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Canyon Spectral:ON CF 8 block lock has moved — how do I reset it?

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Block lock (the steering stop that limits how far the bars rotate so the fork crown doesn't smack the frame/downtube) shifting out of position is a known niggle on these — it's a clamped collar around the steerer/headset area rather than something bolted solid, so a decent knock or an overenthusiastic crash can rotate it.

The quick reset
@Arminius found on a Cube Bosch setup that a shifted steering stop can often just be nudged back — gently push the bars/fork back to the centred straight-ahead position and let the stop re-seat against where it should sit.
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If yours has properly slipped on its clamp rather than just rotated, you'll need to set it deliberately:

Loosen the block lock clamp bolt — it's the small collar/insert sitting in the headset area at the top of the head tube. Usually a 4mm or 5mm hex; back it off just enough that the stop can rotate freely.
Centre the bars dead straight, wheel pointing forward.
Check the stop geometry — the block should be positioned so the bars hit the stop before the fork crown can contact the frame/downtube. Rotate the bars carefully to each lock and confirm the crown clears the frame in both directions.
Retorque the clamp bolt — small fasteners like this are typically in the 4–5Nm range. Don't gorilla it; it's clamping into the headset, not structural frame. A dab of blue Loctite stops it wandering again.

One thing worth ruling out
If the bars feel like they're being pulled to one side rather than just over-rotating, double check the headset preload hasn't loosened at the same time — a slipped stop and a loose top cap often show up together after the same knock. Pop the stem bolts, snug the top cap, retorque the stem (typically 5Nm) and you'll kill two birds.

If the stop is cracked or the splines/teeth on it are chewed (it happens after a hard hit), it's a cheap Canyon spare rather than something to bodge.

Tell me whether it's actually slipped on the clamp or just rotated back too far when you crashed/knocked it — and a quick photo of the headset area would let me point you at the exact bolt.
 
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