rear wheel rebuild tandem question
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As a large, aggressive ride who regularly ride loaded touring bikes and loaded touring bikes, riding on the lightest rims available hasn’t been a problem for many years. I do build wheels from “strength” but discovered long ago that the rim isn’t a place where a lot of strength is needed. Build with strong spokes but the rim doesn’t really do much other than go along for the ride. This kind of problem is rather rare. It happens but it isn’t any reason to run out and buy super heavy rims to solve the problem.
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As a large, aggressive ride who regularly ride loaded touring bikes and loaded touring bikes, riding on the lightest rims available hasn’t been a problem for many years. I do build wheels from “strength” but discovered long ago that the rim isn’t a place where a lot of strength is needed. Build with strong spokes but the rim doesn’t really do much other than go along for the ride. This kind of problem is rather rare. It happens but it isn’t any reason to run out and buy super heavy rims to solve the problem.
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As a large, aggressive ride who regularly ride loaded touring bikes and loaded touring bikes, riding on the lightest rims available hasn’t been a problem for many years. I do build wheels from “strength” but discovered long ago that the rim isn’t a place where a lot of strength is needed. Build with strong spokes but the rim doesn’t really do much other than go along for the ride. This kind of problem is rather rare. It happens but it isn’t any reason to run out and buy super heavy rims to solve the problem.
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I have to disagree here. The rim is clearly the weakest link in a wheel. Over tension your spokes and what will fail - the rim, not the spokes. Use too few spokes for the load and what will fail - the rim, not the spokes. While I agree there isn't a reason to buy super heavy rims, using the lightest rim available isn't wise either.
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Granted too little tensionwill more likely break spokes but too much tension is more likely to crack spoke holes.
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Optimal Spoke Count Suggestion
After factoring in a riders weight and gear, we suggest for individuals between 200 lbs to 229 lbs we recommend a front and rear spoke count of 32 each; for individuals between 230 lbs and 259 lbs, a front and rear spoke count of 36 each; for individuals between 260 lbs and 300 lbs we recommend a front spoke count of 36 and a rear spoke count of 40.
After factoring in a riders weight and gear, we suggest for individuals between 200 lbs to 229 lbs we recommend a front and rear spoke count of 32 each; for individuals between 230 lbs and 259 lbs, a front and rear spoke count of 36 each; for individuals between 260 lbs and 300 lbs we recommend a front spoke count of 36 and a rear spoke count of 40.
Naive consumers often fall for this scam, thinking the wheels must offer higher performance due to having fewer spokes. They don't realize that these wheels make up for the lost strength of the missing spokes by using substantially heavier rims! These trendy wheels look lighter than traditional wheels, but they aren't. Some of these wheels are unreliable -- and dangerous because if one spoke breaks, there are too few others to keep the rim stable.
Many of these wheels also have nonstandard spokes that can be hard to find when a replacement is needed.
The "Less Is More" Scam:
Then, sometime in the 1980s, a clever bean counter at one of the big bike companies had a brainstorm! "What if we were to switch to 32 spoke wheels? Saving 8 spokes would not only save the cost of the spokes, but also reduce the labor cost of wheelbuilding. Multiply the cost savings out by a few thousand bikes, and it can save us some serious money! The beauty part is, that we can cut this corner, even though it will result in more fragile wheels, and then we can present it to the customer as a feature!"This scam was so successful that all of the manufacturers followed suit, laughing all the way to the bank, and the riders suffered the results of the more fragile wheels.Even Fewer Spokes: "Boutique " Wheels
In recent years, the same scam has been extended, as the industry tries to see how few spokes they can get away with before the reliability gets so bad that consumers revolt!These days it is common to see mass-produced bikes and aftermarket wheelsets with 24 or fewer spokes in each wheel. These are represented as "premium" wheels, though they generally have off-brand hubs that are a lot cheaper than genuine Shimano or Campagnolo hubs.Naive consumers often fall for this scam, thinking the wheels must offer higher performance due to having fewer spokes. They don't realize that these wheels make up for the lost strength of the missing spokes by using substantially heavier rims! These trendy wheels look lighter than traditional wheels, but they aren't. Some of these wheels are unreliable -- and dangerous because if one spoke breaks, there are too few others to keep the rim stable.
Many of these wheels also have nonstandard spokes that can be hard to find when a replacement is needed.
Granted too little tensionwill more likely break spokes but too much tension is more likely to crack spoke holes.
