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Date: 11 Oct 2007 20:47:36
From: Derk
Subject: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Hi, I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you reduce tension on the other side. Your opinions Please. Derk
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 16:59:01
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast26may_1m.htm
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 23:00:38
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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"Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." Uncle Isaac
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 13:56:31
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 13, 9:44 am, A Muzi <a...@yellowjersey.org > wrote: > >> Qui si parla writes on road damage- > > datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side > >> to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. > >> but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up > >> you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. > >> AHA! > >> BACK TO SQUARE 167 > >> the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have > >> been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of > >> unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and > >> upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two > >> groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes > >> than the on the bend corrections. > >> This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. > >> AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. > > >> unbalanced method XXXXX > > >> balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY > > >> Chicxulub method > > >> Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best > >> trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of > >> experince > > >>http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... > > >> unbalanced correction in progress::::: > >> torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right > >> to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or > >> unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move > >> toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last > >> torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work > >> in progress. > >> (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there > >> are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant > >> Irishmen) > > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.comwrote: > > > ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first > > unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has > > bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta > > dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally. > > Hey, get back on topic! What do you suggest for Gene's rim when it gets > hit by an asteroid? > "Plan 9 from Outer Space"?
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 15:51:04
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 13, 10:44 am, A Muzi <a...@yellowjersey.org > wrote: > >> Qui si parla writes on road damage- > > datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side > >> to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. > >> but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up > >> you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. > >> AHA! > >> BACK TO SQUARE 167 > >> the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have > >> been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of > >> unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and > >> upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two > >> groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes > >> than the on the bend corrections. > >> This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. > >> AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. > > >> unbalanced method XXXXX > > >> balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY > > >> Chicxulub method > > >> Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best > >> trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of > >> experince > > >>http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... > > >> unbalanced correction in progress::::: > >> torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right > >> to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or > >> unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move > >> toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last > >> torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work > >> in progress. > >> (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there > >> are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant > >> Irishmen) > > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.comwrote: > > > ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first > > unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has > > bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta > > dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally. > > Hey, get back on topic! What do you suggest for Gene's rim when it gets > hit by an asteroid? > -- > Andrew Muziwww.yellowjersey.org > Open every day since 1 April, 1971- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - http://www.universalcycles.com/shopping/product_details.php?id=7807
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 07:27:19
From:
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: > To imply a well made wheel, ridden > often, will never need to be trued is 'waltdisneyworld' thinking. You have obviously never caught your wheel in a trolley track.
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 07:26:36
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 13, 7:48 am, datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com > wrote: > Qui si parla writes on road damage- > > torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side > to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. > but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up > you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. > AHA! > BACK TO SQUARE 167 > the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have > been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of > unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and > upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two > groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes > than the on the bend corrections. > This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. > AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. > > unbalanced method XXXXX > > balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY > > Chicxulub method > > Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best > trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of > experince > > http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... > > unbalanced correction in progress::::: > torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right > to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or > unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move > toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last > torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work > in progress. > (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there > are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant > Irishmen) ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally.
