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Date: 09 Sep 2007 00:26:04
From: tiborg
Subject: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on their website.
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Date: 13 Sep 2007 08:16:55
From: Ron Ruff
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 13, 6:59 am, jim beam <spamvor...@bad.example.net > wrote: > tension needs to be as high as > necessary to prevent spoke slackness in use - no more. I agree... but if your tension is lower than it *could* be then the spokes will go slack at a lighter load than they would otherwise. So if you wish to optimize a wheel's performance (low weight and drag), you will reduce the number of spokes and increase the tension until you are at the limit for at least one part of the system. Even if you just want a standard wheel with 32-36 spokes, one with higher tension will take a bigger load before spokes go slack... though in that case you might get away with lower tension if the loads are not extreme.
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Date: 13 Sep 2007 05:36:55
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 12, 9:24 am, Chalo <chalo.col...@gmail.com > wrote: > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.comwrote: > > > > > If I were building a 900 gram downhill rim with 13/14g spokes, the > > tension would be higher because the application is tougher on the > > wheel, the rim is stronger..nothing to do with the > > spokes... > > You are right that the rim's strength (and sometimes spoke count) > determine the tension to use, but the tension determines what spokes > will be appropriate. > > For a rim with "too many" spoke holes for its weight, like the 48h Sun > CR-18, the spoke tension may have to be less than 100kgf to keep the > rim from buckling (I haven't measured the exact value, just observed > the phenomenon while tensioning wheels). if the tension is less than > 100kgf, then 1.6mm or 1.5mm spokes will work better than thicker ones; > they'll be less likely to go slack. > > For a rim with a heavy section and few spoke holes, the tension should > be a lot higher than 100kgf. 16 spoke road wheels with aero rims are > a good example-- don't those suckers need almost 200kgf of spoke > tension? > > Chalo I have built a few Deep V, radial, bladed, 16 and 18h and the tension was still in the 100-110kgf range, front wheels. Ditto for some Deep V, 24h, 2 cross rears..samo-
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Date: 13 Sep 2007 06:59:49
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jim beam wrote: > > Chalo wrote: > > > For a rim with a heavy section and few spoke holes, the tension should > > be a lot higher than 100kgf. > > that's not true. tension on my 16 spoke heavy section shimano r540's is > about the same as a standard 32 spoke wheel. from factory. > > > 16 spoke road wheels with aero rims are > > a good example-- don't those suckers need almost 200kgf of spoke > > tension? > > nope. Well, I just downloaded the owner's manual for Bontrager package wheels, and for their Race X-Lite Aero (which I assume is a low spoke count wheel) and Race X-Lite Aero Carbon, they spec up to 400 lbf tension. I found a Park Tool page that gave the spec for the Mavic Ksyrium Elite as up to 160 kgf. For what it's worth, it specs the Shimano R540 at 98-118kgf in front and 105-128 kgf in the rear-- relatively normal, just as you claim. The spec for other wheels starts at 50 kgf for front wheel spokes and ranges to 181 for rear wheel spokes, so there's no indication that 100 kgf is the right tension for all purposes. It looks like 100 kgf would be within spec for at least half the listed wheels, though. It's worth pointing out that all the listed wheels are for bikes with some kind of sporting pretensions, and none of them have high spoke counts. So for wheels in the real world whose uses require more of them than play bikes do, I'd expect to see a correspondingly wider range of appropriate spoke tensions depending on spoke count, rim section, and intended load. For what it's worth, Park says this: "The recommended tension for spokes in bicycle wheels can be as low as 80 Kilograms force (Kfg) and as high as 230 Kilograms force. As a rule of thumb, it is best to set tension as high as the weakest link in the system will allow, which for a bicycle wheel is usually the rim." That sounds like something Jobst would say. http://parktool.com/repair/readhowto.asp?id=51 Chalo
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Date: 13 Sep 2007 05:59:13
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Chalo wrote: > jim beam wrote: >> Chalo wrote: >> >>> For a rim with a heavy section and few spoke holes, the tension should >>> be a lot higher than 100kgf. >> that's not true. tension on my 16 spoke heavy section shimano r540's is >> about the same as a standard 32 spoke wheel. from factory. >> >>> 16 spoke road wheels with aero rims are >>> a good example-- don't those suckers need almost 200kgf of spoke >>> tension? >> nope. > > Well, I just downloaded the owner's manual for Bontrager package > wheels, and for their Race X-Lite Aero (which I assume is a low spoke > count wheel) and Race X-Lite Aero Carbon, they spec up to 400 lbf > tension. gotta use consistent units of measurements! 400lbf = 182kgf. > > I found a Park Tool page that gave the spec for the Mavic Ksyrium > Elite as up to 160 kgf. park say? what do mavic say? do mavic use that from factory? > For what it's worth, it specs the Shimano > R540 at 98-118kgf in front and 105-128 kgf in the rear-- relatively > normal, just as you claim. and i'll bet that shimano have never read "the book" so their engineering is untainted. > > The spec for other wheels starts at 50 kgf for front wheel spokes and > ranges to 181 for rear wheel spokes, so there's no indication that 100 > kgf is the right tension for all purposes. It looks like 100 kgf > would be within spec for at least half the listed wheels, though. > > It's worth pointing out that all the listed wheels are for bikes with > some kind of sporting pretensions, and none of them have high spoke > counts. So for wheels in the real world whose uses require more of > them than play bikes do, I'd expect to see a correspondingly wider > range of appropriate spoke tensions depending on spoke count, rim > section, and intended load. > > For what it's worth, Park says this: "The recommended tension for > spokes in bicycle wheels can be as low as 80 Kilograms force (Kfg) and > as high as 230 Kilograms force. As a rule of thumb, it is best to set > tension as high as the weakest link in the system will allow, which > for a bicycle wheel is usually the rim." That sounds like something > Jobst would say. > > http://parktool.com/repair/readhowto.asp?id=51 > > Chalo > i think it more interesting that the only one that is truly a high tension wheel is domestic - and doubtless influenced by jobstian misunderstanding. there really is no point in tension "as high as the rim can bear". it achieves nothing for wheel strength, can increase rim buckling and decreases fatigue life. tension needs to be as high as necessary to prevent spoke slackness in use - no more.