By the way, loose tension on spokes is just as likely to result in rims cracking as over-tensioning is. Tension that is too high puts a lot of strain on the aluminum in the rim as the wheel goes through the tensioning/detensioning cycle that all wheels experience. The spoke tries to pull through the aluminum. Too little tension allows the rim to flex more in that cycle which also causes the aluminum to crack.
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Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Last edited by cyccommute; 04-27-23 at 10:45 AM.
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Yes, really. Why do tandems and touring bikes and bikes that carry heavy loads have more spokes than lightly loaded race bikes? 36 hole wheels are common on single touring bikes and 40 hole wheels are common on tandems if not 48 spoke wheels. More spokes means that each spoke experiences less load. .
As for why low spoke wheels became a thing, certainly weight wasn't the reason nor was cost. Running fewer spokes means you need a heavier rim (as stated in your Sheldon Brown article) to compensate for the increased load on each spoke hole. Obviously the need for a heavier rim is not to prevent spokes from breaking.
The real reason for going to low spoke counts was that so many riders (buyers) find them sexy. Read again - BUYERS. They are giving the masses what they want.
I myself build my rim brake wheels 24F/32R and my disc brake wheels 32F/R. And I'm only 175# soaking wet. A tandem is carrying an extra person's weight - two me me is 350#. At least 40 spokes seems like a bare minimum for a tandem.
Further reason I don't like low spoke count wheels ia that if I break a spoke on a 24 or more spoke wheel, I can adjust other spokes to make it true enough to get home. Less than 24 spokes and I'll be walking or calling for a ride.
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The problem went away when I started using wider rims (Sun-Ringle ENVY).



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The goal is to achieve something like Holme's "One Horse Shay" which lasts because no single element fails prematurely.
For my part, I'm a happy camper if I dent an old wheel on a pothole, only to notice the brake track is worn, and there are stress cracks here and there.
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Last edited by FBinNY; 04-29-23 at 02:38 PM.
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#36
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Precisely my point! And less load on each spoke is less load on each spoke hole!
As for why low spoke wheels became a thing, certainly weight wasn't the reason nor was cost. Running fewer spokes means you need a heavier rim (as stated in your Sheldon Brown article) to compensate for the increased load on each spoke hole. Obviously the need for a heavier rim is not to prevent spokes from breaking.
As for why low spoke wheels became a thing, certainly weight wasn't the reason nor was cost. Running fewer spokes means you need a heavier rim (as stated in your Sheldon Brown article) to compensate for the increased load on each spoke hole. Obviously the need for a heavier rim is not to prevent spokes from breaking.
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Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
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Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
#37
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Some useful advice and observations mixed in with the usual digressions, in the end I took fbinny's about not over thinking it and stuck with 2 cross,
spokes(pillar triple butted) and rim are in the hood first time building with dt Swiss squorx nipples and accompanying phr washers so should be interesting.
spokes(pillar triple butted) and rim are in the hood first time building with dt Swiss squorx nipples and accompanying phr washers so should be interesting.
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One thing about the failure under the tape. It seems relatively independent of the spokes, with greater relation to the tire and tire pressure.
So, 32, 36, or 40 hole may not make a huge difference. In fact, with 40h, one has more nipple holes and less pace between nipples.
One difference in the spoke design might be how much weight bearing stress the wheel experiences. And, fewer crosses and more spokes may well create less flex in the wheel.
So, 32, 36, or 40 hole may not make a huge difference. In fact, with 40h, one has more nipple holes and less pace between nipples.
One difference in the spoke design might be how much weight bearing stress the wheel experiences. And, fewer crosses and more spokes may well create less flex in the wheel.
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Note what is missing from Velocity’s recommendations about what to use for heavy riders/loads…rim suggestions. Kind of curious coming from a company that makes rims but not spokes. They don’t say “use heavier rims”. Instead they say “use more spokes”. Yes, fewer spokes put more stress on the rim but, again, rim failure through cracking or pull through is less common than spoke breakage. The kind of failure that headasunder and, now, sweeks detail, are not related to spoke tension nor spoke count.
Don't know if you remember the infamous paired spoke design of some wheels of the mid-2000's, notably the Bontrager Race wheels. Those were known for spoke hole cracks. Mine started cracking at the spoke holes at 4K miles. I discovered multiple cracks around spoke holes when..........I broke a spoke. Who knows how long those cracks were there.
Granted this has nothing to do with the OP's issue. I've never seen a rim crack that way.
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* I'm using this in a fairly broad sense.