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Front wheel laced differently on each side

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Front wheel laced differently on each side

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Old 02-17-10 | 04:56 PM
  #26  
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Originally Posted by Bianchigirll
there is a simple way to prevent this
See my signature.
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Old 02-17-10 | 06:21 PM
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Originally Posted by noglider
Definitely better. Lace the head-out of the left side, then the head-out of the right side. Twist. Then the head-in of the left side, then the head-in of the right side.
This is basically the method Sheldon Brown proposes on his web page, which is what I've followed -- only he does right side first. With “left-handed” rims (most of them, from what I hear), it's actually easier to start on the left side, because then the “key” spoke (first one forward of valve hole) goes to the left side.

Originally Posted by Bianchigirll
there is a simple way to prevent this
(meaning radial spoking)
But it looks so cartoonish, not complex like a real bike. Just kiddin' -- if you can ride those then more power to ya.
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Old 02-17-10 | 06:34 PM
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Actually, I didn't mean left first. I just meant one side first, other side second. I had forgotten that most rims are right-handed.
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Old 02-17-10 | 08:34 PM
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Erm, I'm a newbie here, obviously, but I thought that most rim mfgrs make them left-handed -- the first hole ahead of the stem is biased toward the left flange. All the Mavics I have are this way, so far as I know. Weinmann concaves right-handed, Wolber Aspin right, but Alpine left. Sun CR18 right. Fiamme Ergal left. Velocity Synergy and Aerohead, can't tell that the spoke holes are biased at all.
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Old 02-17-10 | 08:39 PM
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Please, don't take my word for it. I have a sticky memory for SOME details and a slippery one for others. You may well be right that most rims are left-handed. Whatever is normal, the old Raleighs were the opposite. Maybe because they also drive on the wrong side of the road.
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