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How True Is Out of True?
As in, how much taco can I have in my wheel before I should worry? Right now my front and back wheels on my monstrous steel hybrid commuter each wobble perhaps 1-2 mm, enough to brush the brake pads ever so slightly if I don't adjust them periodically, say once a month. They are not perceptibly out of round yet.
I'm in a context where having them retrued is a stretch and getting new wheels is a BIG stretch. (unless super cheap, true wheels are available somehow). I have a spoke wrench and got them down to 1-2mm out of true from what they were before, perhaps 5-8mm out of true. Then I read stuff about spoke tensioning and figured I shouldn't monkey too much. Hop |
That seems fine, but it would bug the heck out of me.
I always thought a taco was when a wheel was bent to the point of no return, such as so much bending that the rim cracks so from that definition any taco is bad. Yea, you might not want to do more than 1 or two revolutions of the nipple when truing your own wheels unless you really want to mess around with spoke tension. It is better, I believe, to adjust one or two more spokes if it means you only have to turn each nipple a eighth or a quarter of a turn. Also, remember that you are just doing lateral true and while fixing that, you almost in all likelihood messed around with the radial true, i.e. your wheel is no longer a perfect circle though I do believe most people on here would place lateral true in greater importance that radial true. |
1-2mm is nothing but really you should beable to dial them in so there is no run out.
The other day i hit a curb avoiding a truck that went right on red infront of me. Killed my rear rim on the wheels i just finished building. It bent the side walls down on each side and tacoed the rim maybe 10mm out of round. I got it home and got out my hammer anvil and a file. I went to work and now the rim is nice and true. Luckly i don't use rim brakes on my commuter or i would be looking for a new rim. good luck and just sick with getting it true. |
Originally Posted by bottlecape30
(Post 7377776)
It bent the side walls down on each side and tacoed the rim maybe 10mm out of round.
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1 mm is OK but if I see 2mm I adjust the spots that are out.
A good check for even tension is to tap the spokes with a plastic screwdriver handle. All the spokes on a side should sound close to the same and give a musical tone. If they just give a dead sounding thump then they are far too loose. The front on a rim brake wheel should sound the same side to side. A few "keys" difference isn't a big deal but if you hear a full octave difference it's time to retension and retrue. Here's a freeware piano note generator to get an idea of what I'm talking about.... http://www.freedownloadscenter.com/M...nic_Piano.html |
Originally Posted by z415
(Post 7377823)
I guess I got the definition of taco wrong. I always thought a tacoed wheel looks like a taco.
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Originally Posted by z415
(Post 7377823)
I guess I got the definition of taco wrong. I always thought a tacoed wheel looks like a taco.
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Originally Posted by BCRider
(Post 7377845)
A good check for even tension is to tap the spokes with a plastic screwdriver handle. All the spokes on a side should sound close to the same and give a musical tone. If they just give a dead sounding thump then they are far too loose.
The front on a rim brake wheel should sound the same side to side. A few "keys" difference isn't a big deal but if you hear a full octave difference it's time to retension and retrue. Here's a freeware piano note generator to get an idea of what I'm talking about.... http://www.freedownloadscenter.com/M...nic_Piano.html |
Originally Posted by operator
(Post 7378126)
A good check is to buy a tensionmeter.
So is a tensionmeter recommended for basic maintenance/retruing or for handbuilding/relacing a wheel? |
It's all about tension, without even tension the wheel will never work. For basic maintenance truing you can get away without one, but for wheel building and major overhaul it is vital.
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If you have a run out of 1-2mm and you are hitting the brake pads, you must like your brakes super tight.
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Originally Posted by flian
(Post 7378103)
Often, a person will embrace a word they've heard and assign their own definition.
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Ok, problem solved apparently CTRL+ALT+any cursor button does funny things.
