Huffy mountain bike has uneven cone wear marks.
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Huffy mountain bike has uneven cone wear marks.
Hello all, I was trying to fix the issue of my rear wheel wobbling left and right while riding on it and I flipped it upside down to replace the axle, bearings and cones. While it was flipped upside down I spun it by hand and sure enough it was wobbling left and right while spinning. I then noticed the old cones had uneven wear marks on them. Why did this happen. And even now having replacing the whole rear wheel assembly, the wheel still wobbles. What could it be?
#2
Clark W. Griswold
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Curious what you replaced the rear wheel with? It could be the new wheel is also not true or you replaced some of the worn out parts but there are still worn out parts. The frame could be damaged or something else entirely. A Huffy unfortunately is not worth putting much of anything towards money wise. In the end you can just buy a new one that will eventually have the same issues and likely have some issues from new but at least will be new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
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Curious what you replaced the rear wheel with? It could be the new wheel is also not true or you replaced some of the worn out parts but there are still worn out parts. The frame could be damaged or something else entirely. A Huffy unfortunately is not worth putting much of anything towards money wise. In the end you can just buy a new one that will eventually have the same issues and likely have some issues from new but at least will be new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
#5
Clark W. Griswold
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So I haven’t replaced the wheel, I disassembled the hub of the wheel that the bike came with and I went in to replace all of those 3 things, hoping that it would solve the wobble issue however it seems like the issue is still showing. I feel like I should look around for another rim that’s similar to the one that my bike has, and if not I’ll save up and put money towards a better bike that hopefully doesn’t show issues just one year into owning it.
The rim might be out of true but you probably need an entire wheel. A wheel starts at the hub, then spokes, then nipples then the rim all together for one piece then over that you will typically have a rim strip, tube and tire,
I would honestly save towards a bike from a bike shop, if you do have issues they can help you solve it and at least in all the shops I have worked at and the one I own and will soon open we offer a 1 month tune up and then one at the year mark. Plus you generally will get warranties with the bike from the bike shop so if something happens like this there is a chance it could be covered by the OEM.
If you want to continue using the current bike you will probably be spending around $100 for the new wheel and labor but you could get the new bike at the Wally-Mart for the same price.
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Curious what you replaced the rear wheel with? It could be the new wheel is also not true or you replaced some of the worn out parts but there are still worn out parts. The frame could be damaged or something else entirely. A Huffy unfortunately is not worth putting much of anything towards money wise. In the end you can just buy a new one that will eventually have the same issues and likely have some issues from new but at least will be new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
You could also save up and buy a bike that will work for mountain biking or if not mountain biking for whatever riding you are doing. If you go to a bike shop they can help you get a new bike which will work a lot better and have good support behind it. You can also take the current bike to the shop and they can take a look at it and probably suggest buying a new bike a worn out Huffy is not really designed to be fixed and repaired without likely costing more than the bike is worth new.
#7
Senior Member
It sounds (to me) as though the wheel has a crooked axle. Check that first. If there's a coop in your area, you probably can get a usable wheel for a low price, but check the width of your rear dropouts first; Huffy's can be very creative with some measurements.
#10
Rhapsodic Laviathan
Just replace the wheel. See if you got a local bike co-op, or call around some LBS's, one might have cheapo replacement wheels just for bikes like these.