Apologies for the rambling here
So I'm NOT a bike tech. I haven't really wrenched on a biked since I was a teenager. However, I have and older mountain bike with some hybrid tires on it and a fixed gear city type bike that both hadn't been used in a while that I have greased up / cleaned up. Have some teenage nephews visiting for a while and well, they will want to get around and down to the beach, etc.
Anyway, I used my pile of snap on, sk, pb Swiss for most stuff and it worked great. Except for a few specialty tools. My parents had been avid cyclists and I have a small amount of bike specific tools from Park - a couple different cone wrenches, spoke wrench, chain tool a few other things.
I did have to buy a chain whip wrench, a bottom bracket socket, gearset adapter tool, pedal arm puller/removal tool. These I got cheap Amazon stuff and they worked ok for that, I don't see myself using them much.
Got both bikes apart, greased up, the bottom brackets were an SOB had to use an impact on both bikes (I guess its older Shimano style), and both are working great now.
But, those Park cone wrenches, they leave to be desired. They are USA made but pretty thin. Those I'd use more than anything for greasing the axles and setting the bearing lash...
Also, when torquing the bottom bracket cartridge/bearings, I see they (these are old bikes, steel frames, nothing exotic) suggest 30-50nm. But these things were massively tighter. And both were greased. Rest of the assembly I simply did "torque to feel"
So 2 questions:
Is that torque figure assume the threads are greased (ie anti seize or grease)?
Who's got the best cone wrenches? I don't mind paying up for the only few sizes I need for occasional maintenance. The Park I have are double ended stamped style.
Thanks