Yet Another Cycling Forum
General Category => Freewheeling => Topic started by: Coffee Snob on 13 January, 2022, 01:17:56 am
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Pair of spd shoes with reinforced soles, is there something I can use to fill in the pit marks left in the sole after tightening down the spd cleats ?
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why do you want to?
these should be covered by the cleats, unless you've had to make major adjustment.
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The pit marks make it harder to get the cleat exactly where you want it to sit when you are tightening them down. I was wondering if I put a thin layer of superglue over the pit marks in the area where the spd's bite the sole, would this firstly do the job and secondly, be safe ?
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The pit marks make it harder to get the cleat exactly where you want it to sit when you are tightening them down. I was wondering if I put a thin layer of superglue over the pit marks in the area where the spd's bite the sole, would this firstly do the job and secondly, be safe ?
If you have a soldering iron, you could use the heated tip to "straighten out" the pit marks/grooves, then start again with your re-alignment?
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The pit marks make it harder to get the cleat exactly where you want it to sit when you are tightening them down. I was wondering if I put a thin layer of superglue over the pit marks in the area where the spd's bite the sole, would this firstly do the job and secondly, be safe ?
I've never had pit marks so deep that this would be a problem, although I can see how that would be the case.
Depends on what your shoe soles are made of. I would try De Sisti's suggestion, or, if you don't have a soldering iron, buff the marks very firmly with something smooth, like the handle of a butter knife.
I've had success smoothing out gouges on my rotomolded kayak with this method. It's a sort of combination of the friction heating and the smoothing pressure.