I was silently thinking about why my Clydesdale weight combined with a heavy "laptop" and construction ridden SF roads pounding on my Dahon's 16 inch rear wheel... when it happened. Twang... A spoke had let go. I figured this was not a big deal as I had replaced broken spokes and in fact built many wheels in my past. This however is a uniquely tiny bike and with many unique things falls out side of "normal" range. My 16 inch (305) wheel with a 3 speed hub requires a 125mm long spoke. It turns out that even custom spoke cutters at the best bike shop in town can only cut 136mm spokes. What? So finding this out on a Sunday night with a pending meeting on Monday morning that required a bike to attend, I was forced to go to a deep dark place and..... make my own spoke. Well not completely, but I bent a much longer spoke into a tiny spoke. After a whopping 6 miles of riding it is still holding up. My fingers are still crossed....
Notice the eerie headless spoke. Ichabod Crane watch out....
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2 comments:
Well done buddy. I think there is a hozan tool that does that for you somehow, memories are deep in the brain dust, I can't remember the details...
oh yeah... Interesting this spoke threader (http://www.hozan.co.jp/cycle_e/catalog/wheel/C-700.htm) seems like it could make any length spoke, with a real head.
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