- Location
- Inside my skull
I have a wheel in the garage where a spoke snapped while it was just hanging up on a hook. How'd that happen?
Maybe it lost its temper after so long being neglected?
I have a wheel in the garage where a spoke snapped while it was just hanging up on a hook. How'd that happen?
Maybe it lost its temper after so long being neglected?
I have a wheel in the garage where a spoke snapped while it was just hanging up on a hook. How'd that happen?
I have a wheel in the garage where a spoke snapped while it was just hanging up on a hook. How'd that happen?
That's an interesting question, but before the speculation fest starts, are you sure the spoke broke whilst haning there and that it did not break before it was hung up and you just noticed now?
Was definitely not broken before the wheels were retired. Only really keeping them as they are the ones that came on the bike, in case I ever sell it and the new owner wants them.
In a garage, so the temperatures would fluctuate a fair bit but why haven't any of the other 11 (?) wheels out there gone twang?
"Explosive tension". Could happen at any time - lucky you weren't anywhere near it :-)
They're bad wheels: either built with poor quality spokes or (more likely) badly built - insufficiently tight, not stress-relieved, poor spoke-rim angle or even laced the wrong way round, with spokes from the LH rim holes into the RH flange. Not many bike shops build great wheels; they don't have the time to do the best job for what you'd be willing to pay, probably £25 a wheel labour, so ask around for recommendations. Try to get DT spokes; Sapim are also good but I don't find them quite as easy to build with (consistency in length, probably).
The well-known specialist builders insist on choosing the components as they know they can get good results in an acceptable time when all the unknowns are eliminated.
I agree. Modern wheels trued and tensioned by computer, will stay true and last ages.
I've had a puncture when the bike was static in my conservatory, I put that down to heat
Caused by what?
(ie where was the hole, what actually punctured the tyre)
Holes in rubber don't just appear!