raleighnut
Legendary Member
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Copaslip
My understanding is that a freehub places the right hand bearing closer to the right hand drop out and therefore reduces the stress at the centre of the rear spindle?This is one of the reasons that freehubs were invented...
I broke my chainwhip when trying to loosen a stupidly tight lockring on my singlespeed bike. This was my improvised solution, which soon sorted the problem out...
View attachment 562988
It was such a stable setup that all I had to do was stand on the 12 inch spanner!
That's another reason. Although the first cassettes were 7 speed iirc and 7 speed freewheels were (and are) a thing. But yes, getting the bearings out by the dropouts is A Good Thing.My understanding is that a freehub places the right hand bearing closer to the right hand drop out and therefore reduces the stress at the centre of the rear spindle?
The upshot being that more cogs can be fitted to a cassette than a freewheel and the need for multiple rings on the front is reduced?
It's a bit late for that now... I also mangled the lockring tool so a socket would no longer fit over it!A really clever solution but I always think that an adjustable spanner is a compromise. A socket with a breaker bar would have been far easier.
My understanding is that a freehub places the right hand bearing closer to the right hand drop out and therefore reduces the stress at the centre of the rear spindle?
The upshot being that more cogs can be fitted to a cassette than a freewheel and the need for multiple rings on the front is reduced?
I never realised you had any 10/11 speed bikes, I am truly shocked,Stronger axles with a freehub, but then they went and spoiled it by adding too many sprockets and building weaker rear wheels with less dish. Net result no better overall with modern 10/11 speed stuff. If you stick to the early incarnations of freehubs with 6-speed cassettes and the same dishing as a freewheel wheel, then it is overall a better piece of engineering.
Apologies for posting a bit of 'Bike Porn'I never realised you had any 10/11 speed bikes, I am truly shocked,
BTW my 'posh' bike with 10 speed Campagnolo gears on Roval wheels is still lovely.
View attachment 563085
And yes that is a 10 speed semi 'corncob' cassette, 12-24
Cogs are 12-13-14-15-16-17-18-20-22-24,Apologies for posting a bit of 'Bike Porn'
I never realised you had any 10/11 speed bikes, I am truly shocked
The wheels are fantastic, Roval Classique Pave, incredibly strong CX wheels that are 15+ years old now and have thousands of miles on them, the font is a 20 spoke 'Radial' and the rear a 24 spoke Radial/2Cross. They were designed to cope with the 'Paris-Roubaix' and cyclocross riding. They certainly cope with my 16 stone bulk on a 653 time trial frame.I don't have 10/11 speed stuff, I don't like either the compromised engineering of them or the outrageous cost of consumable transmission items. The most cogs I have on any of my back wheels is 7 and I intend to keep it that way.
Your frame is certainly very nice, but cant say I'm too enthused about the wheels. Seem a bit lacking in the spoke count department.
Have you got a bike with one of these Uniglide 'early incarnations'?Net result no better overall with modern 10/11 speed stuff. If you stick to the early incarnations of freehubs with 6-speed cassettes and the same dishing as a freewheel wheel
Cast a fly on rippled waters, and . . .I never realised you had any 10/11 speed bikes, I am truly shocked,
A bite! Good catch @raleighnutI don't have 10/11 speed stuff,
Have you got a bike with one of these Uniglide 'early incarnations'?