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 13:46:20
From: Ron Ruff
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 12, 1:35 pm, "Jambo" <-...@-.- > wrote: > Maybe it has to do with fear and insecurity, that letting other people have > different views will "let the terrorists win". The "War on Terror" and the "terrorists winning" are one and the same... ie when we decided to wage the war, that is when we lost... Nice film, "The Lives of Others". There was a comment made in the film that 20 years ago people would have never tolerated what was going on, but now they were used to it. And we are slowly getting used to it as well.
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 18:13:33
From: Peter Cole
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Ron Ruff wrote: > On Sep 12, 1:35 pm, "Jambo" <-...@-.-> wrote: >> Maybe it has to do with fear and insecurity, that letting other people have >> different views will "let the terrorists win". > > The "War on Terror" and the "terrorists winning" are one and the > same... ie when we decided to wage the war, that is when we lost... > > Nice film, "The Lives of Others". There was a comment made in the film > that 20 years ago people would have never tolerated what was going on, > but now they were used to it. And we are slowly getting used to it as > well. Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not cynical enough (again). I do believe there are some absolutes. The end never justifies the means -- here, there or anywhere.
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Date: 13 Sep 2007 22:06:51
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Peter Cole wrote: > Ron Ruff wrote: >> On Sep 12, 1:35 pm, "Jambo" <-...@-.-> wrote: >>> Maybe it has to do with fear and insecurity, that letting other >>> people have >>> different views will "let the terrorists win". >> >> The "War on Terror" and the "terrorists winning" are one and the >> same... ie when we decided to wage the war, that is when we lost... >> >> Nice film, "The Lives of Others". There was a comment made in the film >> that 20 years ago people would have never tolerated what was going on, >> but now they were used to it. And we are slowly getting used to it as >> well. > > Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not cynical > enough (again). cynical? you're obstreperous, myopic, pig-headed, stubborn, and frankly sometimes outright stupid. but you're not cynical - you'd need to be capable of rational analysis for that. > > I do believe there are some absolutes. The end never justifies the means > -- here, there or anywhere.
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Date: 14 Sep 2007 11:17:45
From: Peter Cole
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jim beam wrote: > Peter Cole wrote: >> Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not >> cynical enough (again). > > cynical? you're obstreperous, myopic, pig-headed, stubborn, and frankly > sometimes outright stupid. but you're not cynical - you'd need to be > capable of rational analysis for that. Main Entry: ob·strep·er·ous Pronunciation: &b-'stre-p(&-)r&s, äb- Function: adjective Etymology: Latin obstreperus, from obstrepere to clamor against, from ob- against + strepere to make a noise 1 : marked by unruly or aggressive noisiness : CLAMOROUS <obstreperous merriment > 2 : stubbornly resistant to control : UNRULY synonym see VOCIFEROUS I am resistant to control, I can see why that might be a problem for you. I do wear glasses. I'm about as likely to be called stupid as short. I've been judged at least capable, and frequently excellent, at "rational" analysis. Is there any other kind? While you're welcome to your opinion of me, do you have to append it to every post?
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Date: 14 Sep 2007 18:59:32
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Peter Cole wrote: > jim beam wrote: >> Peter Cole wrote: > >>> Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not >>> cynical enough (again). >> >> cynical? you're obstreperous, myopic, pig-headed, stubborn, and >> frankly sometimes outright stupid. but you're not cynical - you'd >> need to be capable of rational analysis for that. > > Main Entry: ob·strep·er·ous > Pronunciation: &b-'stre-p(&-)r&s, äb- > Function: adjective > Etymology: Latin obstreperus, from obstrepere to clamor against, from > ob- against + strepere to make a noise > 1 : marked by unruly or aggressive noisiness : CLAMOROUS <obstreperous > merriment> > 2 : stubbornly resistant to control : UNRULY > synonym see VOCIFEROUS > > I am resistant to control, I can see why that might be a problem for you. > > I do wear glasses. > > I'm about as likely to be called stupid as short. > > I've been judged at least capable, and frequently excellent, at > "rational" analysis. Is there any other kind? > > While you're welcome to your opinion of me, do you have to append it to > every post? when you're bullshitting, yes!
