A Cycling & bikes forum. CycleBanter.com

Go Back   Home » CycleBanter.com forum » rec.bicycles » Techniques
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

interchangeable hubs?



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #11  
Old April 17th 08, 01:30 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
_[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,228
Default interchangeable hubs?

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 18:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 12:47:38 +0000, _ wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 22:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 02:30:10 +0000, Ryan Cousineau wrote:

In article
,
landotter wrote:

On Apr 15, 6:01 pm, Jeff Welch wrote:
I have an old huffy 3-speed, my best guess is that it is from the
1970's. I'm just learning how to maintain and repair my own bike,
and was wondering if it is possible to convert the current Shimano
3-speed hub to one of their new Nexus 7-speed hubs. Where would I
start to figure out if it's even possible? (Tire size, frame fork,
something else?)

Sure, it's possible. A Sturmey Archer hub might be a better choice
for that frame spacing, if you don't want to spread it. Plenty of
options with and without brakes.

To elaborate, you'll almost certainly want to build a new wheel around
the Nexus hub, so just find out what the old wheel size was (you can
easily determine that from the tire markings or by taking it to a
half-competent LBS), and spec the necessary rim from there.

The Nexus 7 hubs can be built with rim, roller, or coaster brake
setups, so you can preserve the present braking setup or change it as
you prefer.

As Landotter suggests, an S-A 7-speed will fit in your frame without
changing the rear spacing, though potentially at the cost of a bit of
efficiency and niceness that the Nexus hubs have.

Does Sturmey make a 7-speed hub? If you mean the 8-speed hub, that may
not be a good choice for the OP because the gearing is better suited to
small-wheeled bikes:


Nonsense.

The only difference between a small-wheeled version and a large-wheeled
version of a successful Nexus conversion are the sizes of the chainring
and rear cog; the internal arrangements of the gearhub have no increased
suitablilty for wheels of any size. The only considerations of this
order that would be of importance are range of gearing available and
maximum torque allowed.


Take a look at Sheldon Brown's internal gear calculator:

http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/internal.html

If the OP has 26-inch wheels, a 170mm crank, and a 40-tooth chainring,
then adding the Sturmey-Archer 8-speed hub with its stock 25-tooth
sprocket would give him a range of 41.6 to 126.9 gear inches. That
strikes me as pretty high for a typical gearhub bike.

Now try the Shimano Nexus 8-speed hub with its stock 19-tooth sprocket
(all else held equal) and you get a range of 28.8 to 88.4 gear inches.

It's true that you could get the Sturmey-Archer down into the Nexus
territory with a 28-tooth chainring, but it's my understanding that such
a small ring would probably result in rapid wear of the ring and chain
(though perhaps I'm mistaken about that). Moreover, the OP, who has an
old 3-speed, probably doesn't have a crank with replaceable rings and
thus would have to buy a new crank and maybe a new bottom bracket.

This problem would be exacerbated if the OP's wheels are larger than 26
inches.

So, I don't think it's nonsense to say that the Sturmey-Archer hub is
better suited to small-wheeled bicycles (and actually I was just echoing
Sheldon Brown's judgment on that).


But it is not the HUB that is unsuited to small wheels, it's the rest of
the kit.

(And chain wear is not made worse by small sprockets until you get into the
11-12-13 tooth range; though 11's have been used on SA multi-gear hubs, and
I run a 13 on the Nexus.)
Ads
  #12  
Old April 17th 08, 01:57 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Gary Young
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 477
Default interchangeable hubs?

On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 00:30:20 +0000, _ wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 18:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 12:47:38 +0000, _ wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 22:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 02:30:10 +0000, Ryan Cousineau wrote:

In article
,
landotter wrote:

On Apr 15, 6:01 pm, Jeff Welch wrote:
I have an old huffy 3-speed, my best guess is that it is from the
1970's. I'm just learning how to maintain and repair my own
bike, and was wondering if it is possible to convert the current
Shimano 3-speed hub to one of their new Nexus 7-speed hubs.
Where would I start to figure out if it's even possible? (Tire
size, frame fork, something else?)

