
Here is the steering stem. I slid a new dust seal washer (thin and barely visible in the photo) and rubber dust seal onto the stem first. Then I applied a thin coat of bearing grease to the stem for ease of sliding and corrosion resistance. Then, in the kitchen, I put the lower bearing cone race in a pot of water and brought it to just about boiling. Then I took the pot out to the garage, fished the race out with tongs, dried it with a rag, and slid the race onto the stem. It still took some persuasion with my soft faced hammer to get it all the way down. I suppose it may have been easier if I had put the stem in the freezer.

Once this was done I applied a lot of grease to the cone on the stem and on the dust seal and stuck 19 ball bearings into the grease; I also put some grease into the lower bearing race. Then I slid the stem gently into the headstock all the way, so the dust seal just disappeared into the tube. I then tilted the frame forward to rest on the stem and hold it in place. Then I greased the upper bearing, put in 18 balls, and put the top cone race on. The Steering head top thread turns onto the stem and pulls the bearings tight. Sorry I don't have more pictures of this.
The steering damper parts all sit atop this. Once you have the stem secured with the top thread, place the the steering top plate over the top thread, then slide the "steering damper friction ring" onto the squared steering head stem nut and screw those to the top of the stem, securing the top plate.
I do have some pics of this from disassembly, I will upload those a little later... I'm being called to dinner!
Cheers!
primer63 wrote: Bob, could you sketch out what you are describing here and post a picture of your sketch. I am traveling on business and all I have to look at is what's in the illustrated manual. I have the races and I believe I have all the ball bearings I need that are in good shape. It's the order of assembly that has me bumfuzzled.
If I'm not mistaken, the lower stem has the curved race on the stem. The bottom of the frame steering tube has the collar (not sure if this is the right term) in it. So, I put 19 ball bearings in the collar held in by grease and slide the steering stem upward into the frame tube. Three parts bottom to top.....race, bearings, collar?
On the top assembly, do any of the steering damper parts intermingle with the order of the top bearings and races. I don't think it does. The shade tree engineer in me says no but, this is my first reassembly and I'm not confident in my assumption. I'll try and sketch out myself and see if I can show what I am talking about.