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-   -   Hanging a bike (https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-vintage/792810-hanging-bike.html)

tsappenfield 01-16-12 06:59 PM

Hanging a bike
 
A recent post about bike storage stands got me thinking about the wisdon of hanging a bike from a hook for storage. I have a Raleigh Tourist (really heavy bike) and it's hard for me to believe that hanging this bike over the winter months (which I do) wouldn't result in long term damage to the wheel. I've done this the past four winters with my road bike (really light bike) and I can't see that anything was damaged, but the Tourist ...?

TSapp

r0ckh0und 01-16-12 07:06 PM

I've wondered about this myself, a 25-30 pound bike hanging from a lag hook does'nt seem to be great weight distibution as well as the fact that your applying pressure from the opposite side of the rim as intended. Here at my house, my wife seems to think the support beams on the main floor are going to give way and bring the house down from all the bikes and frames hanging down in the basement.

wahoonc 01-16-12 07:10 PM

There was an article written somewhere a while back about this. Apparently because a wheel is a stressed system it doesn't hurt it, even with a heavier bike. FWIW my heavier bikes sit on the floor or are on low frame racks...I am not about to throw my back out trying to get something the size of a DL-1 on an overhead hook!

Aaron :)

Bianchigirll 01-16-12 07:14 PM

Supporting its own weight hanging on a hook can't be any harder on the bike than toting my big bum over rough roads.

RobbieTunes 01-16-12 07:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bianchigirll (Post 13729051)
Supporting its own weight hanging on a hook can't be any harder on the bike than toting my big bum over rough roads.

That certainly applies to me. A bike is actually suspended from the top of the rims by the upper spokes. This includes the loaded weight. Hanging it from a hook on the ceiling is nothing, really.

20grit 01-16-12 09:04 PM

My room mate and I have the rubbermaid track system for hanging ours. Neither of us have noticed any ill effects.

lostarchitect 01-16-12 09:40 PM

Think about it. I'm pretty sure your body puts more stress on the wheels than the weight of the frame hanging off them.

RaleighSport 01-16-12 09:59 PM

Terrible idea... hanging an old boat anchor on a hook sucks... for your back. That said I've got a 67 racer deluxe hanging on a wall right now.. it stays up there for months at a time and the only problem I have is when it comes time to put it up or take it down!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

mkeller234 01-16-12 10:13 PM

Worry not. My DL-1 hangs by it's front wheel in my basement. It's been there a lot over the past year without even a bit of damage.

3alarmer 01-16-12 10:47 PM

Get yourself a bike wheel from somewhere and experiment.

Hook it to something that will not actually dent the rim and pull
as hard as you can on it. Hang from the ceiling yourself on it.
If you can deform it, the spokes were not properly tensioned.

A good wheel is tensioned to 110-125Kgf.

Like everyone has said prior, the weight of your bike just is
not an issue. I've got a dozen bikes that have been stored
this way for years.

randyjawa 01-17-12 04:47 AM

The only problem with hanging a bicycle is the stuff it hangs on. I have lots of bikes and the plastic covering on the hooks has a tendency to wear through. Once worn through, the metal of the hook will damage an alloy wheel rim. I prevent this by wrapping the hooks with strips of inner tube and PVC taping it into place.

bradtx 01-17-12 05:10 AM

TSapp, The only bikes I haven't had hanging upside down on hooks are my mountain bikes with a suspension fork. I'm not quite sure about bikes equipped with hydraulic brakes.

Brad

stonefree 01-17-12 06:24 AM

I hung a 30lb Raleigh Gran Prix by it's rear wheel on a single rubber coated hook in my garage for 20 years untouched with absolutely no resultant damage. The tires didn't even rot.

Chombi 01-17-12 09:17 AM

One is more likely to run into a Sasquatch lounging in their backyard before finding damage to the wheels of their hanging bikes......
Why won't this pointless concern ever die??........

Chombi

lostarchitect 01-17-12 09:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chombi (Post 13730962)
One is more likely to run into a Sasquatch lounging in their backyard before finding damage to the wheels of their hanging bikes......
Why won't this pointless concern ever die??........

Because there will always be new cyclists. :) It's no biggie, it's an easy one to dispel.

rhm 01-17-12 09:41 AM

I'm wondering what the poor bike did to deserve capital punishment.

wrk101 01-17-12 10:11 AM

+1,285 Lets see, that wheel normally sees 100 pounds or more of loading when you are riding it. So having it support 40 pounds damages it how?

rootboy 01-17-12 10:56 AM

I read somewhere, long ago, the forces generated up through the fork and into the headset bearings. Can't remember what it was, but the figure astounded me. A spoked wheel can take much.

tsappenfield 01-17-12 11:32 AM

So you've convinced me. It stays on the hook until next spring.

TSAPP

RobbieTunes 01-17-12 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chombi (Post 13730962)
One is more likely to run into a Sasquatch lounging in their backyard before finding damage to the wheels of their hanging bikes......

As I was just saying to my buddy the other day...."Sasquatch, get me another beer, and take that bike down before it gets out of true."

Then, we watched on in good humor as a carbon bike came down the road and exploded.

lostarchitect 01-17-12 11:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RobbieTunes (Post 13731542)
Then, we watched on in good humor as a carbon bike came down the road and exploded.

http://images.ientrymail.com/ps-tuto...ion-normal.jpg

You can't see it, but there's a carbon bike in the middle, just there.

Doohickie 01-17-12 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bianchigirll (Post 13729051)
Supporting its own weight hanging on a hook can't be any harder on the bike than toting my big bum over rough roads.

Ding. We have a winner.

And right now my DL-1 is hanging in my garage on hooks.

himespau 01-17-12 12:02 PM

I'd imagine that it's the material of the hook that's important. Don't go scratching things up with a cheap rusty hook.

Chombi 01-17-12 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RobbieTunes (Post 13731542)
As I was just saying to my buddy the other day...."Sasquatch, get me another beer, and take that bike down before it gets out of true."

Then, we watched on in good humor as a carbon bike came down the road and exploded.

Nooo no no no no noooo.........carbon bikes do not "Explode".....they "Asplode"!:eek::D

Chombi

cehowardGS 01-17-12 12:46 PM

I have my bikes hung up, but they are not by the wheel. I have them on the wall supended by two hooks (for each bike) that come out and cradles the frame. The bikes are horizontal too.


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