Question about spokes
#1
Newbie
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 29
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 13 Times
in
11 Posts
Question about spokes
I have never rebuilt a wheel before. I purchased a Trek 7000 that was a secondary bike to the one I went to purchase. My guess was the seller wanted it out of his garage. It cost $10. The sellers said it had a bent wheel. The reason it had a bent rim was 4 spokes were broken. So, I purchased the bike thinking I could find a used wheel. I took it to the LBS and the mechanic said he would not replace the broken spokes. I said so no problem, "How much is it for the same wheel?" He could not find the original wheel but a differnt new wheel was $80. I truly wanted it to be the same wheel as the back. He suggested purchasing one used or rebuilt it myself. While there were not any used in the area or from my search online, I decided to rebuild the wheel. It would be a learning experience. The original wheel is a Matrix 550. The spokes are 14g and 295mm long. I know nothing about spokes and looking for help purchasing the fore mentioned size spokes.Something not to expensive but quality. Do any of you know of brands that would fit the above and places where they can be purchased? I am having problems uploading pictures of the 7000, sorry. Thank you in advance for any information.
Likes For skinz0506:
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Posts: 33,656
Bikes: '96 Litespeed Catalyst, '05 Litespeed Firenze, '06 Litespeed Tuscany, '20 Surly Midnight Special, All are 3x10. It is hilly around here!
Mentioned: 39 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2026 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 1,096 Times
in
742 Posts
I had that same bike years ago, a 1992 Trek 7000. Once you get it road worthy, you will like riding it. As long as the new wheel is the correct size (26", ISO 559) matching the other one's appearance shouldn't be important on a $10 bike.
Anyway, before you try to rebuild the old wheel be sure the rim isn't actually bent.. If it is replacing the broken spokes will be exercise in futility as you won't be able get it both true and evenly tensioned. I expect the reason your shop's mechanic refused to just replace the spokes was he concluded the rim itself was really bent.
If the only problem is truly broken spokes, look for DT, Saipem or Wheelsmith brand spokes in the correct length. There are several on-line shops that sell spokes or your LBS may have them or can cut and thread a few to the right length.
Anyway, before you try to rebuild the old wheel be sure the rim isn't actually bent.. If it is replacing the broken spokes will be exercise in futility as you won't be able get it both true and evenly tensioned. I expect the reason your shop's mechanic refused to just replace the spokes was he concluded the rim itself was really bent.
If the only problem is truly broken spokes, look for DT, Saipem or Wheelsmith brand spokes in the correct length. There are several on-line shops that sell spokes or your LBS may have them or can cut and thread a few to the right length.
#3
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: New Rochelle, NY
Posts: 38,716
Bikes: too many bikes from 1967 10s (5x2)Frejus to a Sumitomo Ti/Chorus aluminum 10s (10x2), plus one non-susp mtn bike I use as my commuter
Mentioned: 140 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Quoted: 5786 Post(s)
Liked 2,579 Times
in
1,430 Posts
Spoke specifications are very simple and limited to three main ones: length, gauge, material, plus type, ie. double butted or straight gauge.
Assuming you removed and measured one spoke from the INSIDE OF THE ELBOW to the end you have two specs already, the length and gauge. The material is simple for you, in that anyone doing the labor should invest in stainless steel spokes. You also have a choice of plane gauge or double butted. I'm a big fan of butted spokes but they are pricier, though they build a more resilient wheel. Your call.
As to brand, the major brands are of comparable quality so I would seek out a reputable source and go ahead and place the order.
One last suggestion, look at wheel and no how far down from the top of the nipples the spokes end. Ideally they should end about 1 mm shy of the top. Compare this to your wheel and you'll know whether you may want to increase or decrease the length from your measured spoke. Also note that rear wheels generally you spokes of two lengths about a millimeter or two apart. So if this is a rear measure spokes from both sides.
Assuming you removed and measured one spoke from the INSIDE OF THE ELBOW to the end you have two specs already, the length and gauge. The material is simple for you, in that anyone doing the labor should invest in stainless steel spokes. You also have a choice of plane gauge or double butted. I'm a big fan of butted spokes but they are pricier, though they build a more resilient wheel. Your call.
As to brand, the major brands are of comparable quality so I would seek out a reputable source and go ahead and place the order.
One last suggestion, look at wheel and no how far down from the top of the nipples the spokes end. Ideally they should end about 1 mm shy of the top. Compare this to your wheel and you'll know whether you may want to increase or decrease the length from your measured spoke. Also note that rear wheels generally you spokes of two lengths about a millimeter or two apart. So if this is a rear measure spokes from both sides.
Last edited by FBinNY; 09-05-22 at 04:03 PM.
