![]() ![]() Quote from: rickpaulos on December 21, 2022, 01:10:33 PM Which Stingray Chopper? There have been at least 7 versions. however, id have to find a wheel which prob wouldnt be too hard but then also need to find brakes.īy the looks of the fork, id assume it was a drum brake rim.ĭo you think this would fit then if the tube was long enough ? I read in another forum that they claim a suzuki k10 fork would fit it. The fork at amazon claims to be 1 1/8 so based on what you are saying, it might fit assuming the steering tube is long enough.? Probably from different factories or countries. Some Pacific bikes use a completely different serial number system. Pacific numbers cover all their brands, Schwinn, Mongoose, and countless kiddy bikes. The 3rd,4th, & 5th letters don't seem to match any particular model. SNGNP04A B000001 (a second letter after the month likely means they produced over 100,000 bikes that month. Many Pacific bikes start with 5 letters, 2 digits for the year, 1 letter for the month, then 5 to 6 digits for a sequential number. The serial number should contain the year & month. You can call Pacific help line and they might be able to tell you. I see the date code on the sticker but I haven't seen any decoding for that. Most bike shops and coops have hundreds in stock yet the chance of finding one that even fits is low.īTW, in your first photo the bearing is on upside down. The number of different forks must be over 1,000,000 by now when you look at the combo of fit factors. Material (aluminum, carbon, steel, cromo or a mix of any of those) 100 is most common but there are many other widths.įork size (what size wheel was it made for)īrake mounts (none, caliper, disc, drum, canti/vbrake) width of the fork where the wheel bolts in. (many Schwinns and other low end USA bikes). (longer can be cut down or spaced)įork steerer inner diameter (on USA bikes from the 1960s-1970s)ġ" od forks were made with 1/16" wall thickness which take a 7/8" stem or some were made to take a. Steerer length, measured from the bottom of the lower race to the top. Steerer outer diameter (1" or 1 & 1/8" are most common) Threaded or unthreaded (threaded on yours). Fork sizing points to check when shopping replacements.įor your bike, the first 3 need to match. ![]()
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