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What should I do about a tensioned/trued wheel that lost significant spoke tension after first use?

Bicycles Asked by Jeff Walden on September 5, 2020

My front and rear wheels needed truing, so I picked up tools to do it. Rims are DT Swiss R460: 20 spokes front, 24 back. Max spoke tension is 1200N.

I got my front wheel to a left-side tension range of 685-889N and a right-side tension range of 685-938N, and I got my rear wheel to a left-side tension range of 540-720N and a right-side tension range of 758-991N. Numbers are without tire or tube and after de-stressing both sides of each wheel. I adjusted each spoke using tighten-then-back-off spoke wrench technique. I didn’t use spoke prep — figuring it wasn’t strictly necessary for an existing wheel if I was attentive and executed tighten-then-back-off correctly.

I put tires and tubes on the wheels and reinstalled them, then did 13mi Sunday. The rear wheel felt maybe more "taut" than normal (from fresh reinflation to max 120psi?), but otherwise things went fine.

It’s now Tuesday, and I figured it’d be a good idea to recheck tensions after a ride and some time. Didn’t remove the tires, just popped the bike in a stand and ran the TM-1 over a few spokes. The tensions were much lower, 14-16 on a TM-1 versus 17-22 before for a few random left-side spokes on each wheel. (Maybe "taut" is not actually what I was feeling in the rear wheel.) That decrease isn’t normal — is it?

Should I just tighten all the spokes to get them to a more desirable tension range again? Is it normal for tension to decrease so much from putting an inflated tire on a wheel? (This answer suggests no.) Should I remove (or at least deflate) the tires before doing so, and if so should I tension beyond 1200N assuming some loosening when a tire is added again? (This answer again suggests no.) Or is my no-spoke-prep tactic coming back to bite me, prior tensioning would likely have been fine if I’d used some, and I should apply some to every spoke and then tension things up?

3 Answers

It's normal. You can corroborate by letting the air out of your tire and measuring then. The whole thing is one of the reasons tension balance is important; outliers that still seem to have a decent amount of tension on them can be brought to slack by this effect.

I would work on getting the tension balance tighter. Low spoke count wheels are not forgiving of it. DT Spoke Freeze works well as an after-the-fact "prep" if you want something on there without having to undo the wheel. It is true to its name, making re-adjustment later difficult, so you want things pretty dialed first.

Answered by Nathan Knutson on September 5, 2020

Yes, it’s normal for spoke tension to decrease when the tire is inflated.

First of all I’d use much more tension and try to get it more even. Currently you have about 30% difference between slackest and tautest spoke, which is a lot (I’d aim for ~10%, but I’m a perfectionist in that regard).

540N on the slackest rear spoke before you’ve even inflated the tire is very little. I’d get the drive side spokes to slightly over the allowed 1200N and hope that the non-drive side ends up around 700N.

I’d also aim for 900N on the front wheel.

All tensions assuming zero tire pressure.

Considering the low spoke count and the high tire pressure you are using you could go for even higher (initial) spoke tension.

I’ve had good experience with using grease on the spoke nipples (on contact surfaces and thread). Makes truing much easier, avoids wear from truing and also avoids deforming the spokes or nipples from all the tension force.

Answered by Michael on September 5, 2020

My front and rear wheels needed truing, so I picked up tools to do it. Rims are DT Swiss R460: 20 spokes front, 24 back. Max spoke tension is 1200N.

Ouch!

1200N is a reasonable spoke tension for a 36-spoke wheel. To keep 20 spoke wheel in tension, it would need 2160 N tension, and to keep 24 spoke wheel in tension, it would need 1800 N tension.

That decrease isn't normal -- is it?

It's exactly what you would expect for a low spoke count wheel. The wheel stands on the few bottommost spokes. The fewer spokes there are, the fewer spokes the wheel stands on. A severe bump in the road and the momentary load can be 200-300 kg (2000 - 3000 N). A 20-spoke or 24-spoke wheel cannot withstand that load, so the bottommost spoke is slack and the nipple on the threads is free to turn due to vibration.

As a bad fix (not recommended), you could try some thread glue in the nipple threads. They will prevent the nipples turning freely. This is both a good thing (bump + vibration does not loosen the spokes), and a bad thing (your wheel truing just became harder).

As an ultimate fix, throw away these poor rims that were clearly designed by an incompetent engineer (who would design a rim that has both fewer than 36 spokes and maximum tension reasonable for 36 spokes?), and try to find a rim:

  • That has 20 spokes and 2160 N maximum allowed tension
  • That has 24 spokes and 1800 N maximum allowed tension
  • That has 36 spokes and 1200 N maximum allowed tension

My recommendation is the last choice. Experience has shown that 36 spoke wheel is a reasonable compromise between low and high spoke counts and very durable.

Answered by juhist on September 5, 2020

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