Ok for sure, thanksTommyG wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 3:41 amWhen you take the spool apart, work inside a plastic bag, those small parts are prone to try and get away.
Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
Hey Slazmo,Slazmo wrote: ↑Sat Apr 11, 2020 9:50 pmIt's rather straight forward, just don't loose the retainer clip and disassemble it all in a clear plastic bag to catch any jettisoned parts.
How it happens... Chinsy plastic, coupled with shear forces and a cup that both acts against rotation forces and magnets - possible it grabs somewhere at some stage of the spool generating to 30,000 revolutions or so.
Rather than those two pins holding it really needs some form of key between the spool / shaft and the plastic in a mild interference guise.
So here’s my issue. I’m located in Canada. I can order that part but shipping to Canada from tackletrap is $15 which I’m ok with paying that plus the part $23 usd. The problem is even the guy there told me it’s not the easiest thing to replace.
They offer to fix it for $5 if I ship them the spool, which I thought was a great price.
But shipping my spool from Canada right now will cost around $20 cad, then $5 usd for labour, $8 usd for the part and then $15 usd for shipment back. So grand total I’m looking at like $60 cad just to replace this small plastic piece.
I wish there was a video of what I can expect and I can try doing it myself, I just don’t want to try and somehow can’t get it to work and then have to ship it in which would cost me more.
I even contacted Daiwa Canada and then gave me the closest repair shop and I called them but they can’t get the piece and they can’t even get a part number to replace the spool if I wanted lol
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
This is the closest video i can find
https://youtu.be/zdXj_QOJJ2I
All you need to do is
Take the c clip off (relatively easy, but go slow and focus on not damaging the spool or shaft)
Take the washer, spring, inductor off
Replace the broken piece
Put the inductor, spring and washer back on
Then depending on how handy you are, either spend 5 min or 20 min and swearing putting the c clip back on, if you don't loose that or the spring.
Work in a bag as others have said.
A job for sharp eyes and not sausage fingers
https://youtu.be/zdXj_QOJJ2I
All you need to do is
Take the c clip off (relatively easy, but go slow and focus on not damaging the spool or shaft)
Take the washer, spring, inductor off
Replace the broken piece
Put the inductor, spring and washer back on
Then depending on how handy you are, either spend 5 min or 20 min and swearing putting the c clip back on, if you don't loose that or the spring.
Work in a bag as others have said.
A job for sharp eyes and not sausage fingers
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
Awesome. That video was perfect, and the next video that loads shows how he puts it back together.y2k88 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 2:44 pmhttps://blog.lurestyle.jp/archives/32176
https://blog.lurestyle.jp/archives/32093
I totally understand the mechanics of it and how the spring needs to be pushed down while you put the clips back in order for the purple part to be able to move up and down.
This is a extremely helpful and I’m confident I can do it.
Just one question, in the second link you provided, it shows the part I need in 2 small plastic pieces.
Is is the same piece as the tackletour one I need but separated?
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
The second link just shows they have 2 white pieces (one as spare).Datbasstho wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:12 pmJust one question, in the second link you provided, it shows the part I need in 2 small plastic pieces.
Is is the same piece as the tackletour one I need but separated?
You only need one.
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
Ok cool.y2k88 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:15 pmThe second link just shows they have 2 white pieces (one as spare).Datbasstho wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:12 pmJust one question, in the second link you provided, it shows the part I need in 2 small plastic pieces.
Is is the same piece as the tackletour one I need but separated?
You only need one.
Appreciate it very much man!
I’ll update the thread once I complete it.
-
- Pro Angler
- Posts: 1514
- Joined: Fri May 08, 2015 11:43 pm
- Location: Gold Coast, Queensland. Australia
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
It's not a hard process. Just work methodically and conciouse on what your doing - work inside that plastic bag is a massive help for "explosive take off parts"...
That e-clip is by far the most difficult of the whole process - you the rest is the reinstalling of the parts in the reverse order - work with the parts lined out in a horizontal plane - spool to the left and spread parts to the right as they come out in sequence.
You'll be able to achieve this for sure!
That e-clip is by far the most difficult of the whole process - you the rest is the reinstalling of the parts in the reverse order - work with the parts lined out in a horizontal plane - spool to the left and spread parts to the right as they come out in sequence.
You'll be able to achieve this for sure!
Last edited by Slazmo on Tue Apr 14, 2020 1:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Platinum Angler
- Posts: 1464
- Joined: Sat May 10, 2014 12:24 pm
- Location: Donkin, Nova Scotia
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
I have a couple I can send you. I live in Nova Scotia so shipping won't be expensive. PM me and we'll sort it out.Datbasstho wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 11:12 amHey Slazmo,Slazmo wrote: ↑Sat Apr 11, 2020 9:50 pmIt's rather straight forward, just don't loose the retainer clip and disassemble it all in a clear plastic bag to catch any jettisoned parts.
How it happens... Chinsy plastic, coupled with shear forces and a cup that both acts against rotation forces and magnets - possible it grabs somewhere at some stage of the spool generating to 30,000 revolutions or so.
Rather than those two pins holding it really needs some form of key between the spool / shaft and the plastic in a mild interference guise.
So here’s my issue. I’m located in Canada. I can order that part but shipping to Canada from tackletrap is $15 which I’m ok with paying that plus the part $23 usd. The problem is even the guy there told me it’s not the easiest thing to replace.
They offer to fix it for $5 if I ship them the spool, which I thought was a great price.