I would not say you would need a tensionmeter unless your wheel is so off that you cannot ride any faster than you can walk - that would require some major work and patience. With that being said, that happened to me (car whacked me) and I just found it more convenient to get it fixed in a shop. |
If you've ever seen a truly taco'ed wheel it's far more than just out of true. WHen a wheel tacos it actually snaps past the spokes on one side so the spokes go past vertical and no longer support the rim properly with one side in opposition to the other. If you don't actually snap the rim past vertical on the one series of spokes I'd suggest that it's not taco'ed and is just "out of true".
http://www.instructables.com/files/d...7HZ.MEDIUM.jpg Now THAT is a taco. Note how the spokes from one side are no longer under tension and are actually sticking up out of the rim? When the guy stomps it back down it'll drive those loose spokes back over center and they'll then have their tension restored. It won't be pretty but if it doesn't explode it'll get the guy home. Tensionometer is a nice thing to have but you don't NEED one to build or true up wheels. A lot of us do it by ear through setting up the spokes to even musical notes of the desired value. I've done a good 12 pairs over the years and only had minor tuning issues with one road wheel and no more than the issues I'd expect with my mountain bike wheels. All without a tensionometer. I'm sure you'll find a lot of wheelbuilders that built hundreds of wheels in the past without them as well. |
Originally Posted by nitropowered
(Post 7378482)
If you have a run out of 1-2mm and you are hitting the brake pads, you must like your brakes super tight.
What is a more usual or customary gap size? Thanks! |
I prefer a short free movement in the brake levers so I typically set the clearance to 1mm. I guess I assumed that everyone does it this way.
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Originally Posted by BCRider
(Post 7378760)
I prefer a short free movement in the brake levers so I typically set the clearance to 1mm. I guess I assumed that everyone does it this way.
I do it the same way, but I'm a relative newb. |
Originally Posted by BCRider
(Post 7378724)
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Originally Posted by HopliteGrad
(Post 7378951)
But 1-2mm out of true is more a nuisance than a real issue. Of course, I'll continue to play with the spokes and try to reduce the untrue-ness while keeping spoke pitch as uniform as possible.
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Originally Posted by z415
(Post 7377823)
I guess I got the definition of taco wrong. I always thought a tacoed wheel looks like a taco.
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Originally Posted by BCRider
(Post 7378760)
I prefer a short free movement in the brake levers so I typically set the clearance to 1mm. I guess I assumed that everyone does it this way.
I aim at 0.2 mm, both sideways and circular when truing wheels. That can be achieved with no special gauges. A good eye, a good spoke wrench, some experience and a lot of patience is all one needs. A perfectly built wheel is ever so important when it comes to braking smoothly (and safely). |
Originally Posted by Retro Grouch
(Post 7381226)
Actually, taco isn't a very accurate descriptive word. "Pringle" would be a better word for describing the double fold shape the wheel takes when the rim goes over center.
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I can and have built wheels without a tension-meter... now that I have one if just confirms that my hands know what they have been doing and that my hearing is just fine.
Wheels should be no more than .5 mm out of true and I prefer even closer tolerances. |
Originally Posted by z415
(Post 7378665)
Ok, problem solved apparently CTRL+ALT+any cursor button does funny things.
I would not say you would need a tensionmeter unless your wheel is so off that you cannot ride any faster than you can walk - that would require some major work and patience. With that being said, that happened to me (car whacked me) and I just found it more convenient to get it fixed in a shop. |
Originally Posted by BCRider
(Post 7378724)
Tensionometer is a nice thing to have but you don't NEED one to build or true up wheels. A lot of us do it by ear through setting up the spokes to even musical notes of the desired value. I've done a good 12 pairs over the years and only had minor tuning issues with one road wheel and no more than the issues I'd expect with my mountain bike wheels. All without a tensionometer. I'm sure you'll find a lot of wheelbuilders that built hundreds of wheels in the past without them as well.
No professional wheelbuilder will be without a tensionmeter for ANY of their wheelbuilds. For home hack mechanics yeah, you might be able to get away without having one but if you're buliding up a powertap to a reynolds dv46c rim and sapim cx-rays and charginig someone for it. You better have a tensionmeter. This isn't a joke. If you can be as accurate as the DT swiss tensionmeter when doing your musical notes then you have got to be a prodigy this world has never seen. Especially considering the amount of different spokes out there you'd have to learn all the tones for. Double butted, single butted, straight gauge, different length spokes. I like the "let's shun progress" and the "people were doing fine before without them" attitudes but it is seriously misplaced for wheelbuilding. |
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