





🔩 Unlock Vintage Power with Precision & Strength!
The Park Tool Freewheel Remover FR-2 is a specialized, heat-treated alloy steel tool designed for removing older Sun Tour 2-notch freewheels. Its thin wall construction allows removal without disassembling cones or locknuts, fitting securely with a 1-inch base compatible with standard wrenches or vises. Highly rated and backed by a limited lifetime warranty, it’s the go-to tool for vintage bike maintenance and restoration.











| ASIN | B001472M4K |
| Best Sellers Rank | #86,651 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #230 in Bike Shop Tools |
| Brand Name | Park Tool |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (932) |
| Finish Types | Natural |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00763477003430, 04962772158227 |
| Included Components | Cassette and Freewheel Tools |
| Item Length | 7 Inches |
| Item Weight | 0.1 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Park Tool |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | Limited Lifetime Warranty - See parktool.com/warranty |
| Material Type | Multi |
| Model Number | FR-2 |
| Package Quantity | 1 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
P**N
Worked Great - no substitute for this tool!
Replacing a worn freewheel and chain on my wife's 1974 Raleigh Pro... I dare say the Maeda (Suntour) freewheel she had on there NEVER had been removed. To say it was tight is an understatement. Best way to use this Park tool is to clamp the tool itself in a vise and use the wheel to unscrew. Necessary downward force to keep the tool firmly engaged while turning the wheel can be applied in this way. After superhuman effort - literally body-hugging the wheel and fearing I'd strip out or break the prongs on the tool, the freewheel finally popped loose. Using penetrating oil and giving it plenty of time to work was a must! Also, with the Park tool out of the vise and engaged in the freewheel, a few sharp raps with a hammer directly on the tool could help, but do it as a last resort. (This will not harm your bearings, cones, or races, but be SURE you have clearance between tool and end of axle before doing this - or just remove the axle) Use anti-seize or grease on the thread and mating shoulders with your freewheel replacement. It's likely I'll never need this tool again, but if you need it, get it. (Custom ground needle-nose pliers and a large crescent wrench didn't work for me either)
B**H
Love this tool. Would be stuck without it. Allowed me to get to rear wheel to repack bearings.
Works great on a Suntour pefect freewheel from the early 80"s. Love this freewheel. They were well built. Held the tool in place with the axle nut and turned with a wrench (actually a park tool chain whip that comes with a 1" opening on butt of handle. Check it out, works great). Had zero difficulty with removing the freewheel. Once it came slightly loose, released the axle nut and the freewheel spun off nicely. Worth every penny. Took the opportunity to disassemble the freewheel and replace bearings. Wasn't really necessary as it turns out, but did it anyway.
L**C
It's a Park tool - it's top quality
I was a frame builder and bike shop manager/mechanic in the early 80's and was recently restoring the first bike I built from one of my frames - mine. Not having needed a Suntour freewheel tool in a "while", I couldn't find my 20 year old Suntour 2- notch tool. Did I say 20 years? Geesh time flies. I should have said nearly 40 years (circa 1982) - same as the bike and frame set. So I had no choice but to buy a new one. Most of my tools acquired in the past 20 years or so are Park (or Campy) so I didn't hesitate to buy this one as I expect it will last as long as my heavily used, back in the day, original removal tool. Well, not long after this tool arrived and I used it on my resto project that I found a box tucked away in my home shop with a few tools and bike parts, including not one but two Suntour freewheel removal tools. Too late to return it, plus I had used it and didn't feel right about sending it back, so now I have three. I am set to work on Suntour freewheels for a long time. However, the point of the story is in comparing the new Park tool to my old tools, I can say the Park tool is every bit as well made, nicely finished, similar weight and overall usability and sturdiness to the old tools made "back in the day". It's not made of cheap pot metal or poorly machined, etc. It's a perfectly good professional bike shop quality tool. If you need one and are SURE you don't have an old one lying around somewhere, I would not hesitate to recommend getting this Park tool
R**M
Worked great
The tool fit my 25 year old mountain bike perfectly. I was able to rebuild it with a new axle. Works just like new now
J**E
Works
The tool works. Observations to using this tool effectively to remove a "stuck" freewheel: I cautiously recommend users to initially utilize your skewer, screwed down very lightly, to help hold this tool on so that you do not strip off the two teeth that engages the freewheel. Use a vice or a large wrench (you can put a pipe on a wrench handle too) to get enough leverage to crank the freewheel from the initial position. Once you get the freewheel moving for the first 1/4 rotation, **remove the skewer or you will break it**, and then continue to screw the freewheel off, which may now be done by hand without tools.
M**L
Use axle to hold this in place while hammering
The Sun Tour 2 notch freewheels are notoriously difficult to remove. It's not this tool's fault, it's the design of the freewheel notches: If the freewheel has been on for a long time, and/or if someone has used a lot of muscle pedaling, just two small notches doesn't give you enough for a tool--any tool--to grab. I used a long adjustable wrench on the tool and pounded on it with a heavy hammer to no avail. The tool kept popping out of the freewheel. So here's the fix (which I learned from a bike repair site): run your axle bolt through the wheel and this tool, and *lightly* tighten the nut (without the cone) onto the tool, and the cone on the other end, to hold the tool in place while you pound. (You'll probably need to run the cone out some in order for the axle to be long enough.) Then you can pound without the tool popping out. BUT once the freewheel loosens, be sure to remove the axle, since you can't unscrew the freewheel more than a fraction of a turn with the axle in place--indeed, there should be a tiny amount of slop in the axle when you're pounding. Good luck! And yes, this is the right tool for the Sun Tour two notch freewheel. (Look on-line for videos to help choose the right freewheel or cassette remover.)
I**S
Go with Park for Bikes!
Park never has failed me and I had an ancient suntour freewheel on a destroyed wheel. It was really on so I threw the impact on this and it zipped it off.
J**N
A must-have
Every classic bike toolbox needs a 2-prong freewheel remover. This fits Regina, Mazda/Suntour perfectly.
A**ー
普通に使えました。
M**N
Excellent freewheel removal tool from Park Tools. I had a Suntour Perfect 14-32 freewheel that had been on a wheel for a long time, used through many winters while commuting to work. I bought the Park Tools remover as I thought it would be good quality and up to the job. It took the Park two peg remover, a large adjustable spanner and a lump hammer to remove the obstinate freewheel and the tool coped perfectly, suffering no damage. It might not be the cheapest, but I find that buying good quality tools that will last us much better value than buying cheaper tools that are not up to the job and break. To sum up an excellent tool and well worth the money..
B**R
Grace a cet outil, j'ai démonté la roue libre de mon vieux Gitane de 1974 La roue libre, une Cyclo 72. J'ai mis donc l'outil dans les 2 ergots, j'ai vissé mon blocage rapide dessus pour éviter que ca rippe et de flinguer l'outil. et j'ai dévissé avec une clé a cliquet , grande taille et une douille de 26. La roue posée au sol et j'ai desserré sans difficultés. au préalable, j'avais mis du dégrippant.
D**E
Ottimo prodotto
H**N
Good product good delivery good price makes me happy ready to go
TrustPilot
4天前
1 周前