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 09:44:13
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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>> Qui si parla writes on road damage- > datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com> wrote: >> torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side >> to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. >> but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up >> you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. >> AHA! >> BACK TO SQUARE 167 >> the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have >> been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of >> unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and >> upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two >> groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes >> than the on the bend corrections. >> This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. >> AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. >> >> unbalanced method XXXXX >> >> balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY >> >> Chicxulub method >> >> Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best >> trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of >> experince >> >> http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... >> >> unbalanced correction in progress::::: >> torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right >> to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or >> unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move >> toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last >> torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work >> in progress. >> (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there >> are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant >> Irishmen) Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: > ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first > unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has > bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta > dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally. Hey, get back on topic! What do you suggest for Gene's rim when it gets hit by an asteroid? -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 00:46:53
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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In article <13h1mbhcva6elf1@corp.supernews.com >, A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org > wrote: > >> Qui si parla writes on road damage- > > > datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side > >> to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. > >> but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up > >> you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. > >> AHA! > >> BACK TO SQUARE 167 > >> the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have > >> been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of > >> unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and > >> upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two > >> groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes > >> than the on the bend corrections. > >> This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. > >> AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. > >> > >> unbalanced method XXXXX > >> > >> balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY > >> > >> Chicxulub method > >> > >> Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best > >> trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of > >> experince > >> > >> http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... > >> > >> unbalanced correction in progress::::: > >> torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right > >> to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or > >> unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move > >> toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last > >> torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work > >> in progress. > >> (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there > >> are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant > >> Irishmen) > > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: > > ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first > > unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has > > bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta > > dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally. > > Hey, get back on topic! What do you suggest for Gene's rim when it gets > hit by an asteroid? Preparation-A. -- Michael Press
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 07:46:35
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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A Muzi wrote: >>> Qui si parla writes on road damage- > >> datakoll <datak...@yahoo.com> wrote: >>> torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side >>> to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. >>> but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up >>> you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. >>> AHA! >>> BACK TO SQUARE 167 >>> the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have >>> been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of >>> unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and >>> upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two >>> groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes >>> than the on the bend corrections. >>> This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. >>> AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. >>> >>> unbalanced method XXXXX >>> >>> balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY >>> >>> Chicxulub method >>> >>> Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best >>> trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of >>> experince >>> >>> http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio... >>> >>> unbalanced correction in progress::::: >>> torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right >>> to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or >>> unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move >>> toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last >>> torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work >>> in progress. >>> (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there >>> are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant >>> Irishmen) > > Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: >> ok...thanks, I think..but when I true a wheel, I check tension first >> unless I built it..and when I true it, I tighten/loosen..unless it has >> bigger problems like out of round, low or high tension, outta >> dish..'truing' is like building, just takes less time, generally. > > Hey, get back on topic! What do you suggest for Gene's rim when it gets > hit by an asteroid? just crank the spoke tension /way/ up! any fule knos that will make the wheel stronger to resist impact!
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 07:25:51
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 12, 3:01 pm, Ozark Bicycle <bicycleatel...@ozarkbicycleservice.com > wrote: > On Oct 12, 12:44 pm, jobst.brandt griped: > > > someone writes: > > Why can't you get off that hobbyhorse? When you've invested in monogrammed chaps--it tends to focus the intellect. Yippeeiiiaayyy!
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 13:48:02
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Qui si parla writes on road damage- torqueing one side only? just for arguement: say you torque one side to eliminate damage, correcting to a true state. but given the math reality coming into play AS the wheel trues up you and wheel are back in the balance correction topo area. AHA! BACK TO SQUARE 167 the unbalanced correction for hypothetical example only could have been (my english suffers here in this transient state) a set of unbalanced corrections made slighlty less so by going down and upstream of the now slightly less unbalanced corrections into two groups of balancinbg corrections spread out over several more spokes than the on the bend corrections. This ploy leads to what? a balanced correction state. AS 'X' represents torque at bend, 'Y' represents balancing torque. unbalanced method XXXXX balanced method YYYYYYYYYYYYYY XX YYYYYYYYYYYYY Chicxulub method Beecaws this direction is in the real time math direction, it is best trying to go that way. I assume the author comes from this level of experince http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:3Hy8eoFQgj0J:nicholnl.wcp.muohio.edu/DingosBreakfastClub/Extinction/Chicxulub.html+formation+gulf+of+mexico+comet&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=8&gl=us unbalanced correction in progress::::: torqueing one side when dishing the rear, bringing the rim over right to left, is unbalanced in group 3. In group 2, one side torque or unbalanced torque moves toward using the dishing opportunity to move toward balance by pre planning or staging torque levels near the last torque increase levels. Or that's where I'm at at at this stage: work in progress. (I get rims from a unamed supplier that are really screwed up-there are retarded malicious shippers, mostly bad tempered ignorant Irishmen)
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 05:30:06
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 12, 11:34 am, still me <wheeled...@yahoo.com > wrote: > On Thu, 11 Oct 2007 13:22:22 -0700, landotter <landot...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > >I usually go through a wheel after I've stress relieved a factory or > >handbuilt wheel and pluck and look for very sharp or flat tones, see > >if I can even out the tension and keep the wheel true. It makes for a > >very stable wheel. > > I agree and emphasize "see if I can". After a rim has been on the road > for a while you will have road abuse and that will lead to uneven > tension to correct the abuse. Unless you change rims rather often, you > will never have perfectly even tension in a wheel that's used for road > riding. In spite of what is being said, we see wheels abused all the time, even here in the republic where the roads are pretty good. Hit something, a piece of wood, a hole, whatever and the rim will be slightly deformed, needing truing. To imply a well made wheel, ridden often, will never need to be trued is 'waltdisneyworld' thinking. The best a wheel will ever be is when the rim is new and the build is complete, before riding.