#4
Newbie
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 29
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 13 Times
in
11 Posts
I had that same bike years ago, a 1992 Trek 7000. Once you get it road worthy, you will like riding it. As long as the new wheel is the correct size (26", ISO 559) matching the other one's appearance shouldn't be important on a $10 bike.
Anyway, before you try to rebuild the old wheel be sure the rim isn't actually bent.. If it is replacing the broken spokes will be exercise in futility as you won't be able get it both true and evenly tensioned. I expect the reason your shop's mechanic refused to just replace the spokes was he concluded the rim itself was really bent.
If the only problem is truly broken spokes, look for DT, Saipem or Wheelsmith brand spokes in the correct length. There are several on-line shops that sell spokes or your LBS may have them or can cut and thread a few to the right length.
Anyway, before you try to rebuild the old wheel be sure the rim isn't actually bent.. If it is replacing the broken spokes will be exercise in futility as you won't be able get it both true and evenly tensioned. I expect the reason your shop's mechanic refused to just replace the spokes was he concluded the rim itself was really bent.
If the only problem is truly broken spokes, look for DT, Saipem or Wheelsmith brand spokes in the correct length. There are several on-line shops that sell spokes or your LBS may have them or can cut and thread a few to the right length.
Last edited by skinz0506; 09-05-22 at 05:06 PM.
#5
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: SFBay
Posts: 2,334
Bikes: n, I would like n+1
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 127 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 133 Times
in
108 Posts
Understanding wheel spoke failures may help here. If you break one spoke, maybe two, due to a specific event like a crash, it’s easy enough to replace them if the rim isn’t damaged. It’s not common to break more than one or two spokes before the rim is damaged enough that a replacement costs less than the labor to repair it.
On the other hand, if spokes are breaking due to fatigue, that’s a warning the wheel wasn’t built right and though you can’t see it, every other spoke in the wheel is getting ready to break as well. I’m this case you could replace the 4 broken ones, but no matter what you do another 4, maybe more, will be broken in 500 to 1000 miles. This will keep repeating, at best, until all of the spokes have been replaced. The mechanic knows that if he replaces one or two, but they keep breaking like this, that the customer will constantly be returning with newly broken spokes and the labor cost will quickly pass that of a new wheel. I had a friend in college not believe me about this. He ended up replacing something like 15 or 20 spokes in a ?28? spoke wheel over a couple months in the summer before he finally just got a new wheel.
In that case you can probably reuse the hub and rim, but should replace all of the spokes if you want to guarantee long term durability. You’ll want to make sure they are oriented the same way in the hub, and relative to each other. There’s plenty more to proper wheel building elsewhere on this site.
If you want to go this route, or any other that involves replacing spokes, I would remove a good spoke and have the shop measure it to confirm the length. Nothing worse than ordering a batch of spokes and not being able to use or return them.
On the other hand, if spokes are breaking due to fatigue, that’s a warning the wheel wasn’t built right and though you can’t see it, every other spoke in the wheel is getting ready to break as well. I’m this case you could replace the 4 broken ones, but no matter what you do another 4, maybe more, will be broken in 500 to 1000 miles. This will keep repeating, at best, until all of the spokes have been replaced. The mechanic knows that if he replaces one or two, but they keep breaking like this, that the customer will constantly be returning with newly broken spokes and the labor cost will quickly pass that of a new wheel. I had a friend in college not believe me about this. He ended up replacing something like 15 or 20 spokes in a ?28? spoke wheel over a couple months in the summer before he finally just got a new wheel.
In that case you can probably reuse the hub and rim, but should replace all of the spokes if you want to guarantee long term durability. You’ll want to make sure they are oriented the same way in the hub, and relative to each other. There’s plenty more to proper wheel building elsewhere on this site.
If you want to go this route, or any other that involves replacing spokes, I would remove a good spoke and have the shop measure it to confirm the length. Nothing worse than ordering a batch of spokes and not being able to use or return them.
Last edited by jccaclimber; 09-05-22 at 04:40 PM.
#6
Newbie
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 29
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 13 Times
in
11 Posts
Spoke specifications are very simple and limited to three main ones: length, gauge, material, plus type, ie. double butted or straight gauge.
Assuming you removed and measured one spoke from the INSIDE OF THE ELBOW to the end you have two specs already, the length and gauge. The material is simple for you, in that anyone doing the labor should invest in stainless steel spokes. You also have a choice of plane gauge or double butted. I'm a big fan of butted spokes but they are pricier, though they build a more resilient wheel. Your call.
As to brand, the major brands are of comparable quality so I would seek out a reputable source and go ahead and place the order.