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Date: 15 Sep 2007 09:59:28
From: Peter Cole
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jim beam wrote: > Peter Cole wrote: >> jim beam wrote: >>> Peter Cole wrote: >> >>>> Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not >>>> cynical enough (again). >>> >>> cynical? you're obstreperous, myopic, pig-headed, stubborn, and >>> frankly sometimes outright stupid. but you're not cynical - you'd >>> need to be capable of rational analysis for that. >> >> Main Entry: ob·strep·er·ous >> Pronunciation: &b-'stre-p(&-)r&s, äb- >> Function: adjective >> Etymology: Latin obstreperus, from obstrepere to clamor against, from >> ob- against + strepere to make a noise >> 1 : marked by unruly or aggressive noisiness : CLAMOROUS <obstreperous >> merriment> >> 2 : stubbornly resistant to control : UNRULY >> synonym see VOCIFEROUS >> >> I am resistant to control, I can see why that might be a problem for you. >> >> I do wear glasses. >> >> I'm about as likely to be called stupid as short. >> >> I've been judged at least capable, and frequently excellent, at >> "rational" analysis. Is there any other kind? >> >> While you're welcome to your opinion of me, do you have to append it >> to every post? > > when you're bullshitting, yes! At the risk of pointing out the obvious, you just violated your own guideline, unless your idea of me "bullshitting" is calling myself cynical.
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Date: 15 Sep 2007 07:03:41
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Peter Cole wrote: > jim beam wrote: >> Peter Cole wrote: >>> jim beam wrote: >>>> Peter Cole wrote: >>> >>>>> Just when I'm thinking I've grown too cynical I discover I'm not >>>>> cynical enough (again). >>>> >>>> cynical? you're obstreperous, myopic, pig-headed, stubborn, and >>>> frankly sometimes outright stupid. but you're not cynical - you'd >>>> need to be capable of rational analysis for that. >>> >>> Main Entry: ob·strep·er·ous >>> Pronunciation: &b-'stre-p(&-)r&s, äb- >>> Function: adjective >>> Etymology: Latin obstreperus, from obstrepere to clamor against, from >>> ob- against + strepere to make a noise >>> 1 : marked by unruly or aggressive noisiness : CLAMOROUS >>> <obstreperous merriment> >>> 2 : stubbornly resistant to control : UNRULY >>> synonym see VOCIFEROUS >>> >>> I am resistant to control, I can see why that might be a problem for >>> you. >>> >>> I do wear glasses. >>> >>> I'm about as likely to be called stupid as short. >>> >>> I've been judged at least capable, and frequently excellent, at >>> "rational" analysis. Is there any other kind? >>> >>> While you're welcome to your opinion of me, do you have to append it >>> to every post? >> >> when you're bullshitting, yes! > > At the risk of pointing out the obvious, you just violated your own > guideline, unless your idea of me "bullshitting" is calling myself cynical. now you're being short.
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Date: 14 Sep 2007 04:19:22
From: still me
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2007 18:13:33 -0400, Peter Cole <peter_cole@comcast.net > wrote: >I do believe there are some absolutes. The end never justifies the means >-- here, there or anywhere. Especially when the end is a fraud from the beginning.
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 15:24:21
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: > > If I were building a 900 gram downhill rim with 13/14g spokes, the > tension would be higher because the application is tougher on the > wheel, the rim is stronger..nothing to do with the > spokes... You are right that the rim's strength (and sometimes spoke count) determine the tension to use, but the tension determines what spokes will be appropriate. For a rim with "too many" spoke holes for its weight, like the 48h Sun CR-18, the spoke tension may have to be less than 100kgf to keep the rim from buckling (I haven't measured the exact value, just observed the phenomenon while tensioning wheels). if the tension is less than 100kgf, then 1.6mm or 1.5mm spokes will work better than thicker ones; they'll be less likely to go slack. For a rim with a heavy section and few spoke holes, the tension should be a lot higher than 100kgf. 16 spoke road wheels with aero rims are a good example-- don't those suckers need almost 200kgf of spoke tension? Chalo
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 19:57:01
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Chalo wrote: > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: >> If I were building a 900 gram downhill rim with 13/14g spokes, the >> tension would be higher because the application is tougher on the >> wheel, the rim is stronger..nothing to do with the >> spokes... > > You are right that the rim's strength (and sometimes spoke count) > determine the tension to use, but the tension determines what spokes > will be appropriate. > > For a rim with "too many" spoke holes for its weight, like the 48h Sun > CR-18, the spoke tension may have to be less than 100kgf to keep the > rim from buckling (I haven't measured the exact value, just observed > the phenomenon while tensioning wheels). if the tension is less than > 100kgf, then 1.6mm or 1.5mm spokes will work better than thicker ones; > they'll be less likely to go slack. > > For a rim with a heavy section and few spoke holes, the tension should > be a lot higher than 100kgf. that's not true. tension on my 16 spoke heavy section shimano r540's is about the same as a standard 32 spoke wheel. from factory. > 16 spoke road wheels with aero rims are > a good example-- don't those suckers need almost 200kgf of spoke > tension? nope.
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 05:31:59
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 10, 2:49 am, Rik O'Shea <rikos...@yahoo.com > wrote: > On 9 Sep, 13:54, "Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com" > > <pe...@vecchios.com> wrote: > > On Sep 9, 1:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any > > rim, generally. > > "right side rear" - Do you mean the rear drive side or non-drive side? no, I mean the right side of the rear wheel. Unless the cogs are on the left, of course...
