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The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 8th 05, 08:38 PM
rBOB
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Default The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.

Are you sure it's coming from the spokes? If it is the spokes, maybe
the wheels were not stress relieved. This should be done as the last
step of wheel building and then the wheel must be touched up (trued)
again. Anyone who has ever built more than a few wheels should know
this. If the builder did not do this, it's a mark against him. You can
read more he

http://sheldonbrown.com/wheelbuild.html

Before a wheel is ready for the road it must be stress relieved, because the bend in the spoke has to accommodate itself to the shape of the hub flange and vice versa, and a similar process may go on where the nipple sits in the rim.


After you do this, you will probably have to do some touch-up truing, then repeat the stressing process until it stops making noise and the wheel stops going out of true.


If the wheels get trued properly, there no reason not to go on your
ride.

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  #2  
Old September 8th 05, 10:18 PM
Jeff Wills
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Default The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.


rBOB wrote:
Are you sure it's coming from the spokes? If it is the spokes, maybe
the wheels were not stress relieved. This should be done as the last
step of wheel building and then the wheel must be touched up (trued)
again. Anyone who has ever built more than a few wheels should know
this. If the builder did not do this, it's a mark against him.


If the wheels weren't stress-relieved, they'll usually go through one
round of "pling pling pling" before settling in- after which they're
quiet. On a trike, pling pling pling in corners indicates the spokes
are moving against one another, which is usually caused by insufficient
tension.


You can
read more he

http://sheldonbrown.com/wheelbuild.html


An excellent reference.


Before a wheel is ready for the road it must be stress relieved, because the bend in the spoke has to accommodate itself to the shape of the hub flange and vice versa, and a similar process may go on where the nipple sits in the rim.


After you do this, you will probably have to do some touch-up truing, then repeat the stressing process until it stops making noise and the wheel stops going out of true.


If the wheels get trued properly, there no reason not to go on your
ride.


Yes and no. The wheel may true up properly, but sthe spokes may still
be fatigued to the point where they will fail early. There's no reason
why a set of spokes can't last 10's of thousands of miles if properly
tensioned. On the other hand, they may start to fail in less than 500
(I've experienced both ends of the spectrum).

It's tough to tell from the other side of the planet. I'd say that if
the original builder is willing to tension and true the wheels then you
should take advantage of the service. They won't all fail at once- but
once two or three go, it would be time to consider replacing all of the
spokes.

Jeff

  #3  
Old September 9th 05, 01:05 AM
Sunset Fanatic
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Default The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.


rBOB who? wrote:
Are you sure it's coming from the spokes?...


There is enough deflection when corning in many trikes to make the
discs rub slightly (if said trike is disc brake equipped, of course).
This is more of a "ringing" sound [1] than a pinging sound, however.

[1] My Earth Cycles Dragonflyer [TM] trike exhibits this behavior.
--
Tom Sherman - Fox River Valley

  #4  
Old September 9th 05, 03:32 PM
gotbent
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Default The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.


Also i have hub breaks so it's unlikely to be disk noise


If your hub breaks, loose spokes could be the least of your problems. In
this trainof thought, though, can hub brakes make odd noises when subjected
to side loads?




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  #5  
Old September 9th 05, 11:40 PM
gotbent
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Default The wheels on the trike go pling pling pling.


wrote in message
news
If your hub breaks, loose spokes could be the least of your problems.


Been there done that - crashed the trike while still pretty new at the
whole thing - both hubs bust the flanges while I was 20 miles from
home ...


I have them back from the shop all nice and tight. I'll have a spin
round the area tomorrow and see if anything drops off. Though if the
rain keeps up like this (North east U.K.) it will be a quiet day in
front of the TV instead of a ride come Sunday.

Everso.

Also i have hub breaks so it's unlikely to be disk noise

I seem to remember about your early adventures with cracked hub flanges, and
I thought the "breaks" was a double entendre.



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