View Single Post
  #33  
Old November 25th 14, 07:48 PM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
ian field
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,008
Default QD wheel spindles.



"Sir Ridesalot" wrote in message
...
On Monday, November 24, 2014 1:42:59 PM UTC-5, Ian Field wrote:
"Sir Ridesalot" wrote in message
...
On Sunday, November 23, 2014 1:01:14 PM UTC-5, Ian Field wrote:
"John D. Slocomb" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 22 Nov 2014 18:06:45 -0000, "Ian Field"
wrote:



"Phil W Lee" wrote in message
. ..
"Ian Field" considered Thu, 20
Nov
2014 20:05:04 -0000 the perfect time to write:

Just scrounged a pair of MTB wheels - but they have QD spindles.

My locking up chain isn't long enough to go through both wheels,
the
frame
and whatever I'm chaining it to.

Is there any technical reason why I couldn't swap the spindles
over
from
a
pair of old damaged wheels?

Thanks.

Why not just drop the front wheel out when you lock it up, and
thread
it on the locking up chain where it will fit, next to the back
wheel?

I've seen plenty of bikes locked up that way, without any apparent
problems.

Too lazy - also involves unhooking the front brake cable so the
blocks
clear
the tyre.

I get grease on my hands often enough fixing things that go wrong.

Get another locking cable/chain and lock the frame and wheels
together
and then the whole package to the lamp post. Cable locks are cheap.
Or
a length of chain and another padlock.

Or spray paint the bike with various colors. I had a mate that did
that figuring that no one would steal anything that looked "that
bad",
and nobody did but whether that validates his theory I'm not sure
:-)

The bike was scrounged on Freecycle a few years ago, I have spent
money
on
it - but generally as little as I can get away with.

From time to time I get comments while locking it outside the
supermarket;
"the chains worth more than the bike isn't it?".

As yet, I have other spare wheels - so I can put off using the QR ones
untill there's no other choice.

A regular wheelnut is a loose fit on the QR axle - a QR cone wont fit
the
regular axle.

Since a regular cone will go on the QR axle, I can spin one down the
thread
and see whether it fits with the bearing.

If the fit 8is "loose" you're very likely to have trouble keeping the
cones adjusted properly.


Do try to pay attention!!!!!

The fact that a regular cone can be run down the thread of a QR axle,
allows
me to check its fit to the bearing.

The whole point of the exercise is to fit a regular axle that's right for
the cones I'm checking out.


You have a habit of getting pretty nasty to some who are trying to help
you.

If a cone or nut "spins" down a thread then it's likely a loose fit. If
the fit's loose adjustments don't stay. You can have a nut thread onto
something where there's a bit of movement of the nut on the threads.
That's called a Class B fit and it's something that you'd want to avoid.


I'm a lot more polite to people who give helpful information that isn't just
plain wrong.

As I've explained twice now; the fact that the regular axle cone can spin
down the QR axle, allows me to test that cone for fit to the bearing.

The whole object of the exercise is to fit the axle that correctly fits
*THAT* cone.

If you can't be bothered reading and understanding what I said - please also
not be bothered replying.

Ads
 

Home - Home - Home - Home - Home