First time for this
#1
Thread Starter
Ellensburg, WA


Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,791
Likes: 706
From: Lewiston, ID
Bikes: See my signature
First time for this
I took the Gitane Tour de France out for the first time in 6 weeks this afternoon for a nice fall ride - no wind, leaves are changing. Perfect day for a ride.
About 15 miles/24 km in I was rolling up to a stop sign. There was an approaching car but I figured I could make it across. There were two cars stopped on the other side of the intersection at their stop sign. I stood up to accelerate and the cranks locked up. In my mind - "what the ....".
I had to maneuver a quick u-turn to avoid the intersection and getting taken out by the oncoming car. The u-turn started fine and then suddenly I found myself on the ground. "What the ....." I unclipped from the pedals and stood up to check the bike. Wait a minute - the rear wheel was lying separate from the rest of the bike. Now it was time for "what the ##&@*@*##@^$*#!".
I picked up the wheel and bike and walked to the shoulder to put it back together. The only thing I can think of is the quick release skewer wasn't tight enough and the wheel slipped down in the dropout. There were a few paint chips on the freewheel from the dropout, but everything else looked ok - the bike shifted fine on the way home, the wheel was still true. It could have been more disastrous - guess I'll be checking quick releases a little more often.
About 15 miles/24 km in I was rolling up to a stop sign. There was an approaching car but I figured I could make it across. There were two cars stopped on the other side of the intersection at their stop sign. I stood up to accelerate and the cranks locked up. In my mind - "what the ....".
I had to maneuver a quick u-turn to avoid the intersection and getting taken out by the oncoming car. The u-turn started fine and then suddenly I found myself on the ground. "What the ....." I unclipped from the pedals and stood up to check the bike. Wait a minute - the rear wheel was lying separate from the rest of the bike. Now it was time for "what the ##&@*@*##@^$*#!".
I picked up the wheel and bike and walked to the shoulder to put it back together. The only thing I can think of is the quick release skewer wasn't tight enough and the wheel slipped down in the dropout. There were a few paint chips on the freewheel from the dropout, but everything else looked ok - the bike shifted fine on the way home, the wheel was still true. It could have been more disastrous - guess I'll be checking quick releases a little more often.
__________________
1984 Gitane Tour de France; 1982 Nishiki Marina 12; 1984 Peugeot PSV; 1993 Trek 950 mtb; 1991 GT Karakoram, 1983 Vitus 979; Colnago Super, 1989 Spectrum Titanium,
1984 Gitane Tour de France; 1982 Nishiki Marina 12; 1984 Peugeot PSV; 1993 Trek 950 mtb; 1991 GT Karakoram, 1983 Vitus 979; Colnago Super, 1989 Spectrum Titanium,
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 684
Likes: 2
From: Pennsyl-tuckey
Bikes: '86 Cannondale SR400, '86 Pugeot PX10, '92 Bianchi Axis, '95 Bianchi Campione d'Italia, '00 Fondriest X-Status, '08 Specialized Roubaix, '13 Cannondale CAADX
Seems you got off easy, glad you're OK!
#4
curmudgineer
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 4,417
Likes: 113
From: Chicago SW burbs
Bikes: 2 many 2 fit here
I had a loose skewer issue once on my Versailles after I had been dinking with it. I can't remember at the moment what was the root cause, but it was down to an assembly issue that was my fault. If I can remember I'll post back (it was not just the pre-load adjustment of the nut opposite the quick-release).
#5
Thread Starter
Ellensburg, WA


Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,791
Likes: 706
From: Lewiston, ID
Bikes: See my signature
It was really weird. The skewer's been on there since I got the bike 2 yrs ago and the wheel is rarely out of the frame. I'm going to tighten it up and cross my fingers it doesn't happen again.
__________________
1984 Gitane Tour de France; 1982 Nishiki Marina 12; 1984 Peugeot PSV; 1993 Trek 950 mtb; 1991 GT Karakoram, 1983 Vitus 979; Colnago Super, 1989 Spectrum Titanium,
1984 Gitane Tour de France; 1982 Nishiki Marina 12; 1984 Peugeot PSV; 1993 Trek 950 mtb; 1991 GT Karakoram, 1983 Vitus 979; Colnago Super, 1989 Spectrum Titanium,
#7
Wow, you know you're fast when you manage to outrun your rear wheel
. I've had wheels shift position on me before but I've never had one make it past the brake pads and out of the dropouts. Usually when it happens to me it's because I wasn't paying attention to protruding axle length vs. dropout thickness but, y'know, axles don't really grow spontaneously so I can't really offer any ideas. I can, however, make some cracks about build quality of French bikes if you'd like
.
. I've had wheels shift position on me before but I've never had one make it past the brake pads and out of the dropouts. Usually when it happens to me it's because I wasn't paying attention to protruding axle length vs. dropout thickness but, y'know, axles don't really grow spontaneously so I can't really offer any ideas. I can, however, make some cracks about build quality of French bikes if you'd like
.
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