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 02:52:06
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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at some point all seperate and useful strategy meld into all spokes are of equal tension cosmically reducing friction and tension aaahhhhh!
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 01:24:20
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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yeeeah. You get to a point on the learning curve where you can eyeball the rim and evolve a several step strategy to get it straight and true. Combining lateral and radial truing with several seperate techniques melded together. Haven't read the piece but I guess that's a given. But the rim is a math construction like a bridge.. As J.Brandt often states, all spokes are at the same place and torques. Well. they should be. but often are not. But that does't mean you don't work toward that level. So, with paragraph one, you keep the average, low, and high spoke torque levels in mind as you true, always working toward all spokes torqued equally. Whatever strategm your using, it's moving toward all spokes are at an equal torque level - even if they not or won't be if hell freezes over again. The wheel starts with all spokes at seated equal tensions, then very small torque differences, a 1/4 turn, are used to take a direction for trueing the rim. You increase tensions, and equally decrease if necessary ( a radial opposite side ploy bringing an egg into roundness) using the strategms you learned but you "never" reduce spoke tension and not go for an opposite effect. Balance, as all spokes are of equal tension, is the essence of roundness and physics? as a strict rule, that's not true in practice but its always a good ideal to follow. Tension has an upper set level for function, all modifications of that level should be in balance not reduction. let me know if that's reasonable
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 03:54:37
From: Ben C
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On 2007-10-13, datakoll <datakoll@yahoo.com > wrote: > yeeeah. You get to a point on the learning curve where you can eyeball > the rim and evolve a several step strategy to get it straight and > true. > Combining lateral and radial truing with several seperate techniques > melded together. > > Haven't read the piece but I guess that's a given. > > But the rim is a math construction like a bridge.. As J.Brandt often > states, all spokes are at the same place and torques. Well. they > should be. > but often are not. But that does't mean you don't work toward that > level. > > So, with paragraph one, you keep the average, low, and high spoke > torque levels in mind as you true, always working toward all spokes > torqued equally. Whatever strategm your using, it's moving toward all > spokes are at an equal torque level - even if they not or won't be if > hell freezes over again. > > The wheel starts with all spokes at seated equal tensions, then very > small torque differences, a 1/4 turn, are used to take a direction for > trueing the rim. You increase tensions, and equally decrease if > necessary ( a radial opposite side ploy bringing an egg into > roundness) using the strategms you learned but you "never" reduce > spoke tension and not go for an opposite effect. > > Balance, as all spokes are of equal tension, is the essence of > roundness and physics? > > as a strict rule, that's not true in practice but its always a good > ideal to follow. > > Tension has an upper set level for function, all modifications of that > level should be in balance not reduction. > > let me know if that's reasonable Good advice. I have also found it's important to undercorrect as overcorrection leads to chaos. For wheelbuilders in group 2, the new rim leaves the factory rounder and truer than it's ever going to be again. If you're careful to turn each nipple by the same amount it comes up almost true first time. A few small corrections from that point and you're home and dry. Don't overcook the goose.
