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#51
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
--snip-
Why would you have to replace the forks or build new wheels to put in a solid axle? --snip-- I think he meant through-axle (like on Freeride/Downhill MTBs) SYJ |
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#52
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Pete Cresswell writes:
One of my riding buddies (about 50 years of racing) had a crack up one morning. He failed to adequately tighten the QR on his rear wheel... My point here is that these sort of accidents can and do happen. I've never had an accident. I'm still trying to train myself to check QR tension before getting on the bike. I do it sometimes and when I remember that I forgot, I stop and do it right then and there. This sounds like poltergeists are at work. What sort of QR's are you using? If the QR was tight when you put the wheel in, then it ought to remain that way for a long time. Having ridden a QR equipped bicycle for a long time, I am convinced that this is not a common hazard of QR's. I've taken many 2000 mile rides in the Alps with rough roads and hard braking, never once removing the wheel on many of these where I had no flat front tire. Having said that, one day I pulled the bike off the carrier on the back of my car, got on it, and rode off: no check. First time I applied the front brake it felt funny. Turned out front skewer was *really* loose - i.e. just a little more and the wheel would have come out. As it was, the lawyer lips probably saved me. So how did it get loose and why? Besides, I have ridden substantial distances that included hard braking with the QR open with no effect. What did your wheel do that you could notice when braking? I'll never know why it was loose - user error the night before? - something about vibration on the rack?... Sounds like poltergeists. But the reason seems moot to me. The bottom line seems to be that somebody of reasonable intelligence and reasonable diligence could wind up having a wheel come out in use - all they would have to do is forget to check the wheel before riding and have it loose at that time. You would have to have lift-off from the road for the wheel to come out. I suppose that isn't so rare in off road riding but it isn't common in road rides. I still use skewers, but only because they're the only game in town without replacing all 3 of my forks and building new wheels. And why would you not want QR wheels unless you never get flat tires and always carry wrenches in your patch kit? Other than that, trading the extra 20 seconds I'd have to spend changing a front tire for knowing that wheel isn't coming loose, I'd go for through-axle in a heartbeat. That sounds a lot like elastic waist band, belt and suspenders to make sure your pants don't fall down. You make it sound like the QR is a vestige of ancient professional road racers who changed their own tubulars. I am glad to inherit the device, regardless of its origin. Jobst Brandt |
#53
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
Having said that, one day I pulled the bike off the carrier on the back of my car, got on it, and rode off: no check. First time I applied the front brake it felt funny. Turned out front skewer was *really* loose - i.e. just a little more and the wheel would have come out. As it was, the lawyer lips probably saved me. I cycle about 17.000 km a year and I *NEVER* check the QR B4 I ride, though my wheels are without lawyers lips, just like everybody's wheels I know here and I never heard about anybody having trouble with QR. Greets, Derk |
#54
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Derk wrote:
Sorry, meant to say: my fork is without lawyers lips. |
#55
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
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#56
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Derk wrote:
(PeteCresswell) wrote: Having said that, one day I pulled the bike off the carrier on the back of my car, got on it, and rode off: no check. First time I applied the front brake it felt funny. Turned out front skewer was *really* loose - i.e. just a little more and the wheel would have come out. As it was, the lawyer lips probably saved me. I cycle about 17.000 km a year and I *NEVER* check the QR B4 I ride, though my wheels are without lawyers lips, just like everybody's wheels I know here and I never heard about anybody having trouble with QR. Greets, Derk Lawyer lips are a major PIA IMHO. Gee I hate those things. What is the use of QR if you have a fork with lawyer lips? Every time you take out the wheel you have to unscrew the QR so when you install the wheel again the chance that you adjust the QR wrong is much greater. I don't get it. Lou -- Posted by news://news.nb.nu |
#57
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Lou Holtman wrote:
Lawyer lips are a major PIA IMHO. Gee I hate those things. The first thing I did after buying an Easton fork was that I asked my mechanic to remove these things. What is the use of QR if you have a fork with lawyer lips? It's ridiculous........That's what happens when people go to court all the time to blame others for everything that happens to them. Greetings, Derk |
#58
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Per David L. Johnson:
Why would you have to replace the forks or build new wheels to put in a solid axle? Wouldn't address the root problem, which is the cut-out receptacles in the fork. -- PeteCresswell |
#59
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
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#60
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bigger lawyer lips on the way?
Per Derk:
just like everybody's wheels I know here and I never heard about anybody having trouble with QR. Just a couple of nights ago Americas Funniest Videos showed a kid doing a wheelie, only to have the front wheel fall out. Didn't look particularly funny to me, but there it was.... -- PeteCresswell |
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