You need bicycle-specific tools called cone wrenches. Once you have those, there are a thousand tutorials on YouTube and elsewhere on what to do next.
Fantastic_Inside4361 on
Put it back in the bike. Tighten the cone temporarily. This should release the tension to unscrew that nut by hand, or with a pair of pliers. Release the tension you put on the cone as soon as you can to avoid damage to the bearings. Try and replace with a nut you can grip.
3 Comments
You need bicycle-specific tools called cone wrenches. Once you have those, there are a thousand tutorials on YouTube and elsewhere on what to do next.
Put it back in the bike. Tighten the cone temporarily. This should release the tension to unscrew that nut by hand, or with a pair of pliers. Release the tension you put on the cone as soon as you can to avoid damage to the bearings. Try and replace with a nut you can grip.
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/tooltips/conewrenches.html
Get resources for working on bikes