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derailleur hitting spokes

Old 08-28-13, 11:19 AM
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unterhausen
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derailleur hitting spokes

I have an ultegra hub from the 9 speed era and a DT swiss 700c rim. I use SRAM 9 speed cassettes. In first gear, the derailleur hits the spokes, not enough to rip it off the frame, but enough to make me worry about it. I need to check the alignment of the hangar, but it still seems like the derailleur is awfully close to the spokes. Does this sound normal? I bought the hub used, I suppose that the spacing could be off.
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Old 08-28-13, 11:28 AM
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Unless someone replaced the freehub body it is what it is.

Do SRAM cassettes sit further back on the hub? Is the wheel over dished?
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Old 08-28-13, 11:30 AM
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Close is normal, close enough to touch or nearly touch isn't.

Odds favor a bent hanger, and you can probably confirm this by shifting to a gear combination where the cage is nearly vertical, then looking from behind the bike.

The cage should be vertical, and not have the bottom pointing in toward the wheel. If you're not sure, place a yardstick vertically against the wheel (tire on is fine) as a frame of reference. The cage should be parallel.
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Old 08-28-13, 11:35 AM
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Originally Posted by FBinNY View Post
Close is normal, close enough to touch or nearly touch isn't.

Odds favor a bent hanger, and you can probably confirm this by shifting to a gear combination where the cage is nearly vertical, then looking from behind the bike.

The cage should be vertical, and not have the bottom pointing in toward the wheel. If you're not sure, place a yardstick vertically against the wheel (tire on is fine) as a frame of reference. The cage should be parallel.
Had this happen once as well. Spent a good amount of time adjusting the front derailleur and got very frustrated when it wouldn't adjust properly. Then found the culprit.
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Old 08-28-13, 11:41 AM
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Also note that if you changed the wheel, your limit settings may be off. There's some variation in the exact cassette location wheel to wheel. So it's possible that your RD is inboard more than it should be in low. This would be confirmed if you had to adjust the trim (cable tension) after changing the wheel.

Even before checking the hanger alignment, check the trim adjustment, confirming that it's restrictive enough to allow crisp shifting to low and no more. Confirm by pushing in the lower body with your hand while pedaling.
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Old 08-28-13, 11:58 AM
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It sounds like you have a new/different wheel. You should expect to have to make minor derailleur adjustments whenever you change a wheel, even like for like, due to manufacturing tolerances.

After ensuring that the derailleur and hanger are not bent, I would suggest following this procedure from the beginning, as if it is a new installation: https://www.parktool.com/blog/repair-...nts-derailleur
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Old 08-28-13, 11:58 AM
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Originally Posted by FBinNY View Post
Odds favor a bent hanger, and you can probably confirm this by shifting to a gear combination where the cage is nearly vertical, then looking from behind the bike.
9-speed era says 10 years old (give or take). If your hanger is still straight after that much time you should buy a lottery ticket.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:02 PM
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Originally Posted by Retro Grouch View Post
9-speed era says 10 years old (give or take). If your hanger is still straight after that much time you should buy a lottery ticket.
The hanger on both my 1967 Frejus, and 1990 Prisms are both straight after 10s of thousands of miles. What numbers should I play?

Seriously, the bent hanger is the most likely possibility, and easy enough to confirm at home.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:08 PM
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Originally Posted by FBinNY View Post
What numbers should I play?
If I knew what numbers to play, I'd play them.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:11 PM
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Originally Posted by Retro Grouch View Post
If I knew what numbers to play, I'd play them.
But you don' have an old bike with a straight hanger.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:14 PM
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Originally Posted by FBinNY View Post
But you don' have an old bike with a straight hanger.
Pretty old. It's a '92 (or so). It's been reworked a couple of times though.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:41 PM
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Check your drive side spoke tension. I had a very loose leading spoke on the drive side of a wheel that would go slack enough to contact the derailler cage under high torque. After the wheel was properly tensioned (found numerous other low tension spokes too that no doubt contributed to the problem) the noise went away. I encountered the same thing a few years later on a friend's almost new bike with Mavic wheels.
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Old 08-28-13, 12:55 PM
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Originally Posted by joejack951 View Post
Check your drive side spoke tension. I had a very loose leading spoke on the drive side of a wheel that would go slack enough to contact the derailler cage under high torque.
That's one reason why I like to build my wheels with the pulling spokes on the inside of the flange; tension pulls the drive-side spokes further away from the cage.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:02 PM
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Originally Posted by techsensei View Post
That's one reason why I like to build my wheels with the pulling spokes on the inside of the flange; tension pulls the drive-side spokes further away from the cage.
I build my wheels that way too now, per Sheldon Brown's advice. This particular wheel was a pre-built wheel that I purchased before I started desiring odd combinations of wheel components that could only be had (for a price I was willing to pay) by building the wheel myself.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:14 PM
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I forgot to mention that I replaced the freehub body, but I'm pretty sure it was identical to the old, broken one. I don't know if that's when this problem started or not.

