Just Lined the garage wall and put up some bike hangers.
Any reason why I shouldn't alternate the wheel by which they are hung?
I'm thinking front, rear, front, rear to save bars getting tangled in cables/hoses!
They stand up easier if you rest the back wheel on the floor and hold the bike up by the front. You can get them pretty close together if you put the bars on a slight twist
It's fine to do as you suggested. I have done the same for years with no problems. Put them high enough and you'll still have room for boxes of stuff on the floor below them.
Its a bit of a sod lifting a bike to hang from its back wheel, as you don't have the handle bars to lift the bike with as you would with the front wheel.
Mind, I did exactly that for a few years when space was tight.
Thats how I do mine-no problems at all-Just don't stack them so close that you can't get the one out that you want to ride!
vary the height of the hangers so that you can get them all front-wheel up for easiness and still get them close together
AQR lackey band the brake levers when hanging to avoid brake issues.
If you put the hooks at the right level the bikes, IMO, should have their rear wheel on the floor and their fore their weight with the hook simply holding the bike vertically.
[quote=simons_nicolai-uk ]AQR lackey band the brake levers when hanging to avoid brake issues.
No need with Shimano
[quote=coolhandluke ]
If you put the hooks at the right level the bikes, IMO, should have their rear wheel on the floor and their fore their weight with the hook simply holding the bike vertically.and then you lose floorspace
always been worried about wheel being pulled out of shape so hang bikes by handlebars...
[quote=captain slow ]always been worried about wheel being pulled out of shape so hang bikes by handlebars...
Do you live on Mercury?
Captain Slow:
The wheel is going to have 11-15kg hanging on it max. What is your 70kg+ body weight leaning on the front wheel going to do it? (OK your body weight is split across two wheels, but you see what I mean).
Used to hang bikes of all sorts and weights by the front wheel at Halfords. Never had any problems other than scratches if we put too many bikes in the racks.
no, I live on kebabs 😉
Seriously, I understand the weight of the bike is a fraction of the weight of the rider, but the time the weight is applied for multiplies the effect. I might ride for 150 hours in a year, but my bike could be hung up for 7,500 hours
Anybody remember those physics o level things where they hung a small weight on a piece of wire for ten years and it stretched enormously - just never fancied that happening to my spokes
If you install an anti gravity device your wheels won't be affected by their 10 year hang.
but the time the weight is applied for multiplies the effect
No it doesn't.
[quote=captain slow ]Seriously, I understand the weight of the bike is a fraction of the weight of the rider, but the time the weight is applied for multiplies the effect. I might ride for 150 hours in a year, but my bike could be hung up for 7,500 hoursBut the odds are that it would be a different spoke after each ride, so it would even out.....
Captain_slow. Google yield stress.
If you stay below the yield stress nothing will happen.