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 05:30:49
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 8:23 pm, Chalo <chalo.col...@gmail.com > wrote: > Qui si parla Campagnolo wrote: > > > > > 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any > > rim, generally. > > That's a relatively safe generalization, but it doesn't make much > sense from an engineering perspective. A 32 hole downhill rim > weighing 900g and laced with 13-14ga spokes should have a much higher > per-spoke tension than a 48 hole touring rim weighing 480g and laced > with 15-16ga spokes. > > I know you build a lot of 32 and 36 spoke road bike wheels with > 400-500g rims and 14-15ga butted spokes, and 100kgf per spoke is good > for that kind of wheel. But some wheels must have less tension and > others benefit from more tension. > > Chalo If I were building a 900 gram downhill rim with 13/14g spokes, the tension would be higher because the application is tougher on the wheel, the rim is stronger..nothing to do with the spokes...'Generally' I think is the operative word here...for the vast majority of the 400 or so wheels built here at the shop each year(like about 398 or so). 48 hole? Not a lot of those out there. I am about to build a tandem with Dyads, DT disc hubs, 40h rear, 36h front, 4 cross rear and 3 cross front and the tensiuon will be( drum roll)...100 kgf for the right rear and front. Don't think any wheel 'benefits' from less tension tho..100-110kgf is the benchmark..but I'm just a dummass wheelbuilder and wrench..not an 'engineer'...... I got along just fine flying USN Fighters w/o ever designing a single one nor really caring about the engineering involved...'pull back, go up, pull farther back, go down'....
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 18:28:32
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Ron Ruff wrote: > > Chalo... did you suggest that a 48h touring wheel with light spokes > should have particularly low tension? Yes. > If so... why? The low tension is so that the total tension of the large number of spokes doesn't collapse the comparatively lightweight rim. Light spokes are used so that they can have a meaningful amount of elastic takeup at that low tension. I have built 48 spoke wheels with 700C Sun CR18 rims and straight 14ga spokes, but it's difficult to get the spokes tight enough to stay tight without causing the rim to buckle. It's too much spoke cross- sectional area for that rim. 15-16ga or 15-17ga spokes are a better choice for a rim like that. Chalo
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 08:52:16
From: Ron Ruff
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 10:09 pm, jim beam <spamvor...@bad.example.net > wrote: > and spoke slackening in use is > simply a function of the rim deforming at the loading point - a stronger > rim will deform less and thus require less tension, all loads being equal. The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to support the load. In the classic example with a box rim and 36 spokes only ~3 spokes at the bottom see significant detension under normal loads, and the sum of their detensioning is about equal to the load applied... the rest of the spokes are hardly effected. A stiffer rim will spread the load a bit, but not nearly as much as you would expect based on rim stiffness alone (ie doubling the rim vertical stiffness might result in a 10% reduction in the max spoke detension). Of course in all cases the vector sum of the change in spoke tension for all the spokes must equal the applied load. As you said, it isn't necessary to have spoke tension higher than what will prevent them from going slack, but in an "optimized" wheel, where you are trying to achieve the best strength/ weight or strength/ aero drag, the spoke tension will end up being high. Chalo... did you suggest that a 48h touring wheel with light spokes should have particularly low tension? If so... why?
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 21:16:48
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Ron Ruff wrote: > On Sep 9, 10:09 pm, jim beam <spamvor...@bad.example.net> wrote: >> and spoke slackening in use is >> simply a function of the rim deforming at the loading point - a stronger >> rim will deform less and thus require less tension, all loads being equal. > > The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple... the > deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to support the load. unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff one. > In the classic example with a box rim and 36 spokes only ~3 spokes at > the bottom see significant detension under normal loads, and the sum > of their detensioning is about equal to the load applied... the rest > of the spokes are hardly effected. A stiffer rim will spread the load > a bit, but not nearly as much as you would expect based on rim > stiffness alone (ie doubling the rim vertical stiffness might result > in a 10% reduction in the max spoke detension). Of course in all cases > the vector sum of the change in spoke tension for all the spokes must > equal the applied load. > > As you said, it isn't necessary to have spoke tension higher than what > will prevent them from going slack, but in an "optimized" wheel, where > you are trying to achieve the best strength/ weight or strength/ aero > drag, the spoke tension will end up being high. > > Chalo... did you suggest that a 48h touring wheel with light spokes > should have particularly low tension? If so... why? > >
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 12:36:16
From: Jambo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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"jim beam" <spamvortex@bad.example.net > wrote in message news:xNqdnTlDP-Iti3vbnZ2dnUVZ_g-dnZ2d@speakeasy.net... > Ron Ruff wrote: >> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple... the >> deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to support the load. > > unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is the same, > regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the rim rigidity, and > a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff one. > You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, beamboy. Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, that's right, we're talking about you.
