Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....

(Example: Events:Cirque du Cyclisme:2002)

Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2005 10:31:01 -0700 (PDT)
From: "Ted E. Baer" <wickedsky@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....
To: Classicrendezvous@bikelist.org, Jerome & Elizabeth Moos <jerrymoos@sbcglobal.net>
In-Reply-To: <20050627132254.22428.qmail@web81006.mail.yahoo.com>


If one has to resort to installing a spacer under the freewheel, he/she is doing themselves and future owners three disservices:

1. Never should a spacer be placed behind a freewheel because 99% it cannot be removed (after torquing the freewheel and years of climbing hills) without ruining the hub.

2. If the rear derailleur (on the bicycle that is now using this wheel) comes the slightest bit out of adjustment and throws the chain into the area between the spokes and the reverse side of the freewheel, you now have a chain that is wedged heavily down and in between this area. Of the 99% of the times I have seen this happen, all 8 (if 32H) or all 9 (if 36H) outer drive side spokes needed to be replaced as the chain shredded them to the point where the wheel was no longer safe to ride.

3. You have left the future owner with all sorts of silly and ridiculous spacings (123.5mm, 124.5mm, etc) which he or she now has to attempt to rectify.

*4. It has been my experience (in selling on eBay for 5 years of so) that the resale value the hub with the dreaded shim is much lower (to the buyer who knows what he/she is looking at.)

As for putting the spacer behind the fixed cup in order to achieve proper chain-line, that too is very "hack." We all have (or have access to) an old Campagnolo catalog that tells us exactly how to set up chainline. Oh, and do not forget that if you put that 1mm spacer behind the fixed cup, you have successfully moved your entire bottom bracket over 1mm thereby bringing your left crank closer to the frame and moving your right crank further out. But if riding with an offset BB suits your needs then more power to you.

Ted E. Baer Where we had two helicopters, eight news vans, and over 300 policemen dressed in riot gear the other day to make sure a bunch of 17-y.o. kids didn't get out of hand. I wonder what this cost the city? Hopefully not as much as Palo Alto's $21.5 million dollar settlement with Enron........... Palo Alto, CA

--- Jerome & Elizabeth Moos <jerrymoos@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> Well, I did slap in a wider FW in my case, but I've
> used spacers under the FW also, and it's probably
> useful to know that is is an option. I'm about 90%
> sure that the same spacers work for the FW or the BB
> fixed cup. Should be available at a
> classic-oriented (or just an old) LBS, Loose Screws,
> or Bike Tools, Etc. Another option would be to use
> a longer limit screw, but I'm not sure how standard
> the threads on those are. As you say, most of the
> time just adjusting the limit screw works, which is
> why this question doesn't often come up.
>
> Regards,
>
> Jerry Moos
> Houston, TX
>
> loudeeter@aol.com wrote:
> I can understand this becoming a problem if someone
> only has one bike and one freewheel, but most of us
> have boxes of freewheels or at least, spare wheels,
> with the right width freewheel. Why should one beat
> their heads against the wall, darwinizing a solution
> to a problem that has easier fixes? This would be
> kind of like machining a brake hole so that it will
> take a recessed brake only because one doesn't have
> a nutted brake in the inventory. The easier solution
> is to just get the right part. Lou Deeter, Orlando
> FL
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jerome & Elizabeth Moos
> To: loudeeter@aol.com;
> classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
> Sent: Mon, 27 Jun 2005 05:30:15 -0700 (PDT)
> Subject: Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....
>
>
> That works most of the time, but I just had a
> similar problem. I had put a
> 5-speed FW in a frame with 126mm spacing (the pink
> Torpado recently on eBay). I
> ran the outer stop screw on the Galli RD all the way
> in, but it still allowed
> the chain to come out too far and jump off the small
> cog. Using a 6-speed FW
> instead solved the problem, but the spacers would
> have worked also. I'm
> assumimg it's the same problem here.
>
> Regards,
>
> Jerry Moos
> Houston, TX
>
>
>
> loudeeter@aol.com wrote:
> I'm feeling pretty ignorant about this discussion.
> Why worry about a spacer at
> all? Why not just use the outer adjustment screw on
> the rear derailleur to match
> the outer limit with the smallest cog? Is the
> concern that the chain will jump
> off and jam between the freewheel and the frame? Is
> it a chainline issue? Lou
> Deeter, Orlando FL
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ternst
> To: Joe Bender-Zanoni ; john@os2.dhs.org; Bianca
> Pratorius
> Cc: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
> Sent: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 22:04:07 -0700
> Subject: Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....
>
>
> The aluminum shims are nice and lite, but it's very
> important that the
> tightening procedure is accurate and lucky, so that
> the spacer does not distort
> and stretch out of place giving an uneven seat.
> John is right on the SA spacers. Even better are the
> Campy steel spacers, which
> I think came in 1,1.5, and 2 mm. Chose your best
> chainline width and play.
> Even these had to be tightened slowly and without
> jerking to insure a seating of
> equal dimension and pressure. Dillitants who slap
> and ram stuff together either
> are very unhappy when things fail, or have very
> unhappy clients short of
> commitimg mayhem returning to the scene of the crime
> for satisfaction after the
> dastardly deed was perpretated on their pride and
> joy
> Ted Ernst
> Palos Verdes Estates, CA.
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Joe
> Bender-Zanoni"
> To: ; "Bianca Pratorius"
> Cc:
> Sent: Sunday, June 26, 2005 7:00 PM
> Subject: Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....
>
> > There were standard aluminium shims available to
> bike shops in various
> > widths. They are also useful for spacing fixed bb
> cups when necessary.
> >
> > Joe Bender-Zanoni
> > Grand Isle, VT
> > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "John
> Thompson"
> > To: "Bianca Pratorius"
> > Cc:
> > Sent: Sunday, June 26, 2005 10:44 PM
> > Subject: Re: [CR]Is there such a thing....
> >
> >
> >> Bianca Pratorius wrote:
> >>
> >> > I am trying to put a 6 speed freewheel on an
> axle, but when I mount >> >
> the
> >> > freewheel the distance between the smallest cog
> and the right side
> >> > dropout is larger than in other bikes that I
> have. Is there such a >> >
> thing
> >> > as a freewheel spacer that I can use to keep
> the freewheel from
> >> > threading all the way in? This might be a
> problem in that I am trying
> >> > to use a Shimano freewheel on a Suntour hub. I
> only need to get the
> >> > freewheel a bit bit closer to the derailleur to
> get the shifting to be
> >> > closer to original spec. I am also trying to
> accomplish the same thing
> >> > by using a slightly narrower spacing than the
> original Suntour spacers
> >> > came out to, but it is closer to the slightly
> narrower spacing that the
> >> > frame seems to be originally designed for.
> >>
> >> I've always used Sturmey-Archer shims for this...
>
> >>
> >> -- >> John (john@os2.dhs.org)
> >> Appleton WI USA
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