I have a hanger alignment tool, I'll probably just check it. I'm pretty careful to keep the drive side away from anything, but I suppose it could have taken a hit.
The derailleur has been adjusted.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:14 PM
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Originally Posted by techsensei View Post
That's one reason why I like to build my wheels with the pulling spokes on the inside of the flange; tension pulls the drive-side spokes further away from the cage.
Mavic says the out board running pulling spokes make for a stronger wheel.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:15 PM
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Originally Posted by unterhausen View Post
I forgot to mention that I replaced the freehub body, but I'm pretty sure it was identical to the old, broken one. I don't know if that's when this problem started or not.

I have a hanger alignment tool, I'll probably just check it. I'm pretty careful to keep the drive side away from anything, but I suppose it could have taken a hit.
The derailleur has been adjusted.
If the bike fell to the right that could bend the hanger.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:22 PM
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Originally Posted by davidad View Post
Mavic says the out board running pulling spokes make for a stronger wheel.
Maybe it does; I dunno. I'd like to know their reasons or to see the tests. Stronger in what way? Higher load bearing? More lateral stiffness? Better resistance to fatigue?
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Old 08-28-13, 01:42 PM
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Originally Posted by unterhausen View Post
I forgot to mention that I replaced the freehub body, but I'm pretty sure it was identical to the old, broken one. I don't know if that's when this problem started or not.
I don't think the freehub would work properly without it but make sure you didn't forget the spacer that goes behind the freehub between it and the hub shell. Without that spacer the freehub willl sit further inboard than it should and could result in the derailler hitting the spokes. I seem to recall that leaving out that spacer binds up the freehub but I could be wrong. It's been a little while since I did all my Shimano freehub experiments (one hub which I used was a 9 speed-era Ultegra too).

A quick way to check to see if you forgot the spacer is to measure over the locknuts. If it's less than 130mm, you goofed somewhere.
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Old 08-28-13, 01:48 PM
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Originally Posted by techsensei View Post
Maybe it does; I dunno. I'd like to know their reasons or to see the tests. Stronger in what way? Higher load bearing? More lateral stiffness? Better resistance to fatigue?
Europeans have been building pulling elbow out forever. I also do so because IME, the contact with the rim of the flange provides more stability, hence resistance to fatigue, the free unsupported inboard spoke. This is a marginal difference, but can't hurt.

OTOH Jobst Brandt always held that building the other way reduces the chance of snagging the derailleur, since tension change ubnder load would move the point of cross in, and for the last 30 years or so many (most?) USA builders build that way.

I continue to build pulling elbow out, for a different reason entirely. Having the outboard spokes fan counter-clockwise means that the overrunning wheel will tend to lift an overshifted chain out, rather than sucking it down toward the hub as a clockwise turbine would.

So ther you have it, 3 theories, three reasons. Pick whichever you feel is more important and build accordingly.
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Old 08-28-13, 04:26 PM
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Is there really supposed to be a spacer behind the freehub body on this hub? It didn't have one when I replaced it, and so it doesn't have one now

I always did pulling spokes on the outside because that was the way it was done when I was learning. Funny that one person seems to have changed that for the U.S. The previous incarnations of this wheel were built with pulling spokes on the inside, so I kept it that way when I put the most recent rim on it
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Old 08-28-13, 04:32 PM
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Originally Posted by unterhausen View Post
Is there really supposed to be a spacer behind the freehub body on this hub? It didn't have one when I replaced it, and so it doesn't have one now
I don't know about a spacer behind the freehub, but suspect that the person who mentiond it might have meant a spacer behind the cassette to push it out so it overhangs the freehub body and the lockring works to compress it without bottoming.
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Old 08-28-13, 05:03 PM
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Originally Posted by unterhausen View Post
I forgot to mention that I replaced the freehub body, but I'm pretty sure it was identical to the old, broken one. I don't know if that's when this problem started or not.

I have a hanger alignment tool, I'll probably just check it. I'm pretty careful to keep the drive side away from anything, but I suppose it could have taken a hit.
The derailleur has been adjusted.
good excuse to use a really cool tool.... this is what i was the only time I ran into the derailler into spoke thing...but I was doing fixes for a charity and the bikes were "well used"
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Old 08-28-13, 07:41 PM
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Originally Posted by FBinNY View Post
I don't know about a spacer behind the freehub, but suspect that the person who mentiond it might have meant a spacer behind the cassette to push it out so it overhangs the freehub body and the lockring works to compress it without bottoming.
Nope, I meant what I said. See here: https://techdocs.shimano.com/media/te...9830611839.pdf

If the OP had mentioned a 10 speed cassette vs. 9 my first question would have been about the Shimano 10 speed cassette spacer though.
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Old 08-28-13, 08:00 PM
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Originally Posted by joejack951 View Post
Nope, I meant what I said. See here: https://techdocs.shimano.com/media/te...9830611839.pdf

If the OP had mentioned a 10 speed cassette vs. 9 my first question would have been about the Shimano 10 speed cassette spacer though.
As I said, "I don't know...." Thank you for the link to the schematic, which proves that a picture is worth.....
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