Ruby60 said:I need to rebuild my PowerTap rear wheel. I was sprinting through an intersection and hit a pot hole (didn't see it...) HARD. Rim goes out of round and out of true, AND rim side mildly crushed inward. Since this is my PT wheel I did some work to make it rideable: working judiciously, I tapped out the braking sidewall so it's not too bad, then retrued the wheel, so overall it's not too bad and is rideable. But it's time to rebuild.
This wheel has been in constant use for at least 7 years... maybe 10 years!! Training and racing. I am 98 Kilos (on a good day) and consider myself to be a Crit rider and sprinter. I attribute it's longetivity to the following: 14g, 3X, brass nips, and laced to a 32 hole Velocity Aerohead OC rim.
Ok enough history.
I have a small stock of regular (not OC) Aerohead rims I could use, but I'm leaning towards getting another Aerohead OC rim. I would still build it with 14g straight, 3X and brass nips unless you pros would suggest something other.
So what would your opinion be concerning the OC vs the normal rim, and what spoke tensions would you recommend? ( I use a wheelsmith tensiometer)
Sorry for the long read...
Thanks
Ruby60 said:Thanks BK.
Just checked the Velocity site... yup, no Aerohead OC's, but as you suggested, the A23 OC's look good. And the DT's... I will definitely check into those...I like the idea of eyeleted rims, although I haven't had any issues with the Aeroheads developing cracks around the holes.
Which rim would be your preference?
Thanks again.
Ruby60 said:Thanks BK.
Just checked the Velocity site... yup, no Aerohead OC's, but as you suggested, the A23 OC's look good. And the DT's... I will definitely check into those...I like the idea of eyeleted rims, although I haven't had any issues with the Aeroheads developing cracks around the holes.
Which rim would be your preference?
Thanks again.
biker jk said:I would appreciate any thoughts as to what may be the cause of a problem I'm having with a rear wheel. The rim was replaced and re-laced with the same spokes and hub. After around 200km of riding, a pinging sound started to occur when under load (climbing). It's not a high pitched sound but somewhat dull.
Anyway, I went back to the builder and he suggested the spokes may need a drop of oil where they cross (built two cross with DT Aerolite spokes, 24 spokes and Kinlin XR-270 rim). I had checked the spoke tension with my Park gauge and the non-drive side spokes seemed very low (not even registering on the gauge, i.e. zero, although with tyres mounted, while the drive side was between an 11 and 12 which equated to around 100kgf). I mentioned to the builder that the non-drive side spokes seemed to have little tension and he tightened then a little.
I put the wheel back on the bike and oiled the spoke cross-over points and it was fine for another 200km then today the pinging was back. Non-drive side spoke tension is 2-3 on the Park gauge and a few spokes are still close to zero. So, could the pinging be caused by too low spoke tension on the non-drive side? The wheel is still true.
Bustedknuckle said:Low spoke count, thin spokes, light rim...not surprised it's making some noise. How much do you weigh?
I'd say a beefier spoke on the RH side would help a lot. Say DT Comps or Sapim Race..then thin on the LH side and 110kgf on the RH side
Wait, you are saying that the wheel was rebuilt with spokes that are 10000km old? That's your problem right there. They will be as flexy as spaghetti!biker jk said:I weigh 68kg and the wheel had covered 10000km before the rim was replaced without any pinging or trouble whatsoever. So ca n anyone help?
42x16ss said:Wait, you are saying that the wheel was rebuilt with spokes that are 10000km old? That's your problem right there. They will be as flexy as spaghetti!
After being de-stressed when the wheel was disassembled and re-stressed when it was rebuilt, yes. In my experience anyway.biker jk said:Really? 10,000km and the spokes will be flexy like spaghetti? You didn't read 100,000km by mistake? The front wheel is as stiff as the day I bought it. The rear remains true but pings. I would like to know if your claim is correct.
42x16ss said:Wait, you are saying that the wheel was rebuilt with spokes that are 10000km old? That's your problem right there. They will be as flexy as spaghetti!
biker jk said:I would appreciate any thoughts as to what may be the cause of a problem I'm having with a rear wheel. The rim was replaced and re-laced with the same spokes and hub. After around 200km of riding, a pinging sound started to occur when under load (climbing). It's not a high pitched sound but somewhat dull.
Anyway, I went back to the builder and he suggested the spokes may need a drop of oil where they cross (built two cross with DT Aerolite spokes, 24 spokes and Kinlin XR-270 rim). I had checked the spoke tension with my Park gauge and the non-drive side spokes seemed very low (not even registering on the gauge, i.e. zero, although with tyres mounted, while the drive side was between an 11 and 12 which equated to around 100kgf). I mentioned to the builder that the non-drive side spokes seemed to have little tension and he tightened then a little.
I put the wheel back on the bike and oiled the spoke cross-over points and it was fine for another 200km then today the pinging was back. Non-drive side spoke tension is 2-3 on the Park gauge and a few spokes are still close to zero. So, could the pinging be caused by too low spoke tension on the non-drive side? The wheel is still true.
Giuseppe Magnetico said:To me this does sound like the tension is too low. You should be at about 120-130kgf on the drive side and around 60-65 on the nds. A spoke won't spaghetti as it ages, it will stretch out and brake first. I wouldn't have rebuilt with those spokes either, too many miles on them for a low spoke count wheel. Remember the less spokes you have the faster they wear out. If it still does make a noise after realizing a proper final tension, drop linseed oil or loctite on the head (tire side) of each nipple, could be a bad seat in one the spoke holes.
==========================================biker jk said:Can someone please explain why the drive side pulling spokes should be installed heads out? I'm planning on building a set of wheels with rear 24h laced 2 x both sides. The non-drive pulling spokes should also be heads out, correct?
biker jk said:Can someone please explain why the drive side pulling spokes should be installed heads out? I'm planning on building a set of wheels with rear 24h laced 2 x both sides. The non-drive pulling spokes should also be heads out, correct?
Euskadi said:Hi everyone,
Will Dt Competitions 1.8/1.6 be fine with 2.3 (dura ace 7900) spoke hole diameter? I mean, not too thin?
thanks
Euskadi said:does anyone know where do I find the specs for this hubs? flange spacing etc...