Journey into the un...
 

[Closed] Journey into the unknown which is the best wheel building step by step

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Preferably on the web just about to build(try)a wheel using a CK 24mm 32 hole front hub for my maverick fork.

Any tips and I have not got a wheel truing stand will let one of my mates finish off the put together wheel!!!!

Oh and to make things tricky its a 819 ust rim

Rich


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:42 pm
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I know there'll be more along soon to repeat this, but you could do worse than start with Roger@Wheelpro's book. You do have to pay for it, but it tells you everything you need to know, including how to make a truing widget thing out of cardboard...


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:52 pm
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roger mussons guide is great


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:54 pm
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wheel pro seconded.

best £9 you can spend. built a set of proII on XC717s using his guide and they are solid as a rock 5 months on (i'd never built a wheel before in my life)

thread closed!


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:54 pm
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wheelpro thirded although I did buy a wheel stand as I didn't really have the time to build his one.


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:55 pm
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http://www.sheldonbrown.com/wheelbuild.html is ok.

I found the wheelbuilding bit in "[url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Zinn-Art-Road-Bike-Maintenance/dp/1934030422/ref=cm_lmf_tit_3_rsrrsi2 ]Zinn and the art of road bike maintenance[/url]" really good and easy to follow, but that's a £15 book...not sure if there is a similar chapter in the [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Zinn-Art-Mountain-Bike-Maintenance/dp/193138259X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1262188511&sr=1-1 ]mountain bike version[/url]

I might have to check out this wheelpro book though as everyone raves about it. 🙂


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:55 pm
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+1 for wheelpro


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:57 pm
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Wheel Pro - Made my 2 wheels via this book - had to rebuild my 1st as not the greatest execution but now sound 🙂

http://www.wheelpro.co.uk/wheelbuilding/book.php


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 4:59 pm
 dale
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wheelpro built 819's into lefty hub(virgin wheel builder) months of rocky riding still true
take youre time,threadlock the cups


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 5:02 pm
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wheelpro guided my first wheel build and still going strong after many miles 🙂 really easy to follow book


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 5:38 pm
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erm wheelpro etc


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 5:40 pm
 sv
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Yep wheelpro - I have made about 4 sets of wheels plus a couple of rebuilds and spoke replacements for friends.


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 6:24 pm
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Copy another wheel, especially the "unders and overs". Use a piece of chalk and the fork as a stand.

The best first wheel to build is a new rim replacement on an existing wheel. Get an identical rim and tape the 2 together then swap the spokes 1 at a time, taking care that offset spoke holes are observed.

Sheldon Brown, as ever, gives excellent free advice here.> http://www.sheldonbrown.com/wheelbuild.html


 
Posted : 30/12/2009 6:49 pm
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(Mr MC posting)

+3 for sheldon brown's site. Built my first wheel from that back in the nineties and have done loads since for myself and others with no problems. Have a built one in the same lacing to hand to compare in case you have a brain fart with lacing. Take your time and be methodical. I find it very therapeutic, and seeing a finished, perfectly true wheel at the end of it is very satisfying.

You dont need a stand to finish a wheel off, especially a front (which usually has symmetrical stanchions, unlike many chainstays). You can flip the wheel to make sure its centred, and something forgiving like a matchstick taped to the fork stanchion will do the the job of the feeler on a jig. I have a truing stand but have done this to true wheels when I couldnt be bothered removing the tyre.

Youll probably find yourself doing bigjohn's suggestion of rim swapping, if not as your first build, then on subsequent "re-builds". I swapped 717s (built on Hope hubs) for beefy 325's for a downhill week, and eventually rebuilt them with 717s to go on MCs hardtail.

I bought Jobst Brandts the Bicycle Wheel book as a bit of a science/engineering geek but its not a guide book as such.


 
Posted : 01/01/2010 5:18 pm