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 19:45:13
From: Lou Holtman
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Jambo wrote: > "jim beam" <spamvortex@bad.example.net> wrote in message > news:xNqdnTlDP-Iti3vbnZ2dnUVZ_g-dnZ2d@speakeasy.net... >> Ron Ruff wrote: > >>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple... the >>> deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to support the load. >> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is the same, >> regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the rim rigidity, and >> a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff one. >> > You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, beamboy. > > Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less tension, less > load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, that's right, we're talking > about you. > > That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get obsessive. Lou -- Posted by news://news.nb.nu (http://www.nb.nu)
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 18:39:21
From:
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Lou Holtman writes: >>>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple >>>> ... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to >>>> support the load. >>> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is >>> the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the >>> rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff >>> one. >> You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, beamboy. >> Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less >> tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, that's >> right, we're talking about you. > That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get > obsessive. I'm not sure what you mean by that, but you needn't wait for others to explain why spokes of wheels are tensioned. That such wheels rely on the tension of the bottom spokes has been explained endlessly here and once these spokes are slack, they may as well be removed from the wheel (as was shown in a picture offered here a few times). The problem with that is that the rest of the spoke also have no tension, so when it is their turn at the bottom the wheel collapses. Even if the slackened spokes are not removed, they offer no lateral strength, so the wheel can collapse to the side. Therefore, how tight should spokes be, knowing that the wheel can support only as much load as the tension in those spokes 4+ at the ground contact zone? Well the tighter they are the more load the wheel can carry and that tension is limited by the buckling strength of the rim. That riding on rough surfaces, like a road with many manual paving patches, wheel loading can be more than twice the static load of rider and bicycle. Although loosely spoked wheels may not collapse on such a road, their spokes become slack and in time lose alignment as spoke nipples unscrew. Many people use thread locking goo to prevent this but don't understand what caused their wheel to fail when the bump in the road was large enough. Jobst Brandt
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 20:24:15
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: > Lou Holtman writes: > >>>>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple >>>>> ... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to >>>>> support the load. > >>>> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is >>>> the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the >>>> rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff >>>> one. > >>> You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, beamboy. > >>> Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less >>> tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, that's >>> right, we're talking about you. > >> That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get >> obsessive. > > I'm not sure what you mean by that, but you needn't wait for others to > explain why spokes of wheels are tensioned. That such wheels rely on > the tension of the bottom spokes has been explained endlessly here and > once these spokes are slack, they may as well be removed from the wheel > (as was shown in a picture offered here a few times). The problem > with that is that the rest of the spoke also have no tension, so when > it is their turn at the bottom the wheel collapses. this old saw again... 1. unless your rims are made of string cheese, they don't collapse. http://www.flickr.com/photos/38636024@N00/417157612/ 2. you're misunderstanding what you see with spoke tension decrease. all it is is rim deformation. if the rim were perfectly rigid, you'd see a completely different spoke tension distribution, but the wheel would still work!!! > > Even if the slackened spokes are not removed, they offer no lateral > strength, so the wheel can collapse to the side. Therefore, how tight > should spokes be, knowing that the wheel can support only as much load > as the tension in those spokes 4+ at the ground contact zone? Well > the tighter they are the more load the wheel can carry and that > tension is limited by the buckling strength of the rim. > > That riding on rough surfaces, like a road with many manual paving > patches, wheel loading can be more than twice the static load of rider > and bicycle. Although loosely spoked wheels may not collapse on such > a road, their spokes become slack and in time lose alignment as spoke > nipples unscrew. Many people use thread locking goo to prevent this > but don't understand what caused their wheel to fail when the bump in > the road was large enough. spokes with excessively tight spokes buckle at small bumps in the road...
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 22:36:55
From: Lou Holtman
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: > Lou Holtman writes: > >>>>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple >>>>> ... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to >>>>> support the load. > >>>> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is >>>> the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore the >>>> rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less stiff >>>> one. > >>> You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, beamboy. > >>> Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less >>> tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, that's >>> right, we're talking about you. > >> That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get >> obsessive. > > I'm not sure what you mean by that, but you needn't wait for others to > explain why spokes of wheels are tensioned. That such wheels rely on > the tension of the bottom spokes has been explained endlessly here and > once these spokes are slack, they may as well be removed from the wheel > (as was shown in a picture offered here a few times). The problem > with that is that the rest of the spoke also have no tension, so when > it is their turn at the bottom the wheel collapses. > > Even if the slackened spokes are not removed, they offer no lateral > strength, so the wheel can collapse to the side. Therefore, how tight > should spokes be, knowing that the wheel can support only as much load > as the tension in those spokes 4+ at the ground contact zone? Well > the tighter they are the more load the wheel can carry and that > tension is limited by the buckling strength of the rim. > > That riding on rough surfaces, like a road with many manual paving > patches, wheel loading can be more than twice the static load of rider > and bicycle. Although loosely spoked wheels may not collapse on such > a road, their spokes become slack and in time lose alignment as spoke > nipples unscrew. Many people use thread locking goo to prevent this > but don't understand what caused their wheel to fail when the bump in > the road was large enough. > > Jobst Brandt Thanks Mr. Brandt for explaining this again and again. What strikes me is the amount of attention spokes, wheels, rims get in rbt and every discussion ends in name calling and people getting personal in a very nasty way. And guess what, me and all my riding buddies had any problems with our wheels for years and years. So I wonder 'what is all this fuss about'. 'Maybe it is something of the 'new world'. Lou -- Posted by news://news.nb.nu (http://www.nb.nu)
