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Date: 06 Sep 2007 22:57:00
From: JG
Subject: half radial, again
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I built a R/3X rear wheel based on Sheldon's page, but I see it doesn't generate a lot of enthusiasm here, so I thought about it a bit. Am I right that torque puts much greater tension (~100x) on a radial spoke than a tangentially laced spoke? Doesn't this mean a R/3X wheel puts a uniform, but much greater tension on the non-drive spokes under torque? JG
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Date: 07 Sep 2007 17:57:17
From: Ron Ruff
Subject: Re: half radial, again
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On Sep 7, 8:52 am, David Bonnell <dbonn...@gmail.com > wrote: > So these two sites are in complete > contradiction to one another. Any comments? The site you linked to has many strange ideas that aren't supported by physics. I have no idea what "imbalance in lateral strength" could mean in reality... stiffness is the same from either side, although spokes will go slack sooner with a force towards the looser spokes. The most important contributor to lateral stiffness is the bacing angle of the NDS spokes... but the tension of these spokes must also be considered... since the greater the bracing angle, the looser they will be... and the looser they are, then the more likely they will go slack from radial loads (which are generally the highest). So... we are trying to achieve "high enough" tension on the NDS, and "high enough" lateral stability... and these work against each other. On the DS we are basically stuck with a flange spacing of ~19mm from the centerline, because this is the most we can get with a 130mm dropout while leaving room for the 8,9,10 spd cassette. If we space the NDS 38mm over then the ratio of NDS/DS tension will be 1/2 (assuming the pattern is the same on both sides). On some hubs the NDS spacing is only 30mm (AC comes to mind). This helps to balance the tension but compromises the lateral stiffness a lot. I think something in the 35-38mm range is the best compromise. For shallow rims, which are generally lighter and cannot take high tension, an OC rear is a good idea. This gives a greater bracing angle to the DS, which allows a higher NDS tension, and provided that the flange spacing is fairly high, the lateral stiffness will still be good. Deeper and heavier rims can be safely built with higher tensions, so this is less of an issue for them. Heads in radial on the drive side allows for a *slightly* greater spacing there (maybe 20-21mm), which will balance the tension a little better. But don't try this with a normal J bend hub... they are not designed for this type of lacing (combined with high DS tension) and the flange will fail. That is the main thing that is wrong with the author's recommendation. The other is that having the loose NDS spokes take all the torque load means they will likely go slack when radial and torque loads are high... *if* the hub has a normal small flange on that side. Also since normal hubs aren't designed to transfer torque loads through hub body, the hub body can also twist and fail. Some hubs (like your Shimano) use straight pull spokes with radial lacing on the DS. There is nothing wrong with this provided that the NDS flange is large... which minimizes the tension change due to torque loads... and of course the hub body and flanges must be designed for the loads that they will see. Another variation on the theme is triplet lacing (Campy G3 is one example)... where there are twice as many spokes on the DS compared to the NDS. This effectively doubles the tension in the NDS spokes. I've built several wheels with this pattern and it works well, but to get the maximum benefit from it you need a hub with ~45mm NDS spacing... or in other words a hub specially made for this pattern. Normal hubs loose some lateral stiffness, but if the NDS spacing is high you can have very good lateral stiffness and still have high NDS tension. The down side is that if you break a NDS spoke, the wheel goes *way* out of true.
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Date: 07 Sep 2007 07:52:14
From: David Bonnell
Subject: Re: half radial, again
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On Sep 7, 4:55 am, Ron Ruff <rruffrr...@yahoo.com > wrote: > Like Chalo said... if you have nearly tangential spokes on the drive > side, then the NDS radial spokes are essentially taken out of the > torque picture. > > As Sheldon mentions, a stiff hub body combined with crossed spokes and > low tension (necessary because of dish), will make it more likely that > combined torque, radial, and lateral loads will cause the NDS spokes > to go slack. Radial lacing the NDS removes one of these components... > at the expense of making the drive side carry all the torque. My Shimano-built rear wheel has radial lacing on the drive side (and some cross pattern on the NDS). I was concerned that this was incorrect and would lead to failure...but 200# and 3 years of riding and the wheel is still true. According to: http://www.geocities.com/spokeanwheel/lacingsr.htm "A multi-speed rear wheel that is half radially laced, with the non drive side being the side with the radial lacing, can only have increased imbalance in the lateral strengths of the two sides of the wheel. The radial spokes on the non drive side will also need a lower build tension when compared to a standard wheel. Since radial lacing has the highest lateral strength, the spokes do not need to be as tight to counter the lateral forces from the drive side in order to achieve a true wheel. Also, with the non drive side spokes even looser than normal, the likelihood that the wheel will go out of true from road shock is increased. " and... "A properly built half radial rear wheel will be radially laced on the drive side. It would also be best to lace the drive side so the spoke heads are on the inside of the flange. " Sheldon's article talks about the "right" side in his discussion about half-radial lacing...which I infer to be the drive side. He also refers to "wrong-way half radial". So these two sites are in complete contradiction to one another. Any comments?
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Date: 06 Sep 2007 23:55:20
From: Ron Ruff
Subject: Re: half radial, again
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Like Chalo said... if you have nearly tangential spokes on the drive side, then the NDS radial spokes are essentially taken out of the torque picture. As Sheldon mentions, a stiff hub body combined with crossed spokes and low tension (necessary because of dish), will make it more likely that combined torque, radial, and lateral loads will cause the NDS spokes to go slack. Radial lacing the NDS removes one of these components... at the expense of making the drive side carry all the torque.
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Date: 07 Sep 2007 06:02:07
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: half radial, again
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JG wrote: > > Am I right that torque puts much greater tension (~100x) on a radial > spoke than a tangentially laced spoke? In the absence of tangential spokes, yes. > Doesn't this mean a R/3X wheel > puts a uniform, but much greater tension on the non-drive spokes under > torque? No, because the crossed spokes on the right side don't let the wheel wind up enough to affect the tension on the left by much. Chalo
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