One last suggestion, look at wheel and no how far down from the top of the nipples the spokes end. Ideally they should end about 1 mm shy of the top. Compare this to your wheel and you'll know whether you may want to increase or decrease the length from your measured spoke. Also note that rear wheels generally you spokes of two lengths about a millimeter or two apart. So if this is a rear measure spokes from both sides.
Assuming you removed and measured one spoke from the INSIDE OF THE ELBOW to the end you have two specs already, the length and gauge. The material is simple for you, in that anyone doing the labor should invest in stainless steel spokes. You also have a choice of plane gauge or double butted. I'm a big fan of butted spokes but they are pricier, though they build a more resilient wheel. Your call.
As to brand, the major brands are of comparable quality so I would seek out a reputable source and go ahead and place the order.
One last suggestion, look at wheel and no how far down from the top of the nipples the spokes end. Ideally they should end about 1 mm shy of the top. Compare this to your wheel and you'll know whether you may want to increase or decrease the length from your measured spoke. Also note that rear wheels generally you spokes of two lengths about a millimeter or two apart. So if this is a rear measure spokes from both sides.
Last edited by skinz0506; 09-05-22 at 04:54 PM.
#7
Really Old Senior Member
Are the broken spokes all in one area as if they were taken out with a stick?
OR
A random distribution, possibly all one one side, likely the NDS (left)?
IF the latter, that would suggest fatigue breakage and replacing all the spokes would be the prudent move. The rest of the spokes are on their way out.
Get new brass nipples too. Trying to use old corroded nipples is a total pain vs new.
They give an inconsistent "feel" when trying to tension up a wheel. If you are inexperienced, it makes the job exceedingly more difficult to learn.
Since you will be dealing with a used rim, I'd probably shop by price for spokes, assuming it's a rim brake bike with some wear on the brake track.
OR
A random distribution, possibly all one one side, likely the NDS (left)?
IF the latter, that would suggest fatigue breakage and replacing all the spokes would be the prudent move. The rest of the spokes are on their way out.
Get new brass nipples too. Trying to use old corroded nipples is a total pain vs new.
They give an inconsistent "feel" when trying to tension up a wheel. If you are inexperienced, it makes the job exceedingly more difficult to learn.
Since you will be dealing with a used rim, I'd probably shop by price for spokes, assuming it's a rim brake bike with some wear on the brake track.
#8
Newbie
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 29
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 13 Times
in
11 Posts
Understanding wheel spoke failures may help here. If you break one spoke, maybe two, due to a specific event like a crash, it’s easy enough to replace them if the rim isn’t damaged. It’s not common to break more than one or two spokes before the rim is damaged enough that a replacement costs less than the labor to repair it.
On the other hand, if spokes are breaking due to fatigue, that’s a warning the wheel wasn’t built right and though you can’t see it, every other spoke in the wheel is getting ready to break as well. I’m this case you could replace the 4 broken ones, but no matter what you do another 4, maybe more, will be broken in 500 to 1000 miles. This will keep repeating, at best, until all of the spokes have been replaced. The mechanic knows that if he replaces one or two, but they keep breaking like this, that the customer will constantly be returning with newly broken spokes and the labor cost will quickly pass that of a new wheel. I had a friend in college not believe me about this. He ended up replacing something like 15 or 20 spokes in a ?28? spoke wheel over a couple months in the summer before he finally just got a new wheel.
In that case you can probably reuse the hub and rim, but should replace all of the spokes if you want to guarantee long term durability. You’ll want to make sure they are oriented the same way in the hub, and relative to each other. There’s plenty more to proper wheel building elsewhere on this site.
If you want to go this route, or any other that involves replacing spokes, I would remove a good spoke and have the shop measure it to confirm the length. Nothing worse than ordering a batch of spokes and not being able to use or return them.
On the other hand, if spokes are breaking due to fatigue, that’s a warning the wheel wasn’t built right and though you can’t see it, every other spoke in the wheel is getting ready to break as well. I’m this case you could replace the 4 broken ones, but no matter what you do another 4, maybe more, will be broken in 500 to 1000 miles. This will keep repeating, at best, until all of the spokes have been replaced. The mechanic knows that if he replaces one or two, but they keep breaking like this, that the customer will constantly be returning with newly broken spokes and the labor cost will quickly pass that of a new wheel. I had a friend in college not believe me about this. He ended up replacing something like 15 or 20 spokes in a ?28? spoke wheel over a couple months in the summer before he finally just got a new wheel.
In that case you can probably reuse the hub and rim, but should replace all of the spokes if you want to guarantee long term durability. You’ll want to make sure they are oriented the same way in the hub, and relative to each other. There’s plenty more to proper wheel building elsewhere on this site.