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 22:50:57
From:
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Lou Holtman writes: >>>>>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple >>>>>> ... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to >>>>>> support the load. >>>>> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is >>>>> the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore >>>>> the rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less >>>>> stiff one. >>>> You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, >>>> beamboy. >>>> Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less >>>> tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, >>>> that's right, we're talking about you. >>> That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get >>> obsessive. >> I'm not sure what you mean by that, but you needn't wait for others >> to explain why spokes of wheels are tensioned. That such wheels >> rely on the tension of the bottom spokes has been explained >> endlessly here and once these spokes are slack, they may as well be >> removed from the wheel (as was shown in a picture offered here a >> few times). The problem with that is that the rest of the spoke >> also have no tension, so when it is their turn at the bottom the >> wheel collapses. >> Even if the slackened spokes are not removed, they offer no lateral >> strength, so the wheel can collapse to the side. Therefore, how >> tight should spokes be, knowing that the wheel can support only as >> much load as the tension in those spokes 4+ at the ground contact >> zone? Well the tighter they are the more load the wheel can carry >> and that tension is limited by the buckling strength of the rim. >> That riding on rough surfaces, like a road with many manual paving >> patches, wheel loading can be more than twice the static load of >> rider and bicycle. Although loosely spoked wheels may not collapse >> on such a road, their spokes become slack and in time lose >> alignment as spoke nipples unscrew. Many people use thread locking >> goo to prevent this but don't understand what caused their wheel to >> fail when the bump in the road was large enough. > Thanks Mr. Brandt for explaining this again and again. What > strikes me is the amount of attention spokes, wheels, rims get in > RBT and every discussion ends in name calling and people getting > personal in a very nasty way. And guess what, me and all my riding > buddies had any problems with our wheels for years and years. So I > wonder 'what is all this fuss about'. 'Maybe it is something of the > 'new world'. Until "the Bicycle Wheel" was published, there was no analysis and technical explanation for why bicycle wheels are built the way they are. Much of what was done was based on myth and lore, while regular wheel builders fortunately knew what worked and what didn't, but they were unclear on why that was so. Most of the book presents a picture that is opposite to what was commonly believed and this enraged many wheel builders. Wheelsmith wrote the first review for Bicycling magazine in which he skillfully avoided saying what he felt but the allusions are clear - that it was far fetched and that it failed to cover all there is to wheel building. Originally I had asked Rick Hjertberg (Wheelsmith) to be a co-author, but I discovered that he didn't want to expose his trade secrets that were mostly defrocked in the book. Others who felt similarly have been attacking the book ever since. More recently civility in discourse has been eroded on RBT. People no longer "disagree" they reply with rude rejoinders, not realizing that these discredit what they say. This tone has permeated our society from high places in the USA that attack people's honesty and patriotism for expressing disagreement. We have lost community in this era and it may not return for a long time. I am amazed when traveling, how well the Europeans have recovered after the evils of WWII. Even former communist controlled areas show more care for civility and civil liberties that the USA. To see how destructive a Stasi (or CIA) can be, see: http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-lives1dec01,0,2952621.story The brutality is all mental, but the human destruction total; done only with words! How could that hurt? I'm curious how the showing of the film was delayed coming to the USA for nearly a year while being show in the rest of the world. Thereafter it appeared mostly in smaller "art cinemas" here. Jobst Brandt
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 15:35:12
From: Jambo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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<jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org > wrote in message news:46e71bd1$0$14069$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > Lou Holtman writes: >> Thanks Mr. Brandt for explaining this again and again. What >> strikes me is the amount of attention spokes, wheels, rims get in >> RBT and every discussion ends in name calling and people getting >> personal in a very nasty way. And guess what, me and all my riding >> buddies had any problems with our wheels for years and years. So I >> wonder 'what is all this fuss about'. 'Maybe it is something of the >> 'new world'. ..... > Others who felt similarly have been attacking the book ever since. > More recently civility in discourse has been eroded on RBT. People no > longer "disagree" they reply with rude rejoinders, not realizing that > these discredit what they say. This tone has permeated our society > from high places in the USA that attack people's honesty and > patriotism for expressing disagreement. We have lost community in > this era and it may not return for a long time. Maybe it has to do with all the TV "reality" shows that portray no reality at all, but rather the worst excesses of tabloid commercial TV in pursuit of ratings. Maybe it has to do with fear and insecurity, that letting other people have different views will "let the terrorists win". Or maybe it has to do with the need of some people to be acknowledged in some way as having something to contribute, even though their bleating really has nothing to do with advancing knowldege, but rather to gain their 15 minutes of fame (or infamy - beamboy, you reading this?). Regardless, when people like beamboy go to great lengths to manufacture an identity, manufacture contrarian ideas with manufactured and contrived "data", and to devote a major part of their lives in perpetuating fraudulent ideologies as means of defining their identity, and society (through popular culture) saying this is okay, we're indeed headed for dark times.
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Date: 12 Sep 2007 20:53:55
From: Andrew Price
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On 11 Sep 2007 22:50:57 GMT, jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: >To see how >destructive a Stasi (or CIA) can be, see: > >http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-lives1dec01,0,2952621.story That is a great film. >The brutality is all mental, but the human destruction total; done >only with words! How could that hurt? > >I'm curious how the showing of the film was delayed coming to the USA >for nearly a year while being show in the rest of the world. >Thereafter it appeared mostly in smaller "art cinemas" here. A sad additional piece of information is that its main protagonist, Ulrich Mühe, died last July at the early age of 54.
