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Adjusting spoke tension is a black art!
Whenever I have tried, it always makes things worse.
But that's just me.![]()
The spokes were all OK when I set out a hour before and there's no damage to the wheel. Put it into my local shop to sort .Wheels need to be re-tensioned and trued, normal maintenance for aluminum rims and less so with carbon. Also depends on how hard you ride, as wheels are consumables IMO.
Does the rim have any damage, like flat spots? All the spokes or some of them a loose? Start with re-tensioning and see how it goes.
The spokes were all OK when I set out a hour before and there's no damage to the wheel. Put it into my local shop to sort .
As someone who builds all his own wheels. You get a feel for each spokes tension, by pinching together two spokes, just after they cross over. Sure the first time you tension a wheel, you check tension with a gauge. But once you've tensioned many wheels. Your hand is a pretty accurate gauge. I then recheck tension after the first hard ride. Then every 12 months.Unless you used a tension gauge, then you have no way of knowing if the spokes were ok.
As a self confessed Sorcer'ers apprentice, Where do you find what the spoke tension should be? Who's website? The bike maker, the wheel maker, the rim maker or the spoke supplier?Unless you used a tension gauge, then you have no way of knowing if the spokes were ok.
If your BSB (Bike Store Boy) doesn't put a tension gauge on each spoke, then he's just screwing you. Some of these jokers will tell you that they can listen to the spokes. When they spew such nonsense, I wonder why someone with perfect pitch would be shuffling around in the back of a bike store rather than sitting in the recording studio turning out platinum records.
Regardless, it's good practice to check the spoke tensions when a bike is new, after 100 miles, and again after 250 miles. If you're running aluminum rims, you'll want to check them again every 500 or so miles. If you're running carbon rims, you can go much longer.
This has happened to me when I've built a wheel with too little tension and ridden it too hard. It means whoever built your wheel messed up, but it's fixable by a professional as discussed above.Hi, I'm the owner of a cube stero hybrid hpc pro with 300 miles on the clock. Yesterday at the end of a fast down hill forestry road, I noticed that all the spokes in the rear wheel had come loose. Has anyone ever come across this before?