But shipping my spool from Canada right now will cost around $20 cad, then $5 usd for labour, $8 usd for the part and then $15 usd for shipment back. So grand total I’m looking at like $60 cad just to replace this small plastic piece.
I wish there was a video of what I can expect and I can try doing it myself, I just don’t want to try and somehow can’t get it to work and then have to ship it in which would cost me more.
I even contacted Daiwa Canada and then gave me the closest repair shop and I called them but they can’t get the piece and they can’t even get a part number to replace the spool if I wanted lol
- cndbasshunter
- Pro Angler
- Posts: 4216
- Joined: Thu Jan 31, 2013 12:32 pm
- Location: CANADA
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
daiwa canada parts ordering is very difficult and expensive. best to source from the US or japan.
aikmen is terrible.
aikmen is terrible.
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
^ Yes x 1000. Avoid this place.
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
Ok, I think I got this!Slazmo wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 10:51 pmIt's not a hard process. Just work methodically and conciouse on what your doing - work inside that plastic bag is a massive help for "explosive take off parts"...
That e-clip is by far the most difficult of the whole process - you the rest is the reinstalling of the parts in the reverse order - work with the parts lined out in a horizontal plane - spool to the left and spread parts to the right as they come out in sequence.
You'll be able to achieve this for sure!
Appreciate the help!
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
Ah, I wish you would have posted earlier, I already placed my order with TackleTrap.adam lancia wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 4:29 amI have a couple I can send you. I live in Nova Scotia so shipping won't be expensive. PM me and we'll sort it out.Datbasstho wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 11:12 amHey Slazmo,Slazmo wrote: ↑Sat Apr 11, 2020 9:50 pmIt's rather straight forward, just don't loose the retainer clip and disassemble it all in a clear plastic bag to catch any jettisoned parts.
How it happens... Chinsy plastic, coupled with shear forces and a cup that both acts against rotation forces and magnets - possible it grabs somewhere at some stage of the spool generating to 30,000 revolutions or so.
Rather than those two pins holding it really needs some form of key between the spool / shaft and the plastic in a mild interference guise.
So here’s my issue. I’m located in Canada. I can order that part but shipping to Canada from tackletrap is $15 which I’m ok with paying that plus the part $23 usd. The problem is even the guy there told me it’s not the easiest thing to replace.
They offer to fix it for $5 if I ship them the spool, which I thought was a great price.
But shipping my spool from Canada right now will cost around $20 cad, then $5 usd for labour, $8 usd for the part and then $15 usd for shipment back. So grand total I’m looking at like $60 cad just to replace this small plastic piece.
I wish there was a video of what I can expect and I can try doing it myself, I just don’t want to try and somehow can’t get it to work and then have to ship it in which would cost me more.
I even contacted Daiwa Canada and then gave me the closest repair shop and I called them but they can’t get the piece and they can’t even get a part number to replace the spool if I wanted lol
All good though, if I ever need another, I know who to contact.
Thanks!
-
- Senior Angler
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2018 8:21 pm
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
cndbasshunter wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 5:11 amdaiwa canada parts ordering is very difficult and expensive. best to source from the US or japan.
aikmen is terrible.
Daiwa Canada is the one who told me to call Aikmens.
The guy at Aikmens said he couldn’t even find the part number for the spool itself if I wanted to just order one.
I asked him are the SV spools all different from the newer SV models, he told me he doesn’t know. Lol
So no part number for the conductor, no part number for the spool, no idea what spool goes to what reel and absolutely no suggestion on what I can do.
I got off the phone feeling like I called the wrong number.
-
- Platinum Angler
- Posts: 1464
- Joined: Sat May 10, 2014 12:24 pm
- Location: Donkin, Nova Scotia
Re: Plastic broken piece inside SV Spool
I wish I had seen your thread sooner. Next time I got you.Datbasstho wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 5:51 pmAh, I wish you would have posted earlier, I already placed my order with TackleTrap.adam lancia wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2020 4:29 amI have a couple I can send you. I live in Nova Scotia so shipping won't be expensive. PM me and we'll sort it out.Datbasstho wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 11:12 amHey Slazmo,Slazmo wrote: ↑Sat Apr 11, 2020 9:50 pmIt's rather straight forward, just don't loose the retainer clip and disassemble it all in a clear plastic bag to catch any jettisoned parts.
How it happens... Chinsy plastic, coupled with shear forces and a cup that both acts against rotation forces and magnets - possible it grabs somewhere at some stage of the spool generating to 30,000 revolutions or so.
Rather than those two pins holding it really needs some form of key between the spool / shaft and the plastic in a mild interference guise.
So here’s my issue. I’m located in Canada. I can order that part but shipping to Canada from tackletrap is $15 which I’m ok with paying that plus the part $23 usd. The problem is even the guy there told me it’s not the easiest thing to replace.
They offer to fix it for $5 if I ship them the spool, which I thought was a great price.
But shipping my spool from Canada right now will cost around $20 cad, then $5 usd for labour, $8 usd for the part and then $15 usd for shipment back. So grand total I’m looking at like $60 cad just to replace this small plastic piece.
I wish there was a video of what I can expect and I can try doing it myself, I just don’t want to try and somehow can’t get it to work and then have to ship it in which would cost me more.
I even contacted Daiwa Canada and then gave me the closest repair shop and I called them but they can’t get the piece and they can’t even get a part number to replace the spool if I wanted lol
All good though, if I ever need another, I know who to contact.
Thanks!