I was on the CTC Lothian Rally this last weekend. Based at Mortonhall Caravan and Camp Site in Edinburgh the rally was great fun.
I met old friends and made some new ones. The rides were good, evening food and entertainment were excellent.
Sadly the weather was pretty grim, lots of rain, misty and a cold easterly wind.
My bike was parked outside under a tree and got very wet. It is usually dry garaged.
On Sunday I parked opposite St. Gile’s Cathedral on the Royal Mile whilst having a drink break in a nearby coffee shop.
On returning to my bike and getting ready to set off I had a few minutes of worry as the 2 year old n’lock would not engage in the ride position
After a few minutes struggling with it I managed to force it back to the ride position. Later in the ride I forgot and n’locked again only to have the same problem getting it back to the ride position.
Thereafter I remembered to leave it locked in the ride position, using just a U-lock for security when parked.
This week, after arriving home I shared the problem with n’lock's very helpful Franklin Niedrig who advised (and offered) a strip down and relube of the stem.
I undertook the strip down of the n’lock stem myself. With the stem off the bike it involves loosening 3 grub screws whilst removing the parts so released.
Close examination of the stem components revealed no problem other than the lock barrel had rust by it, everything else seemed well lubricated.
Relubing and reassembling the stem were straightforward. The only difficulty came when repositioning the indicator lever on top of the stem.
I got this done by a temporary clamp of the indicator lever post whilst positioning the lever and spring, obvious after the job, not so obvious when you are holding several oily components under a coiled spring tension! The temporary clamping grub screw is then loosened a midge’s wing to just retain the indicator lever post whilst allowing rotation.
So my advice to all you n’lock users is put a few drops of oil on the moving parts of your n’lock and give the lock barrel a soak with oil every year.
Julian.