Thread: Commuter wheels
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Old 04-11-15 | 10:12 AM
  #38  
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Originally Posted by spare_wheel
And I think 36h A23s are about as bombproof as any commuter who is not pretending to be danny macaskill could possibly need.
With 36 spokes, basically any rim is bombproof. The dirty little secret of wheel technology (as Sheldon told us long ago), is that it is spokes that make a wheel strong, not rims.

Up until the early 1980s, virtually all adult bikes had 72 spokes.32 front/40 rear was the standard for British bikes, 36 front and rear for other countries. The exception was super-fancy special-purpose racing wheels, which might have 32 spokes front and rear.

The Great Spoke Scam: In the early '80s a clever marketeer hit upon the idea of using only 32 spokes in wheels for production bikes. Because of the association of 32-spoke wheels with exotic, high-performance bikes, the manufacturers were able to cut corners and save money while presenting it as an "upgrade!" The resulting wheels were noticeably weaker than comparable 36-spoke wheels, but held up well enough for most customers.Since then, this practice has been carried to an extreme, with 28-, 24-, even 16-spoke wheels being offered, and presented as it they were somehow an "upgrade."

Actually, such wheels normally are not an upgrade in practice. When the spokes are farther apart on the rim, it is necessary to use a heavier rim to compensate, so there isn't usually even a weight benefit from these newer wheels!

This type of wheel requires unusually high spoke tension, since the load is carried by fewer spokes. If a spoke does break, the wheel generally becomes instantly unridable. The hub may break too; see John Allen's article.
I think nowadays, rim technology has advanced so that 32 is the new 36, i.e. a bike with 32/32 is probably good enough for almost anything (except tandem duty!), but 36/28 would be a better choice.

Last edited by RubeRad; 04-11-15 at 10:24 AM.
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