My daughter's back wheel bolts on her bicycle just don't seem to be long enough to fit her stabilizers (training wheels). (There's no room left to screw the stabilizer wheel nuts on). I've tried two sets and both have the same problem. So I purchased "stabilizer extender bolts" but after a while of peddling one side loosens and is therefore dangerous and non-functional.
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2You probably mean training wheels. Is it possible to attach a photo? In general, if the problem is really that the bolts are too short, you can try taking them (actually the whole bike) to a hardware store and asking staff to get you a longer version of the same bolt type. – Weiwen Ng Jan 01 '23 at 13:29
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6As an aside, consensus is not to use training wheels. – HAEM Jan 01 '23 at 15:59
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1I know it's not an answer, but I taught both my daughters using this video: https://youtu.be/p6SNCvIN4EI I was impressed how well it went. – pateksan Jan 01 '23 at 16:17
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4@WeiwenNg they are known as stabilizers in the UK https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Training_wheels – pateksan Jan 01 '23 at 16:19
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Welcome to the site - congrats on your first post. Could you please add photos with [edit] ? I have no idea what an extender bolt is. – Criggie Jan 01 '23 at 21:12
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2@WeiwenNg I think Anne-Marie meant stabilisers. You might refer to them as training wheels but be careful telling people what they 'meant' – Swifty Jan 01 '23 at 21:23
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I did not know that UK English uses the term stabilizers. – Weiwen Ng Jan 02 '23 at 12:13
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It only just now occurred to me that stabilizers are not only used for training. Even if that's what the OP Anne-Marie wants them for, the question remains valid for other uses. This could include many forms or durations of reduced mobility (or whatever the current PC term is). – pateksan Jan 04 '23 at 01:04
2 Answers
From the description of the problem, I agree with the solution Wiewen suggested in taking the bike to a local hardware store or bike shop and get longer bolts. In my experience, the bolts on stabilizers (training wheels) are standard and one should be able to find a longer bolt with the same thread.
Pictures of the bike and training wheels would certainly help. From the description of the issue after the "extender bolts" were installed, it may simply be a problem of needing a lock washer installed under the nut.
The issue also could be due to the stabilizer sliding and as it slides the bolts loosen because the tube diameter or something else changes and allows the bolt to loosen. If this is the case then the lock washer would not help.
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Based on the description the problem is that the axle is too short to attach training wheels / stabilizers and the axle extenders won't stay tight.
Here is how some training wheels / stabilizers are installed.

The axle must be long enough to go through the frame, through a washer and then have enough room left for the bolt to attach securely.
If the axle is not long enough axle extenders can be purchased.

Installation would look like this:

Notice the frame brace on the training wheels is bent to make contact with the frame.
Axle extenders are the only solution I know of when the axle is too short. The suffer from some challenges.
- The axle extenders are sometimes difficult to keep tight
- The axle extender moves the training wheel too far from the frame for the frame support portion of the training wheel to connect requiring some bending
- Axle extenders tend to be cheaply made and don't hold up.
If the axle is too short for the training wheels / stabilizers I can think of three solutions.
- You may be able to find rig an axle extender to work (requires mechanical ability and trial and error).
- Find a bike with training wheels / stabilizers installed
- Use a different method of learning to ride a bike (see suggestions in comments)
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