Trainer question
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 2,047
Likes: 1
From: Los Angeles
Bikes: Custom Holland Ti road bike, Custom track bike I traded a painting for.
track wheel with a 15mm nut worked with my trainer.
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Ode to the after work nap ( ride your bike instead)
Ode to the nap
The evil, evil nap
It lures
you succumb
But only with good intent
Shortly I will rise
But you do not.
Do not succumb
To the evil, evil nap
Ode to the after work nap ( ride your bike instead)
Ode to the nap
The evil, evil nap
It lures
you succumb
But only with good intent
Shortly I will rise
But you do not.
Do not succumb
To the evil, evil nap
#4
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 512
Likes: 0
From: Houston, Texas
Bikes: 2008 Specialized Allez Elite, 2007 Trek 7.3 FX, 2005 generic Schwinn Mountain Bike.
Won't matter.. your trainer will most likely come with a sturdier skewer for your rear wheel but other than that it makes no difference. As long as the pressure is up on your tires, the trainer won't damage them. It's easier on them than the road, obviously - your only concern should be how the skewer is going to mount on the trainer and really support a lot more weight than it normally would.
#6
cycle-commuter
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 90
Likes: 0
From: Seattle, WA
Bikes: Bianchi Volpe, Univega Via de Oro
If Alphalegacy's axles are solid, then the skewers most trainers come with won't help, but Terror_in_pink's experience is promising, assuming the track nuts are the usual, big ones with pointy corners and you don't have a lot of extra axle protruding. I would guess, though, that it would depend on how the trainer and skewer-end interface is designed.
The cheap-o Performance trainer I have has cup-shaped parts to grip skewer ends and would probably work on track nuts. This Kurt model, though, seems to have cone-shaped parts, which might not work so well with a blocky axle nut. See the last photos on this page...
https://www.bikesportmichigan.com/rev...-kinetic.shtml
Maybe best to inspect the trainer before buying, if possible...
The cheap-o Performance trainer I have has cup-shaped parts to grip skewer ends and would probably work on track nuts. This Kurt model, though, seems to have cone-shaped parts, which might not work so well with a blocky axle nut. See the last photos on this page...
https://www.bikesportmichigan.com/rev...-kinetic.shtml
Maybe best to inspect the trainer before buying, if possible...
#8
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 378
Likes: 0
From: Toronto, ON
Bikes: 2007 Trek 1500, 1998 Raleigh Tarantula
Hi Alphalegacy,
I had the exact same issue as you (https://www.bikeforums.net/road-cycling/365456-trainer-old-bike.html). And the answer,fortunately, is yes, you'll be fine. I'm not guaranteeing anything, but chances are the trainer will have clamps that hold on to your axle just like they'd hold onto the ends of a QR skewer.
P.S. I'm using the Minoura RDA 850 rim-drive trainer.
Good luck!
I had the exact same issue as you (https://www.bikeforums.net/road-cycling/365456-trainer-old-bike.html). And the answer,fortunately, is yes, you'll be fine. I'm not guaranteeing anything, but chances are the trainer will have clamps that hold on to your axle just like they'd hold onto the ends of a QR skewer.
P.S. I'm using the Minoura RDA 850 rim-drive trainer.
Good luck!