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Date: 11 Sep 2007 20:32:51
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: > Lou Holtman writes: > >>>>>>> The "tensegrity" structure of a wheel isn't quite that simple >>>>>>> ... the deflection of the spokes and rim work in concert to >>>>>>> support the load. > >>>>>> unless the spokes go slack, the support they provide the rim is >>>>>> the same, regardless of tension. the only delta is therefore >>>>>> the rim rigidity, and a stiff rim will distort less than a less >>>>>> stiff one. > >>>>> You've been told and shown this to be wrong time and again, >>>>> beamboy. > >>>>> Tension on spokes affect the loads the wheel can take. Less >>>>> tension, less load capability. Only a moron can... oh wait, >>>>> that's right, we're talking about you. > >>>> That not what mister beam is saying. You have to watch not to get >>>> obsessive. > >>> I'm not sure what you mean by that, but you needn't wait for others >>> to explain why spokes of wheels are tensioned. That such wheels >>> rely on the tension of the bottom spokes has been explained >>> endlessly here and once these spokes are slack, they may as well be >>> removed from the wheel (as was shown in a picture offered here a >>> few times). The problem with that is that the rest of the spoke >>> also have no tension, so when it is their turn at the bottom the >>> wheel collapses. > >>> Even if the slackened spokes are not removed, they offer no lateral >>> strength, so the wheel can collapse to the side. Therefore, how >>> tight should spokes be, knowing that the wheel can support only as >>> much load as the tension in those spokes 4+ at the ground contact >>> zone? Well the tighter they are the more load the wheel can carry >>> and that tension is limited by the buckling strength of the rim. > >>> That riding on rough surfaces, like a road with many manual paving >>> patches, wheel loading can be more than twice the static load of >>> rider and bicycle. Although loosely spoked wheels may not collapse >>> on such a road, their spokes become slack and in time lose >>> alignment as spoke nipples unscrew. Many people use thread locking >>> goo to prevent this but don't understand what caused their wheel to >>> fail when the bump in the road was large enough. > >> Thanks Mr. Brandt for explaining this again and again. What >> strikes me is the amount of attention spokes, wheels, rims get in >> RBT and every discussion ends in name calling and people getting >> personal in a very nasty way. And guess what, me and all my riding >> buddies had any problems with our wheels for years and years. So I >> wonder 'what is all this fuss about'. 'Maybe it is something of the >> 'new world'. > > Until "the Bicycle Wheel" was published, there was no analysis and > technical explanation for why bicycle wheels are built the way they > are. you can say there still isn't! > Much of what was done was based on myth and lore, see above - spoke tension "as high as the rim can bear", strength increasing as tension increases, elimination of fatigue in non-strain aging steels, anodizing causing cracking... the list of myth and lore is long and scary. > while regular > wheel builders fortunately knew what worked and what didn't, but they > were unclear on why that was so. how will they correctly understand it if they're being told that spoke slackening is due to stress superposition and not simple rim distortion? > > Most of the book presents a picture that is opposite to what was > commonly believed that at least is true. > and this enraged many wheel builders. Wheelsmith > wrote the first review for Bicycling magazine in which he skillfully > avoided saying what he felt but the allusions are clear - that it was > far fetched and that it failed to cover all there is to wheel > building. Originally I had asked Rick Hjertberg (Wheelsmith) to be a > co-author, but I discovered that he didn't want to expose his trade > secrets that were mostly defrocked in the book. or he thought you were a crank that hadn't done sufficient homework. > > Others who felt similarly have been attacking the book ever since. > More recently civility in discourse has been eroded on RBT. People no > longer "disagree" they reply with rude rejoinders, not realizing that > these discredit what they say. This tone has permeated our society > from high places in the USA that attack people's honesty and > patriotism for expressing disagreement. We have lost community in > this era and it may not return for a long time. ah, but of course, jobstian ad hominem and "oho" is not discreditable at all!!! > > I am amazed when traveling, how well the Europeans have recovered > after the evils of WWII. Even former communist controlled areas show > more care for civility and civil liberties that the USA. To see how > destructive a Stasi (or CIA) can be, see: > > http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-lives1dec01,0,2952621.story > > The brutality is all mental, but the human destruction total; done > only with words! How could that hurt? > > I'm curious how the showing of the film was delayed coming to the USA > for nearly a year while being show in the rest of the world. > Thereafter it appeared mostly in smaller "art cinemas" here. > /utterly/ irrelevant.
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 10:10:15
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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jim beam wrote: > > Chalo wrote: > > > > Qui si parla Campagnolo wrote: > >> 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any > >> rim, generally. > > > That's a relatively safe generalization, but it doesn't make much > > sense from an engineering perspective. A 32 hole downhill rim > > weighing 900g and laced with 13-14ga spokes should have a much higher > > per-spoke tension than a 48 hole touring rim weighing 480g and laced > > with 15-16ga spokes. > > > I know you build a lot of 32 and 36 spoke road bike wheels with > > 400-500g rims and 14-15ga butted spokes, and 100kgf per spoke is good > > for that kind of wheel. But some wheels must have less tension and > > others benefit from more tension. > > how does that makes sense? spoke tension is simply that required to > prevent the spokes going slack in use - increasing tension does not > increase wheel strength or stiffness. Right. But bigger loads-- static or dynamic-- require more spoke tension to support them. > and spoke slackening in use is > simply a function of the rim deforming at the loading point - a stronger > rim will deform less and thus require less tension, all loads being equal. But all loads are not equal, which is why M/Cs get thicker spokes and higher tensions to go along with their stiff and heavy rims. Heavy riders and those who lay a beating on their bicycles require analogous measures. Chalo
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 08:49:25
From: Rik O'Shea
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On 9 Sep, 13:54, "Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com" <pe...@vecchios.com > wrote: > On Sep 9, 1:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any > rim, generally. "right side rear" - Do you mean the rear drive side or non-drive side?