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Date: 12 Oct 2007 17:00:36
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Derk wrote: > Hi, > > I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: > when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning > spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. > > I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you > reduce tension on the other side. > > Your opinions Please. > > > Derk if it's because the spokes have bedded in beyond initial build, then expect tension increase only. if it's to fudge a deformed rim, as you suspect, tension decrease may be necessary.
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Date: 12 Oct 2007 13:01:34
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 12, 12:44 pm, jobst.brandt griped: > someone writes: Why can't you get off that hobbyhorse?
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Date: 14 Oct 2007 06:46:37
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Ozark Bicycle wrote: > On Oct 12, 12:44 pm, jobst.brandt griped: >> someone writes: > > > > Why can't you get off that hobbyhorse? > If you have to ask... On the other hand, Jobst Brandt is among the prime offenders (Frank Krygowski and "Dear Carl") come to mind of using their email address as their user name. Maybe they should consider changing their legal name to match their email address? -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 13:22:22
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 11, 2:53 pm, "Leo Lichtman" <l.licht...@worldnet.att.net > wrote: > And another thing. As you work on a wheel, it could happen that some spokes > get tightened beyond their proper final tension. Unless you keep copious > notes (who does?) you won't know which these are, so you won't know whether > it is okay to loosen them. > > I turn the nipples in whatefver direction brings the wheel closer to true. > If loosening a spoke will help true the wheel, especially if it rings a > little sharp--LOOSEN IT. I usually go through a wheel after I've stress relieved a factory or handbuilt wheel and pluck and look for very sharp or flat tones, see if I can even out the tension and keep the wheel true. It makes for a very stable wheel. I did this on the horrid Formula/Rigida wheel on my Kona city bike, then brought them up to tension--after thinking about just rerimming first thing--and the wheels are perfect after a few hundred miles of grocery fetching and deliberate abuse. The spoke tension was very uneven out of the box--but I have a feeling that even these bottom barrel single wall hoops should stay round for a good long while now after being attended too. Leo is right, though, rims aren't always perfect, so sometimes you just have to tension or loosen as needed, even if it's a bit uneven.
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Date: 12 Oct 2007 17:34:20
From: still me
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Thu, 11 Oct 2007 13:22:22 -0700, landotter <landotter@gmail.com > wrote: >I usually go through a wheel after I've stress relieved a factory or >handbuilt wheel and pluck and look for very sharp or flat tones, see >if I can even out the tension and keep the wheel true. It makes for a >very stable wheel. I agree and emphasize "see if I can". After a rim has been on the road for a while you will have road abuse and that will lead to uneven tension to correct the abuse. Unless you change rims rather often, you will never have perfectly even tension in a wheel that's used for road riding.