Sure, it's possible. A Sturmey Archer hub might be a better choice
for that frame spacing, if you don't want to spread it. Plenty of
options with and without brakes.

To elaborate, you'll almost certainly want to build a new wheel
around the Nexus hub, so just find out what the old wheel size was
(you can easily determine that from the tire markings or by taking
it to a half-competent LBS), and spec the necessary rim from there.

The Nexus 7 hubs can be built with rim, roller, or coaster brake
setups, so you can preserve the present braking setup or change it
as you prefer.

As Landotter suggests, an S-A 7-speed will fit in your frame without
changing the rear spacing, though potentially at the cost of a bit
of efficiency and niceness that the Nexus hubs have.

Does Sturmey make a 7-speed hub? If you mean the 8-speed hub, that
may not be a good choice for the OP because the gearing is better
suited to small-wheeled bikes:


Nonsense.

The only difference between a small-wheeled version and a
large-wheeled version of a successful Nexus conversion are the sizes
of the chainring and rear cog; the internal arrangements of the
gearhub have no increased suitablilty for wheels of any size. The
only considerations of this order that would be of importance are
range of gearing available and maximum torque allowed.


Take a look at Sheldon Brown's internal gear calculator:

http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/internal.html

If the OP has 26-inch wheels, a 170mm crank, and a 40-tooth chainring,
then adding the Sturmey-Archer 8-speed hub with its stock 25-tooth
sprocket would give him a range of 41.6 to 126.9 gear inches. That
strikes me as pretty high for a typical gearhub bike.

Now try the Shimano Nexus 8-speed hub with its stock 19-tooth sprocket
(all else held equal) and you get a range of 28.8 to 88.4 gear inches.

It's true that you could get the Sturmey-Archer down into the Nexus
territory with a 28-tooth chainring, but it's my understanding that
such a small ring would probably result in rapid wear of the ring and
chain (though perhaps I'm mistaken about that). Moreover, the OP, who
has an old 3-speed, probably doesn't have a crank with replaceable
rings and thus would have to buy a new crank and maybe a new bottom
bracket.

This problem would be exacerbated if the OP's wheels are larger than 26
inches.

So, I don't think it's nonsense to say that the Sturmey-Archer hub is
better suited to small-wheeled bicycles (and actually I was just
echoing Sheldon Brown's judgment on that).


But it is not the HUB that is unsuited to small wheels, it's the rest of
the kit.


The OP wants to revamp an old Huffy. I suspect that means he's either not
willing or financially able to swap out his entire kit. Besides, at that
point he would probably be better off buying a new bike.


(And chain wear is not made worse by small sprockets until you get into
the 11-12-13 tooth range; though 11's have been used on SA multi-gear
hubs, and I run a 13 on the Nexus.)


The issue is the size of the chainring, not the sprocket. You don't think
a 28-tooth chainring would wear more quickly than a 40-tooth chainring?
28 teeth is getting into granny-gear territory. It was my understanding
that granny gears are typically made of steel and not aluminum precisely
because they're more prone to wear. Here's an old posting from Jobst that
I believe bears that out:

http://groups.google.com/group/rec.b...146c8f64ca1dc3

  #13  
Old April 17th 08, 02:59 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
Ryan Cousineau
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,044
Default interchangeable hubs?

In article ,
_ wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 18:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 12:47:38 +0000, _ wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 22:22:36 -0500, Gary Young wrote:

On Wed, 16 Apr 2008 02:30:10 +0000, Ryan Cousineau wrote:

In article
,
landotter wrote:

On Apr 15, 6:01 pm, Jeff Welch wrote:
I have an old huffy 3-speed, my best guess is that it is from the
1970's. I'm just learning how to maintain and repair my own bike,
and was wondering if it is possible to convert the current Shimano
3-speed hub to one of their new Nexus 7-speed hubs. Where would I
start to figure out if it's even possible? (Tire size, frame fork,
something else?)

Sure, it's possible. A Sturmey Archer hub might be a better choice
for that frame spacing, if you don't want to spread it. Plenty of
options with and without brakes.

