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Wheel Building - Should key spoke be inside or outside flange?

Bicycles Asked by Brett DeWoody on June 2, 2021

I’m working on my first wheel build and reading a lot of articles about spoke patterns. Some articles say the key spoke (drive-side, to the right of the valve) should be on the outside of the flange, but others say inside of the flange.

Is there a recommended/better flange side for the key spoke? And then what is the recommended flange side for the spoke on the other side of the valve?

In my current build my key spoke is on the outside of the flange. The parallel spoke on the other side of the valve is inside the left flange.

Update

Here’s my finished wheels showing the lacing pattern. I followed Shimano’s recommended pattern but would love to know if it looks in/correct to anyone. In both pics, the wheels are drive-side up, with the valve at the top-center (in the T of WTB). All spokes on drive-side go to holes on drive-side of rim, same for non-drive side.

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5 Answers

In the end I discovered and followed Shimano's recommended lacing pattern for the front and rear wheels. If I understand the terminology correctly, this means the front is symmetric, and the rear is asymmetric.

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Correct answer by Brett DeWoody on June 2, 2021

For the pulling spokes, the knee should be at the outside of the hub flange (i.e. spoke heads inward).

If you look at the wear marks of a used hub (picture below ; pulling direction clockwise) you see that the pulling spokes leave a strong impression on the hub flange. Such marks are absent on the inside. The knee of a spoke is the most vulnerable spot. With the pulling spokes running tangential on the outside of the hub the load on the knee is shifted to the line of contact of the spoke with the hub. Also the dish (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_wheel#Dish) is larger when the pulling spokes run outside, which increases lateral stability.

In building a wheel and making final adjustments in spoke tension, you often have to add or reduce a small amout of tension on each spoke. It is difficult to avoid a torsional wind-up because the nipple doesn't rotate freely. There are many craft practises to reduce and release this wind-up, but often they leave some residual tension. If the pulling spokes are running inside the hub, the wind-up tension is mostly concentrated on the knee of the spoke. If the pulling spoke is outside the hub, the wind-up tension is more distributed between the nipple and the hub.

For disc-brake wheels, the spokes on the disc side running forward share most of the braking force. So they also should be mounted with the spoke heads inward.

used hub ; pulling spokes running outside ; pulling rotation clockwise

Answered by mathieu van rijswick on June 2, 2021

simple question. pulling the spokes, outside. Nowadays bikes more or less come stock like this though lots of people disagree.

Answered by i_is_biker on June 2, 2021

I don't think it makes much difference, but I usually build with the pulling spokes heads out. With disc wheels, braking forces are probably greater than pedalling forces (and of course the front hub sees torque that isn't there with a rim brake) so you should build them the opposite way than you do for rim brakes, if you think it should make much difference. Or you can build one way on the drive side and the other way on the brake side - I used to see lots of cheap factory wheels like that. How about crossed on the brake side and radial on the other side for a front wheel? (Which of course starts the debate "radial spokes - heads in or out?" Heads out for me, from an aesthetic viewpoint, heads in for a laterally stiffer wheel, however the customer wants it, but I just don't like radial wheels anyway.)

Answered by bertie on June 2, 2021

There are two ways you can think about this.

One way is Shimano's way, that pulling spokes should be on the outside (spoke on the outside, head on the inside). This means on rim brake front wheels, it doesn't matter as spokes don't pull. Whatever is easiest for the wheel builder will be the best way to do it (more about the easiness later). However on disc brake front wheels, the spokes on the left flange and on the right flange should be mirror images of each other if looked at from the outside, because both flanges transmit braking force and braking force only. On the left flange, the braking force is a clockwise load and on the right flange, the braking force is a counterclockwise load. The left side transmits most of the braking force, but because front brake braking force is very substantial, a lot of it is transmitted via the right flange as well.

On disc brake rear wheels, the left side transmits braking force primarily, whereas the right side transmits pedaling force primarily. Thus, both flanges see clockwise loads. Therefore, both flanges should have the same spoke pattern if looked at from the outside.

On rim brake rear wheels, the right flange transmits pedaling force primarily, but a very small part of the pedaling force actually goes via the left flange. There is no braking load at the hub. Thus, the left flange transmits counterclockwise loads and the right flange transmits clockwise loads. For this reason, rim brake rear wheels are ideally spoked as a mirror image of disc brake front wheels. However, the pedaling loads on the left flange are very small so the left flange shouldn't matter much anyway.


The other way is to consider the easiness of the wheel building. It's easier to first install spokes on the inside (heads on the outside), because the later step of installing the other spokes will have the spokes on the outside so the installation work is greatly reduced because you can freely place the outside spokes in the final location with no interference from the existing spokes. In contrast, if you install the outside spokes first and only then the inside spokes, you won't have as much space on the inside of the wheel to freely place the spokes in the final location.

If building wheels according to the bible, the first spoke to be installed will be a right side spoke. It's easiest to make it be an inside spoke. For rim brake front wheels it doesn't matter. For disc brake front wheels it will be a pushing spoke for braking loads so making it an inside spoke is optimal. For rear wheels, it will be a pulling spoke on pedaling loads so strictly speaking it should perhaps be an outside spoke according to Shimano's way.

The second set (on the left flange) is begun with a spoke in the same direction. For disc brake front wheels the second set is begun with a pushing spoke for braking loads so beginning with an inside spoke is optimal. Similarly disc brake rear wheels it will be a pushing spoke for braking loads so beginning with an inside spoke is optimal. For rim brake rear wheels, a very tiny amount of pedaling force goes via the left flange and it will be a pulling force for pedaling forces so strictly speaking it should perhaps be put on the outside. But the pedaling forces the left flange sees will be very minimal so that's not a major problem.

However, a lot of wheels have been built according to those instructions by Sheldon Brown. Such wheels don't have a high failure rate despite the fact that the rear wheels don't have the spokes that will be pulling spokes for pedaling loads optimally oriented.


So, whether you follow Shimano or Sheldon Brown, the front wheel will be the same anyway. For rear wheels, Shimano vs Sheldon Brown disagree on the right side spokes -- Sheldon Brown is easier to implement but Shimano might have a slightly better durability especially if you are one of those who thinks it's a good idea to purchase a 85 Nm mid-drive e-bike, put a 20-tooth chainring and a cassette with a 51-tooth sprocket, put as much load on the bicycle as you can and pull a trailer with heavy stones in it, and repeatedly accelerate up the steepest hill you can find, pedaling standing with the highest assist level.

The Sheldon Brown left side spokes will be ideal for disc brake rear wheels but not perfect for rim brake rear wheels but the pedaling forces on the left flange are so small that they probably don't have any durability difference in any real-life application.

Answered by juhist on June 2, 2021

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