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-   -   skewers (https://www.bikeforums.net/track-cycling-velodrome-racing-training-area/410308-skewers.html)

serge163 04-22-08 12:16 PM

skewers
 
my cc volos came without skewers. i have a lock for the front wheel. what should i use for the rear if i'm planning to race these at the drome?

Yoshi 04-22-08 12:26 PM

Track wheels never use skewers - they use a threaded axle with track nuts.

Hobartlemagne 04-22-08 12:38 PM

I think there are track racing rules forbidding quick release skewers.

serge163 04-22-08 12:42 PM

yeah i know i can't use quick release. so do you think i can pick up axles for these http://www.canecreek.com/volos-track...er-wheels.html at my lbs?

neilG 04-22-08 06:23 PM

Skewers are available that don't have QR levers , but are tightened with a 5mm Allen key. Might be the easy way to go.
http://www.bikeman.com/content/view/1090/66/
These are not QR and no referee should notice or have a problem with them. There are other less expensive ones out there, the Control Techs are just an example.

bonechilling 04-22-08 08:20 PM

Any shop should have some of the alley-key skewers. They'll cost less than $10 and they'll fit your need perfectly.

melville 04-22-08 08:38 PM


Originally Posted by bonechilling (Post 6567189)
Any shop should have some of the alley-key skewers. They'll cost less than $10 and they'll fit your need perfectly.

I did this before my last season of racing--put my bike on a diet with hollow axles and Ti 'slow releases.' They are OK for mass start racing but are not suitable for standing starts. If a kilo or pursuit is in your future, make arrangements to borrow a proper nutted rear wheel if you don't have one already.

serge163 04-22-08 09:03 PM

thanks a lot

bonechilling 04-23-08 07:23 AM


Originally Posted by melville (Post 6567318)
I did this before my last season of racing--put my bike on a diet with hollow axles and Ti 'slow releases.' They are OK for mass start racing but are not suitable for standing starts. If a kilo or pursuit is in your future, make arrangements to borrow a proper nutted rear wheel if you don't have one already.

Good call, I wasn't really thinking about the rear wheel, only the front. A standard nutted track wheel is definitely a must.

Creakyknees 04-23-08 10:24 AM


Originally Posted by melville (Post 6567318)
I did this before my last season of racing--put my bike on a diet with hollow axles and Ti 'slow releases.' They are OK for mass start racing but are not suitable for standing starts. ...

I've been considering this path... Have you ever made one slip? Or just being careful?

I'd personally probably use steel instead of Ti, but my assumption was that tight is tight, and if it won't slip on the road, why should it slip on the track?

melville 04-23-08 11:12 AM


Originally Posted by Creakyknees (Post 6570150)
I've been considering this path... Have you ever made one slip? Or just being careful?

I'd personally probably use steel instead of Ti, but my assumption was that tight is tight, and if it won't slip on the road, why should it slip on the track?

I wouldn't use these on the road or mountain bike unless the bike had vertical drops. Big difference between screwing it on versus clamping it (like a conventional QR). Steel may get you better results. These were ControlTech Ti skewers. Make sure you've got enough thread to shorten the rear to match the 120mm hubs.

Something I didn't try myself but I've seen done with hollow axles was tapping the inside of the axle to 6X1 and using Mavic track bolts. Make sure the threads in the axle are deep enough! Some hollow axles are 5.1mm, some are 5.3 or so and IIRC the right size hole when tapping to M6 is 5.0 mm.

Yoshi 04-23-08 01:17 PM

How is it that you have a rear track wheel that uses a skewer?

Dubbayoo 04-23-08 02:23 PM


Originally Posted by Yoshi (Post 6571145)
How is it that you have a rear track wheel that uses a skewer?

He didn't say it used a skewer. He said they came without. They are included with new wheels so he probably got them used and the seller kept them. Volos clinchers get used on the road a lot.

Yoshi 04-24-08 12:55 PM


Originally Posted by Dubbayoo (Post 6571614)
He didn't say it used a skewer. He said they came without. They are included with new wheels so he probably got them used and the seller kept them. Volos clinchers get used on the road a lot.

If someone says that got wheels that didn't come with skewers I don't think it's unreasonable to assume that the wheels use skewers. The volos wheels that get used on the road are road wheels not track wheels.

So how did you end up with track wheels that use a skewer? Is it actually a volos road wheel that has been converted to a track wheel? Even then, how could you convert a freehub wheel to a track wheel without having the replace the axle?


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