View Poll Results: Do you true your own wheels?
No one touches my wheels but ME..no one!



61
55.45%
Depends on my mood...sometimes me, sometimes LBS



26
23.64%
What's a 'true' wheel (i.e., LBS only)?



23
20.91%
Voters: 110. You may not vote on this poll
Wheel Truing
#2
Senior Member

Joined: May 2002
Posts: 10,123
Likes: 4
From: Near Portland, OR
Bikes: Three road bikes. Two track bikes.
It's not hard; just requires a spoke wrench and some patience.
__________________
Cat 2 Track, Cat 3 Road.
"If you’re new enough [to racing] that you would ask such question, then i would hazard a guess that if you just made up a workout that sounded hard to do, and did it, you’d probably get faster." --the tiniest sprinter
Cat 2 Track, Cat 3 Road.
"If you’re new enough [to racing] that you would ask such question, then i would hazard a guess that if you just made up a workout that sounded hard to do, and did it, you’d probably get faster." --the tiniest sprinter
#5
As a clyde, I've found that building and truing wheels is a valuable skill to have. I haven't had a shop touch my wheels in over a year, and I am currently riding on a set that I built myself.
#7
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,341
Likes: 326
From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
#8
Mine don't really come out of true. It's happened two or three times in the past year. I bring them into LBS and get them fixed when this happens.
I have a bike because I like to ride it, not because I want to do mechanic work in my free time.
I have a bike because I like to ride it, not because I want to do mechanic work in my free time.
#9
Banned.
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 6,434
Likes: 277
From: Carlsbad, CA
Bikes: '09 Felt F55, '84 Masi Cran Criterium, (2)'86 Schwinn Pelotons, '86 Look Equippe Hinault, '09 Globe Live 3 (dogtaxi), '94 Greg Lemond, '99 GT Pulse Kinesis
Nothing more satisfying (and thrilling) than bombing down a twisty descent and occasionally exceeding 50 on wheels you built and trued yourself. It's like shaking hands with the magic genie.
#10
You gonna eat that?
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 14,917
Likes: 543
From: Fort Worth, Texas Church of Hopeful Uncertainty
Bikes: 1966 Raleigh DL-1 Tourist, 1973 Schwinn Varsity, 1983 Raleigh Marathon, 1994 Nishiki Sport XRS
#11
Over the hill

Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 24,595
Likes: 1,361
From: Los Angeles, CA
Bikes: Pinarello Nytro, Momentum Transend
#12
You gonna eat that?
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 14,917
Likes: 543
From: Fort Worth, Texas Church of Hopeful Uncertainty
Bikes: 1966 Raleigh DL-1 Tourist, 1973 Schwinn Varsity, 1983 Raleigh Marathon, 1994 Nishiki Sport XRS
Is that what the kids are calling it these days?
#13
just saying
#14
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,341
Likes: 326
From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
I can tension and true a wheel in less time than I can make two round trips for drop-off and pickup to an LBS and after doing so won't need to repeat the process 2-3 times a year.
I've had one front wheel I built go out of true once (due to a a bent rim) in the last ~15 years (I learned that after you grow to 200 pounds you can't expect a 400 gram rim to hold up).
I've had to deal with a rear wheel I built twice in the last ~15 years (due to bent rims) - once after crashing following a spontaneous front down shift after I wore out my big ring, and once before that when I put a flat spot on my 400 gram rear rim (box section rims that light aren't a good idea for lighter riders either).
I also broke a spoke on a front built by some one else which didn't take a couple minutes to fix.
Last edited by Drew Eckhardt; 09-14-11 at 04:37 PM.
#16
well hello there

Joined: May 2005
Posts: 15,488
Likes: 388
From: Point Loma, CA
Bikes: Bill Holland (Road-Ti), Fuji Roubaix Pro (back-up), Bike Friday (folder), Co-Motion (tandem) & Trek 750 (hybrid)
Not a skill set that I have any interest in learning.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
#18
Banned.
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 1
Likes: 0
first set of wheels i rebuilt i made the assumption that tension should be as high as possible because lots of force is put on the spokes. i got it tight as **** and true, thought "nice." leaned them against the wall and went to watch TV, after about 15 minutes i start hearing PING... PING PING. i went to look and saw a spoke hanging out of the ceiling, that **** was exploding. felt like i was diffusing a bomb when i started lowering tension.
#22
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 2,745
Likes: 0
From: Chicago, IL
Bikes: S-Works Roubaix SL2^H4, Secteur Sport, TriCross, Kaffenback, Lurcher 29er
I also build and ride my own wheels. Gives me much more time on my bikes than dealing with bike shop service.
I am also the mechanic for many of the guys in my regular group. This keeps me in beer year round.
I am also the mechanic for many of the guys in my regular group. This keeps me in beer year round.
#23
#24
My reply was a bit snarky because the poll itself is a bit snarky. It implies that anyone who has LBS do this doesn't know what a true wheel is.
#25
-Jeremy