To elaborate, you'll almost certainly want to build a new wheel around
the Nexus hub, so just find out what the old wheel size was (you can
easily determine that from the tire markings or by taking it to a
half-competent LBS), and spec the necessary rim from there.

The Nexus 7 hubs can be built with rim, roller, or coaster brake
setups, so you can preserve the present braking setup or change it as
you prefer.

As Landotter suggests, an S-A 7-speed will fit in your frame without
changing the rear spacing, though potentially at the cost of a bit of
efficiency and niceness that the Nexus hubs have.

Does Sturmey make a 7-speed hub? If you mean the 8-speed hub, that may
not be a good choice for the OP because the gearing is better suited to
small-wheeled bikes:


Nonsense.

The only difference between a small-wheeled version and a large-wheeled
version of a successful Nexus conversion are the sizes of the chainring
and rear cog; the internal arrangements of the gearhub have no increased
suitablilty for wheels of any size. The only considerations of this
order that would be of importance are range of gearing available and
maximum torque allowed.


Take a look at Sheldon Brown's internal gear calculator:

http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/internal.html

If the OP has 26-inch wheels, a 170mm crank, and a 40-tooth chainring,
then adding the Sturmey-Archer 8-speed hub with its stock 25-tooth
sprocket would give him a range of 41.6 to 126.9 gear inches. That
strikes me as pretty high for a typical gearhub bike.

Now try the Shimano Nexus 8-speed hub with its stock 19-tooth sprocket
(all else held equal) and you get a range of 28.8 to 88.4 gear inches.

It's true that you could get the Sturmey-Archer down into the Nexus
territory with a 28-tooth chainring, but it's my understanding that such
a small ring would probably result in rapid wear of the ring and chain
(though perhaps I'm mistaken about that). Moreover, the OP, who has an
old 3-speed, probably doesn't have a crank with replaceable rings and
thus would have to buy a new crank and maybe a new bottom bracket.

This problem would be exacerbated if the OP's wheels are larger than 26
inches.

So, I don't think it's nonsense to say that the Sturmey-Archer hub is
better suited to small-wheeled bicycles (and actually I was just echoing
Sheldon Brown's judgment on that).


But it is not the HUB that is unsuited to small wheels, it's the rest of
the kit.

(And chain wear is not made worse by small sprockets until you get into the
11-12-13 tooth range; though 11's have been used on SA multi-gear hubs, and
I run a 13 on the Nexus.)


The OP would like to run a 8ish-speed gearhub on a large-wheeled
(26"-29") bike. If they choose a Sturmey-Archer hub, they will have to
use a strangely large cog or a strangely small ring to get the usual
sort of gearing.

On a small-wheeled bike, that same hub gives gearing in a pretty typical
range using cogs and rings in quite mainstream sizes.

Indeed, the gearing issue for small-wheel bikes is such that Shimano
actually built a special hub and cassette with the ability to run a
9-tooth small cog:

http://www.sheldonbrown.com/capreo/index.html

So in short, the Sturmey-Archer 8 hub is well-suited to small-wheel
bikes because it allows use of readily available gearing sizes. On bikes
with larger wheels, normal sorts of gearing options require weird gears.

I do have a 64-tooth ring in my Pile, but it's hardly the sort of thing
I expect the local shop to stock.

--
Ryan Cousineau http://www.wiredcola.com/
"In other newsgroups, they killfile trolls."
"In rec.bicycles.racing, we coach them."
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Phil Wood Bottom Brackets Interchangeable? suzyj Australia 0 July 7th 06 04:35 AM
Are Shimano chainrings interchangeable? Caleb Techniques 16 May 20th 06 01:45 PM
Ksyrium SL and Elite freehubs interchangeable? Chuck Liu Techniques 0 March 18th 06 04:51 AM
DT Wheelsmith nipples interchangeable? [email protected] Techniques 8 February 24th 06 02:49 PM
MegaExo interchangeable with Hollowtech II? [email protected] Techniques 6 December 12th 05 08:16 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:27 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 CycleBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.