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What is the purpose of a threaded bottom bracket like the kinds sold by Shimano etc.? How does this differ from a design in which bearings, spacers and seals are directly press-fit into a bike frame? Are both options useable on the same frames, or do they serve the same purpose but for different frame constructions?

RLH
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DerekG
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What is the purpose of a bottom bracket like the kinds sold by Shimano etc.?

The purpose of any bottom bracket (BB) made by any manufacturer is to allow cranks to freely rotate in the bottom bracket shell (part of the frame).

How does this differ from bearings, spacers and seals that are directly press-fit into a bike frame?

Different frames accept different types of BBs. Some of them are threaded into it, some are pressed into it. There are many incompatible designs of threaded BBs, and several incompatible types of press-fit BBs.

Are both used on the same frame, or do they serve the same purpose?

A frame is designed to accept either a variant of a threaded BB, or a variant of a press-fit BB. Seldom it is possible to modify the frame to accept a different type of BB.

Grigory Rechistov
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  • Might be worth mentioning that technically, shimano HT-2 bbs are pressed bearings too. – abdnChap Nov 02 '20 at 16:12
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    @abdnChap True, the bearings are pressed into the cups. It is the cups themselves that can be threaded into the frame, or pressed into the frame. – Grigory Rechistov Nov 02 '20 at 16:20
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    Only on metal frames, I think it’s possible to ream a BSA shell and redo it in Italian if you had destroyed the threads. On the few metal PF30 frames that exist, I think you can cut threads and turn them into T47 shells (if you have the equipment). Otherwise, you’re absolutely correct, it’s exceedingly rare to be able to change between BB interface types, and i think its even more rarely done. – Weiwen Ng Nov 02 '20 at 19:00
  • @abdnChap I’m pretty sure all BB’s are press fit in that regard. I’m not aware of any where you literally screw the bare cartridge bearing into the frame (although that would be a workable option too!) It’s a common argument against press-fit haters; it’s the tolerance of the interface that matters, not the interface itself. – MaplePanda Nov 02 '20 at 23:24
  • Cup and cone bearings aren't press fit – abdnChap Nov 03 '20 at 09:15
  • @abdnChap are there new bikes currently on the market with cup and cone BBs? – Paul H Nov 03 '20 at 20:51
  • @PaulH Yes there are. – abdnChap Nov 04 '20 at 09:05