If you want to go this route, or any other that involves replacing spokes, I would remove a good spoke and have the shop measure it to confirm the length. Nothing worse than ordering a batch of spokes and not being able to use or return them.
#9
Newbie
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2017
Posts: 29
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 13 Times
in
11 Posts
Are the broken spokes all in one area as if they were taken out with a stick?
OR
A random distribution, possibly all one one side, likely the NDS (left)?
IF the latter, that would suggest fatigue breakage and replacing all the spokes would be the prudent move. The rest of the spokes are on their way out.
Get new brass nipples too. Trying to use old corroded nipples is a total pain vs new.
They give an inconsistent "feel" when trying to tension up a wheel. If you are inexperienced, it makes the job exceedingly more difficult to learn.
Since you will be dealing with a used rim, I'd probably shop by price for spokes, assuming it's a rim brake bike with some wear on the brake track.
OR
A random distribution, possibly all one one side, likely the NDS (left)?
IF the latter, that would suggest fatigue breakage and replacing all the spokes would be the prudent move. The rest of the spokes are on their way out.
Get new brass nipples too. Trying to use old corroded nipples is a total pain vs new.
They give an inconsistent "feel" when trying to tension up a wheel. If you are inexperienced, it makes the job exceedingly more difficult to learn.
Since you will be dealing with a used rim, I'd probably shop by price for spokes, assuming it's a rim brake bike with some wear on the brake track.
#10
With a mighty wind
Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 2,594
Mentioned: 13 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1088 Post(s)
Liked 862 Times
in
490 Posts
I’d probably replace the whole wheel. If you have a bike co-op in your area, this will be super easy and cheap.
If you insist on keeping the wheel, take all the tension off the remaining spokes and confirm the wheel is straight (enough) before doing anything else.
Any bland straight gauge spoke of the proper length will work great.
If you insist on keeping the wheel, take all the tension off the remaining spokes and confirm the wheel is straight (enough) before doing anything else.
Any bland straight gauge spoke of the proper length will work great.
#11
Really Old Senior Member
I'd closely examine the rim in that area.
You can use an adjustable wrench as a gauge to check width consistency.
Run it around the rim to find loose/tight spots (damage).
#12
SE Wis
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Milwaukee, WI
Posts: 10,515
Bikes: '68 Raleigh Sprite, '02 Raleigh C500, '84 Raleigh Gran Prix, '91 Trek 400, 2013 Novara Randonee, 1990 Trek 970
Mentioned: 40 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2747 Post(s)
Liked 3,395 Times
in
2,056 Posts
Regarding spoke length. On a rear wheel the DS and NDS are not necessarily the same length due to hub flanges and wheel dish.
#13
Senior Member
However, if bike in question has disc brakes the OP may still need to measure a spoke from both sides. While rim brake front wheels are generally symmetric, the same often is not true for disc brake front wheels due to the disc mount boss causing one spoke flange to be offset inwards. It's not as pronounced as it is for rear wheels, but it could possibly be an issue.
Disclaimer: my bikes don't have disc brakes, so I have zero personal experience here.
#14
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Northern CA
Posts: 743
Bikes: Cannondale tandems: '92 Road, '97 Mtn. Mongoose 10.9 Ti, Kelly Deluxe, Tommaso Chorus, Cdale MT2000, Schwinn Deluxe Cruiser, Torker Unicycle, among others.
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 279 Post(s)
Liked 207 Times
in
129 Posts
"that’s a warning the wheel wasn’t built right"
Yes and no. Most "average" bikes come with OEM wheels that are machine built with parts "just good enough." With today's ubiquitous disc brakes, many shops don't even bother to touch up the wheels, as a bit of wobble won't be rubbing any brake pads. Probably won't even notice it. Additionally, since no bike shop takes tires off their sub $8,000 bikes and radially trues and even out the spoke tensions, pretty much every bicycle wheel on the bike shop sales floor has wheels that will suffer this same mode of spoke failure in the future. This is simply the reality of the bicycle business.
It would be better to say, "This is an example of how non-hand-built wheels by an experienced builder fail prematurely."
Yes and no. Most "average" bikes come with OEM wheels that are machine built with parts "just good enough." With today's ubiquitous disc brakes, many shops don't even bother to touch up the wheels, as a bit of wobble won't be rubbing any brake pads. Probably won't even notice it. Additionally, since no bike shop takes tires off their sub $8,000 bikes and radially trues and even out the spoke tensions, pretty much every bicycle wheel on the bike shop sales floor has wheels that will suffer this same mode of spoke failure in the future. This is simply the reality of the bicycle business.
It would be better to say, "This is an example of how non-hand-built wheels by an experienced builder fail prematurely."