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Date: 12 Oct 2007 17:44:35
From:
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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someone writes: >> I usually go through a wheel after I've stress relieved a factory >> or handbuilt wheel and pluck and look for very sharp or flat tones, >> see if I can even out the tension and keep the wheel true. It >> makes for a very stable wheel. > I agree and emphasize "see if I can". After a rim has been on the > road for a while you will have road abuse and that will lead to > uneven tension to correct the abuse. Unless you change rims rather > often, you will never have perfectly even tension in a wheel that's > used for road riding. I don't visualize what you believe damages a rim while road riding. You must either land hard on a flat surface to cause a flat spot or partially collapse the wheel laterally to cause a wow. Other than that, bottoming on a curb causes a ding in the bead that can often be straightened with a bit of care. Most riders don't encounter these incidents so why should a wheel get out of true and require differential tightening? We weren't talking about crashing. I find that technical articles in Tour vary from excellent to poor with some poor advice tossed in. Jobst Brandt
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 17:44:39
From: Jasper Janssen
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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vOn 12 Oct 2007 17:44:35 GMT, jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: >I don't visualize what you believe damages a rim while road riding. >You must either land hard on a flat surface to cause a flat spot or >partially collapse the wheel laterally to cause a wow. Yes, that. Exactly. Jasper
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Date: 13 Oct 2007 12:59:57
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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> vOn 12 Oct 2007 17:44:35 GMT, jobst.brandt@stanfordalumni.org wrote: >> I don't visualize what you believe damages a rim while road riding. >> You must either land hard on a flat surface to cause a flat spot or >> partially collapse the wheel laterally to cause a wow. Jasper Janssen wrote: > Yes, that. Exactly. Some riders may exclaim "Wow!". Others use expletives -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 12:51:26
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 11, 1:08 pm, M-gineering <ikmotgeens...@m-gineering.nl > wrote: > Derk wrote: > > Hi, > > > I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: > > when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning > > spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. > > > I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you > > reduce tension on the other side. > > > Your opinions Please. > > > Derk > > Why does it need truing? If the reason is plastic deformation in the rim Ya mean it's bent? > you might need to loosen a spoke to compensate (or get a new rim ;) ) > > -- > /Marten > > info(apestaartje)m-gineering(punt)nl
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 22:00:40
From: M-gineering
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com wrote: > On Oct 11, 1:08 pm, M-gineering <ikmotgeens...@m-gineering.nl> wrote: >> Derk wrote: >>> Hi, >>> I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: >>> when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning >>> spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. >>> I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you >>> reduce tension on the other side. >>> Your opinions Please. >>> Derk >> Why does it need truing? If the reason is plastic deformation in the rim > > > Ya mean it's bent? taken a permanent set -- /Marten info(apestaartje)m-gineering(punt)nl
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 12:50:05
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo-www.vecchios.com
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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On Oct 11, 12:47 pm, Derk <nob...@invalid.org > wrote: > Hi, > > I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: > when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning > spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. > > I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you > reduce tension on the other side. > > Your opinions Please. > > Derk Of COURSE, when you true a wheel, it is a raise on one side, reduce on another and check for roundness, then tension. 'Always tensioning spokes' assumes that they loosen but most times it's because the relativlely soft aluminum rim gets deformed.
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 21:08:12
From: M-gineering
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Derk wrote: > Hi, > > I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: > when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning > spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. > > I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you > reduce tension on the other side. > > Your opinions Please. > > > Derk Why does it need truing? If the reason is plastic deformation in the rim you might need to loosen a spoke to compensate (or get a new rim ;) ) -- /Marten info(apestaartje)m-gineering(punt)nl
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 19:53:54
From: Leo Lichtman
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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And another thing. As you work on a wheel, it could happen that some spokes get tightened beyond their proper final tension. Unless you keep copious notes (who does?) you won't know which these are, so you won't know whether it is okay to loosen them. I turn the nipples in whatefver direction brings the wheel closer to true. If loosening a spoke will help true the wheel, especially if it rings a little sharp--LOOSEN IT.
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Date: 11 Oct 2007 14:00:56
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Tour magazine's article on wheel truing (oct '07)
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Derk wrote: > I read an article in TOUR about wheel truing and it says: > when the wheel needs truing (sideways), it's always a matter of tensioning > spokes and never of reducing spoke tension. > I'm not an expert, but I always learned that if you tension one side, you > reduce tension on the other side. You're right. Algebraically, since spokes pull the rim at a diagonal, loosening a left spoke when tightening a right spoke yields a net lateral movement without changing the height (the +/- height changes being net zero). The corollary is that tightening a spoke on each side makes for a net change in height without a lateral shift (the L/R changes being balanced to zero). Perhaps what the writer intended to say is that in normal use a spoke cannot be any tighter than when it was built, but that is so obvious as to be trite. On the road, when encountering a rider with a broken spoke, simply loosening a nearby spoke or 2 on the opposite side can get a rider home. So, in fact, there are moments when reducing tension is useful, if only as a temporary measure. 'Never' say 'never'! -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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