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Date: 10 Sep 2007 02:23:55
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Qui si parla Campagnolo wrote: > > 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any > rim, generally. That's a relatively safe generalization, but it doesn't make much sense from an engineering perspective. A 32 hole downhill rim weighing 900g and laced with 13-14ga spokes should have a much higher per-spoke tension than a 48 hole touring rim weighing 480g and laced with 15-16ga spokes. I know you build a lot of 32 and 36 spoke road bike wheels with 400-500g rims and 14-15ga butted spokes, and 100kgf per spoke is good for that kind of wheel. But some wheels must have less tension and others benefit from more tension. Chalo
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 21:09:56
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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Chalo wrote: > Qui si parla Campagnolo wrote: >> 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any >> rim, generally. > > That's a relatively safe generalization, but it doesn't make much > sense from an engineering perspective. A 32 hole downhill rim > weighing 900g and laced with 13-14ga spokes should have a much higher > per-spoke tension than a 48 hole touring rim weighing 480g and laced > with 15-16ga spokes. > > I know you build a lot of 32 and 36 spoke road bike wheels with > 400-500g rims and 14-15ga butted spokes, and 100kgf per spoke is good > for that kind of wheel. But some wheels must have less tension and > others benefit from more tension. > > Chalo > how does that makes sense? spoke tension is simply that required to prevent the spokes going slack in use - increasing tension does not increase wheel strength or stiffness. and spoke slackening in use is simply a function of the rim deforming at the loading point - a stronger rim will deform less and thus require less tension, all loads being equal.
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 18:26:05
From: steve
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 11:20 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com > wrote: > On Sep 10, 12:12 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Sep 9, 8:50 pm, steve <ssau...@emich.edu> wrote: > > > > On Sep 9, 3:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > > > I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 > > > > Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke > > > > tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on > > > > their website. > > > > According to DT all of their rims have a max tension of 120kg which is > > > a bit higher than most recommended spoke tensions for rims. If your > > > hub has a lot of dish in it and you are a larger rider then I would > > > probably approch the 120kg mark otherwise you would be fine if you > > > stayed at 110kg which would put less stress on the rim. Good luck. > > > > Steve > > > Thanks. > > For the hub, I'll be getting a Shimano FH-M765 (35.8/24.8 center to > > flange). > > I'm about 75kg and have a seatpost rack loaded from 5 to 10kg. The > > wheel is going on my full suspension commuter which I take over some > > fairly poor roads, so it's going to take some hits. > > I looked up the wrong specs on the hub, it's in fact a 35.35/20.05 > center to flange.- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - With that hub I think you would be fine at a tension of 100kg-110kg. The disc hubs move the non-drive flange in a bit to make room for the disc which will allow tensions to be more even between drive and non- drive. Steve
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 08:20:12
From: tiborg
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 10, 12:12 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com > wrote: > On Sep 9, 8:50 pm, steve <ssau...@emich.edu> wrote: > > > On Sep 9, 3:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > > I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 > > > Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke > > > tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on > > > their website. > > > According to DT all of their rims have a max tension of 120kg which is > > a bit higher than most recommended spoke tensions for rims. If your > > hub has a lot of dish in it and you are a larger rider then I would > > probably approch the 120kg mark otherwise you would be fine if you > > stayed at 110kg which would put less stress on the rim. Good luck. > > > Steve > > Thanks. > For the hub, I'll be getting a Shimano FH-M765 (35.8/24.8 center to > flange). > I'm about 75kg and have a seatpost rack loaded from 5 to 10kg. The > wheel is going on my full suspension commuter which I take over some > fairly poor roads, so it's going to take some hits. I looked up the wrong specs on the hub, it's in fact a 35.35/20.05 center to flange.
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 08:12:05
From: tiborg
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 8:50 pm, steve <ssau...@emich.edu > wrote: > On Sep 9, 3:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com> wrote: > > > I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 > > Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke > > tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on > > their website. > > According to DT all of their rims have a max tension of 120kg which is > a bit higher than most recommended spoke tensions for rims. If your > hub has a lot of dish in it and you are a larger rider then I would > probably approch the 120kg mark otherwise you would be fine if you > stayed at 110kg which would put less stress on the rim. Good luck. > > Steve Thanks. For the hub, I'll be getting a Shimano FH-M765 (35.8/24.8 center to flange). I'm about 75kg and have a seatpost rack loaded from 5 to 10kg. The wheel is going on my full suspension commuter which I take over some fairly poor roads, so it's going to take some hits.
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 05:54:38
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 1:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com > wrote: > I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 > Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke > tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on > their website. 100 kgf on the right side rear and front. The same for any spoke, any rim, generally.
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Date: 09 Sep 2007 04:50:56
From: steve
Subject: Re: Recommended Spoke Tension for DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim
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On Sep 9, 3:26 am, tiborg <tcg...@mac.com > wrote: > I want to build a rear wheel using a DT Swiss XR 4.1d rim and 32 > Alpine III spokes. Does anyone have handy DT Swiss's recommended spoke > tension for this rim? They don't seem to have that information on > their website. According to DT all of their rims have a max tension of 120kg which is a bit higher than most recommended spoke tensions for rims. If your hub has a lot of dish in it and you are a larger rider then I would probably approch the 120kg mark otherwise you would be fine if you stayed at 110kg which would put less stress on the rim. Good luck. Steve
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