dayThe starred review ratings category warmth makes NO sense! These are ball bearings. Perfect selection for bicycle repair/refurbishing. I put new ones (18 per hub) in two 1970s Fuji wheel hubs. Other sizes would fit pedals or an older headset or ball bearing bottom bracket if I were doing those jobs. Value for money.
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JOHN J.
> 3 dayeasy to install
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Art L
> 3 dayRebuilding bike wheels for my multiple bikes, found these,.. all good. No issues.
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Wai Shan Leung
> 3 dayCheap and decent assortment of bearings for bikes. Really only need 2 sizes for common cup and cone bike hubs and bottom brackets. 9 * 1/4 balls per side in the rear hub, 10 * 9/10/11 rule-of-thumb. Nine 1/4 balls per side in the rear hub, 10 3/16 balls per side in the front hub, and eleven 1/4 balls per side in the bottom bracket. 3/16 balls per side in the front hub, and 11 * 1/4 balls per side in the bottom bracket. Use 1/8” and 5/32” in headsets and pedals that use loose or caged balls. They work and the price is right. I didn’t measure them and I take their hardness values at face value. (You want the balls softer than the races so the easy to replace balls wear, not the races.) Pull apart old bearings. Take out balls and probably lose some. Measure balls or just look up what is needed. Clean out old grease from races. Apply new grease to races. Place balls in grease. Reassemble bearing. Tighten preload (aka sideways tightness) until you have that magic spot between too loose/sideways play and too tight/binding. Expect to take a few tries to get it right.
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Jbird
> 3 dayJust received my order, and do they look nice. The very shiny, and round units were very easy to find when prepping the squirrels and rabbits I harvested my first time using these. Bon appetit.
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Gabriel
> 3 dayWorks great
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Ernesto ramos
> 3 dayThank you
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Jennifer
> 3 dayThese are dead nuts on for size too the tenth but not hard steel. Easily dented with a hammer. Ok for projects and measurements but not going to carry fatigue load like a real hardened ball bearing.
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Roland Phillips
Greater than one weekRepaired a bicycle.