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Does it exist a tool (pliers?) for clamping round spokes and avoiding twisting? Anything like the blade wrench used for truing wheels with aero spokes?
Thanks. |
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#2
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On 5/16/2017 6:57 AM, Gabriele Russo wrote:
Does it exist a tool (pliers?) for clamping round spokes and avoiding twisting? Anything like the blade wrench used for truing wheels with aero spokes? Thanks. In my experience (which could be wrong), no. I've tried to kludge together a prototype, with no success. Instead,... Here are a few tips I use for dealing with "wind-up" or spoke twisting, and dealing with aluminum nipples (I assume you're still thinking of using them). 1) Use a spoke wrench that grips nipple on four sides (has a just a tiny slot on side of square nipple cutout, to get wrench past the spoke). Much harder to damage aluminum nipples with these; they are widely available. 2) Lubricate spoke threads. Also lubricate spoke-rim contact surface. The latter makes an astonishing improvement in ease of truing. 3) Grip spoke tightly in fingers while turning nipple wrench - not so much to stop wind-up, but to sense it. When tightening nipple, spoke twists just-so-much before threads break free; continue to turn nipple desired amount, then back off the sensed amount of wind-up. In practice much simpler than the long-winded description I just gave. Helps to have heavily callused fingertips. Be careful, super-thin spokes (DT revolutions, e.g.) can just "keep winding" until they break, or so the venerated Jobst told us. 4) Mark side of un-twisted spoke with a sharpie (felt-tip marker). In the right light, this makes it very easy to see wind-up and remove it. Wipes off with alcohol when finished. 5) Tighten drive-side spokes first, so that rim is too far toward the drive side, while non-drive-side spokes are undertensioned. Guesstimate, trying to get drive-side spoke nipples in their final "setting," then tighten the non-drive-side spokes to desired tension. This means that toward the end of the build, when tension is highest, you are primarily adjusting the lower-tension, easier-to-turn non-drive-side spokes. [In practice, there's some trial-and-error here to get the drive side right so that in the end, it all comes in at the desired tensions and correctly dished.] 6) Definitely remember to stress wheel at end of build to stress-relieve spokes; procedure is better described elsewhere, e.g. Sheldon's site. Also (carefully) flex wheel to de-tension spokes to eliminate any residual wind-up. I do the latter by laying wheel on side with axle resting on a block of wood; push hard downward on opposing sides of rim. You can feel when you're pushing hard enough. By some miracle, this has never taco'ed a wheel on me. 7) Make a serious effort to get all spoke on one side of wheel at nearly equal tension. Tensiometers work nice, but the pluck-and-listen method works well if you have a good sense of pitch. Tensiometers will also make sure you've got things tight enough but not too tight. As you can see, I'm not a /fast/ wheel builder, but I've pushed the bleeding edge on a few wheels and gotten good results (durable wheels) that generally never need retruing. Mark J. |
#3
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On 5/16/2017 7:28 PM, Mark J. wrote:
On 5/16/2017 6:57 AM, Gabriele Russo wrote: Does it exist a tool (pliers?) for clamping round spokes and avoiding twisting? Anything like the blade wrench used for truing wheels with aero spokes? Thanks. In my experience (which could be wrong), no. I've tried to kludge together a prototype, with no success. Instead,... Here are a few tips I use for dealing with "wind-up" or spoke twisting, and dealing with aluminum nipples (I assume you're still thinking of using them). 1) Use a spoke wrench that grips nipple on four sides (has a just a tiny slot on side of square nipple cutout, to get wrench past the spoke). Much harder to damage aluminum nipples with these; they are widely available. 2) Lubricate spoke threads. Also lubricate spoke-rim contact surface. The latter makes an astonishing improvement in ease of truing. 3) Grip spoke tightly in fingers while turning nipple wrench - not so much to stop wind-up, but to sense it. When tightening nipple, spoke twists just-so-much before threads break free; continue to turn nipple desired amount, then back off the sensed amount of wind-up. In practice much simpler than the long-winded description I just gave. Helps to have heavily callused fingertips. Be careful, super-thin spokes (DT revolutions, e.g.) can just "keep winding" until they break, or so the venerated Jobst told us. 4) Mark side of un-twisted spoke with a sharpie (felt-tip marker). In the right light, this makes it very easy to see wind-up and remove it. Wipes off with alcohol when finished. 5) Tighten drive-side spokes first, so that rim is too far toward the drive side, while non-drive-side spokes are undertensioned. Guesstimate, trying to get drive-side spoke nipples in their final "setting," then tighten the non-drive-side spokes to desired tension. This means that toward the end of the build, when tension is highest, you are primarily adjusting the lower-tension, easier-to-turn non-drive-side spokes. [In practice, there's some trial-and-error here to get the drive side right so that in the end, it all comes in at the desired tensions and correctly dished.] 6) Definitely remember to stress wheel at end of build to stress-relieve spokes; procedure is better described elsewhere, e.g. Sheldon's site. Also (carefully) flex wheel to de-tension spokes to eliminate any residual wind-up. I do the latter by laying wheel on side with axle resting on a block of wood; push hard downward on opposing sides of rim. You can feel when you're pushing hard enough. By some miracle, this has never taco'ed a wheel on me. 7) Make a serious effort to get all spoke on one side of wheel at nearly equal tension. Tensiometers work nice, but the pluck-and-listen method works well if you have a good sense of pitch. Tensiometers will also make sure you've got things tight enough but not too tight. As you can see, I'm not a /fast/ wheel builder, but I've pushed the bleeding edge on a few wheels and gotten good results (durable wheels) that generally never need retruing. Mark J. I have, for certain stubborn spokes on old wheels, used a 3" Vise Grip (locking plier) to hold the spoke. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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On 16/05/17 23:57, Gabriele Russo wrote:
Does it exist a tool (pliers?) for clamping round spokes and avoiding twisting? Anything like the blade wrench used for truing wheels with aero spokes? Thanks. To undo some nipples from a wheel with straight pull spokes and too much thread lock, I've used a pair of pliers to hold the spoke. I had no intention of reusing the spokes, but the damage seemed to be mostly that the black paint was removed. The stainless spoke seemed fine. Perhaps the grip pattern of the pliers makes a difference? If in doubt, I think you could fashion soft jaws from a couple of pieces of aluminium and a 2mm drill bit, depending on the dia of the spokes to be held. -- JS |
#5
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On Tue, 16 May 2017 16:28:25 -0700, Mark J.
wrote: On 5/16/2017 6:57 AM, Gabriele Russo wrote: Does it exist a tool (pliers?) for clamping round spokes and avoiding twisting? Anything like the blade wrench used for truing wheels with aero spokes? Thanks. In my experience (which could be wrong), no. I've tried to kludge together a prototype, with no success. Instead,... snip In addition to those good suggestions, push the rim towards the spoke you are tightening to temporarily reduce the tension on it. Usualy spoke twist happens as the tension gets high and the threads of the spoke and the threads of the nipple have a lot of friction against each other. This is more common with aluminum nipples, because they are softer (one of several reasons not to use them). |
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