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Why are 36-spoke wheels a touring thing?

Bicycles Asked on April 18, 2021

I’ve been looking at tourers recently and they tend to have 36 spoke wheels (as does my hybrid on the back after I broke my original rim). What I don’t understand is why high spoke counts aren’t used on more bikes. Race-style road bikes with low spoke counts and smooth roads I understand. Maybe 26″ wheels are tougher than 700C (I don’t know). But CX bikes run (sometimes much) rougher surfaces on 700C and similar tyre widths to tourers — without luggage but surely it’s shock load that breaks spokes. Or 29er hardtails — rougher conditions still, and it’s not like you can expect good technique from all riders all the time.

3 Answers

Summing up comments into an answer, including a few points of my own:

  • More spokes are stronger; more holes in the rim weaken it. So a sweet spot must be found.

  • Standard numbers are good, for hole count and spoke gauge

  • Tourers have to keep going a long way from support, so durability counts (see also brakes); a little extra weight on a laden bike makes little difference unlike in a race.

  • One broken or loose spoke in 36 doesn't make the wheel go as far out of true as one in 32. I'd already experienced this on my hybrid; on the tourer I broke 2 rear drive side outer spokes (damaged in an incident with the chain) and still got home with a nearly true wheel.

  • Although materials have improved, touring is a conservative discipline in which there's no imperative to change what works.

  • Touring can mean sitting and spinning over rough roads for hours on end with a lot of weight on the frame. In CX most of the weight is above the suspension formed by the rider's legs and the rider can stand as required.

Correct answer by Chris H on April 18, 2021

Touring bikes are often heavily loaded with paniers in addition to the rider. The spokes transfer the load from bike frame to the rim and road. Higher spoke count wheels means that the overall load is shared through more spokes resulting in a lower loading per spoke and thereby lowering the chance of spoke failure. This is more important for a touring bike than reducing weight for performance purposes as the rider may be a very long distance from support or repair facilities.

Answered by PaulD on April 18, 2021

I've been looking at tourers recently and they tend to have 36 spoke wheels (as does my hybrid on the back after I broke my original rim).

A touring bicycle needs a durable wheel, something that is repairable with lightweight equipment carried with you if it fails, and something that is likely to not fail in the first place.

What I don't understand is why high spoke counts aren't used on more bikes.

It's a cost reduction thing. For machine-built wheels, installing less spokes makes the wheel building process faster. At the same time, you can claim the low spoke count thing is an "improvement", supposedly reducing weight, and the fools with the money pay anything for the supposed "improvement". They don't realize that to make the rim equally durable, a low spoke count wheel needs a stiffer/heavier rim, something that adds more weight than the few eliminated spokes remove.

Race-style road bikes with low spoke counts and smooth roads I understand.

I don't. As I said, to reduce spoke count while keeping durability the same, you need a stiffer and heavier rim, which probably increases more weight than what is saved by eliminating few spokes.

Fortunately, everyone with money can affect the market. Let's start a campaign to buy only 36 spoke rims and hubs! If people buy the good stuff, the manufacturers are going to keep it in production.

Answered by juhist on April 18, 2021

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