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One of those days...
It started off nice enough. I made the 14 mile jaunt to work, and found a bi-modal bike/bus commuter friend of mine. We had some coffee, he talked about TdF (ugh) and I talked about plans and goals for August. I ran some errands on bike over lunch. No event.
About 3 miles into my homeward commute, I notice I have a broken spoke on my relatively new road bike. I go to tie it off so it doesn't thrash all over the place and kill my panniers or drivetrain. I ghetto-true my wheel to take up the slack for the missing spoke so I'm not rubbing the brakes. I get home no problem. I toss the panniers and lights on my hybrid, then take the wheel to my LBS to have them fix it up for me. I get back home, once-over my hybrid, then take it for a 5-mile-long grocery run to make sure the panniers work on it and all that. About halfway home, I notice a broken spoke on my hybrid too. No biggie, I actually have a spare spoke for it, and it's on the non-drive side of the rear so it requires no special tools. I get home and find TWO broken spokes. Of course there had to be two, since I only have one spare spoke. :mad: My hybrid has MTB wheels with city slick tires on it, so I just stole the rear wheel off my MTB and swapped tires. But still. What a nightmare! |
that sucks man. good luck gettin that taken care of
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That blows. It Happend to me recently and I needed spokes for 27" wheel so I could get home. You should have seen the look on the tech's face when I walked into the closest shop, which sells only high end race bikes and asked for a spoke for a 27" wheel.:eek: I ended up having to take the train home.
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last time that happened to me, I ran with the broken spoke ducttaped to another spoke for 6 months.
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I can afford to have it fixed or even buy a new wheel, so there's not much point in leaving it ghetto-rigged. Heck, next paycheck I could afford to buy a new mountain bike if I wanted to, but I think having 3 bikes of my own and one for the wife is enough for now.
It's not really about the money or even the inconvenience, it's just really annoying. |
That sucks man! I'm learning to build my own wheels now and I hope I get the spoke tension even enough to keep them strong. I'm doing that part by tone but I'm having Paul of Morningstar Tools make me a dial truing gauge that I can use on bmx to 29ers.
At least you didn't have to walk! |
Originally Posted by CsHoSi
(Post 4978039)
That sucks man! I'm learning to build my own wheels now and I hope I get the spoke tension even enough to keep them strong. I'm doing that part by tone but I'm having Paul of Morningstar Tools make me a dial truing gauge that I can use on bmx to 29ers.
At least you didn't have to walk! I'd like to learn to rebuild and eventually lace my own wheels. Maybe one of these days. |
OK, I feel better about busting a spoke every now and then. :D
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I used to do that, now that I have disc brakes and wheels and with the arch of the suspension fork in the way I said screw it. I didn't want some cheesy truing stand either. This gauge bolts onto the dropout with wheel in place.
For my wheelbuild I followed my Zinn mtb repair book to lace the wheels for front disc brake. There's actually a certain way to orient the heads of spokes for optimum strength. I also followed Mike T's Tech Info page for tensioning and helpful tips. You really only need a spoke wrench, screwdriver and some inside calipers. I tried vernier calipers I had but they didn't work so great. Mike's page was really inspirational for me realizing that I could do this, and likely build a better quality wheel than a shop will because I can put unlimited time into making it as perfect as possible. |
I have a runout gauge and a high-accuracy digital caliper (inner and outer) both used for engine/transmission rebuilds and the like... which might work for dish. Hmm. Thanks for the linkage.
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