I just got a new bike as a gift. I rode it maybe 100ft then something happened and when I continued to pedal, the back tire was no longer being moved by pedaling. I brought it in the garage and tipped it upside down to see if I could see what was wrong. The pedals move freely without powering the back tire. It's as if the pedal and back tire are not engaged with one another. So essentially I can pedal and pedal and the bike won't go anywhere. The gears still change and work. The chain seems fine, both the front and rear sprockets move but, the back tire isn't set into motion. I ran out of time last night but I was hoping to get some advice on ideas to look at when I take it apart tonight. I was going to take off the back tire and see if there was something that is disengaged from the rear sprocket to the back tire. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks
-Hope to be biker
(06-01-2010, 02:13 PM)szellman Wrote: I just got a new bike as a gift. I rode it maybe 100ft then something happened and when I continued to pedal, the back tire was no longer being moved by pedaling. I brought it in the garage and tipped it upside down to see if I could see what was wrong. The pedals move freely without powering the back tire. It's as if the pedal and back tire are not engaged with one another. So essentially I can pedal and pedal and the bike won't go anywhere. The gears still change and work. The chain seems fine, both the front and rear sprockets move but, the back tire isn't set into motion. I ran out of time last night but I was hoping to get some advice on ideas to look at when I take it apart tonight. I was going to take off the back tire and see if there was something that is disengaged from the rear sprocket to the back tire. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks
-Hope to be biker
szellman,
Hello and welcome to the forums. I am guessing that you have a multispeed bike. Sounds like your freewheel (the cluster of gears) is gummed up. Try laying the wheel on its side (with it off the bike) and spraying some penetrating oil/spray into the crevis of the freewheel. After that move the freewheel forwards and backwards. Repeat these steps again to see if it starts catching in the right direction. If it does not catch then you may end having to go to a LBS to get a newer freewheel. They are not that much these days. If you think the LBS is way too much then come back here and we can probably find one online. If you can also upload and/or give us a description of the bike that would be helpful too.
Hope this helps,
Bill
Good maintenance to your Bike, can make it like the wheels are, true and smooth!
Remove the back wheel. Now try turning the cogs attached to the hub, the freewheel, or cassette. With the cogs facing you, they should turn freely anti-clockwise, but not turn clockwise.
If the cogs turn freely in both directions it means the ratchet in the freewheel mechanism has either broken, or the springs that force the pawls outwards have broken, or possibly that they have just gummed up with old oil. If that's the case, try squirting in some light oil to see if it frees up the ratchet.
Thanks for the advice. I will take a look at it tonight. If I recall, it is a Titan Pioneer 12 speed, if that makes a difference. I am NOT bike savvy. My parents won this bike at a silent auction and I am just looking to use to it get some exercise. It is brand new and was very surprised when I was unable to even make it around the block before having an issue. I will post again tomorrow whether I was able to get this thing working or not. I will try and be more descriptive or even use pictures if I am unable to get it fixed tonight. Thanks again!
thats kinda crappy to give a broken bike to a silent auction. was it brand new, as in, not assembled? could be a few things, if you don't know what you're doing i'd suggest bring it to an lbs i guess..
Yes it was brand new and assembled.
So tonight, I took off the back tire and yes the gear thingy (sprocket) was spinning in both directions which was obviously my problem. I brought it in a to a local bike shop and they took the sprocket off of the wheel and informed me that the hub on the wheel was stripped causing the issue. So I need a new back tire. The guy at the store assumes the person who assembled the bike over tighten this part causing it to be stripped. Any idea where I can get a cheap 26" wheel frame? The tire itself is like 1.5-2 inches wide. In my time I would call this a mountain bike, not a ten speed with thin tires if that makes sense. Like I said I am not bike savvy. Thanks for all your advice although it turned out to be a helpless cause. I'm sure the bike in total isn't worth more than $100 bucks and I was just hoping for something to get some exercise on. Well that exercise is just going to have to wait.
What is LBS?
Wow. You guys know your bikes! Yes, I have a 6-sprocket free wheel that is in great shape. (Like I said the bike was brand new, never been used) What is stripped, is the threads on the hub. The guy at my lbs recommend a bike shop across town that is kind of a co-op bikeshop (junkyard) for bikes. I guess it's a find your part, you name the price type of a deal.
Xerxes - your link in your post, I think is exactly what I am after. Can I just put my sprocket on to that rear wheel and be up and running? Granted I might need a bike shop to do that but really is that all I need is a new rear wheel with a hub suitable for a freewheel?
WOW first time I ever seen one do that!!! As Joe_W always says "Wheels are Consumables"! Here is proof of that. Had to be some major riding torque? You can always salvage the spoke protector as an extra, lol. They will have to more then likely give you a different wheel.
Good maintenance to your Bike, can make it like the wheels are, true and smooth!
I say "rims are consumables". Hubs should last longer. And here is another reason not to buy bikes with freewheels anymore (so that rules out most department store bikes).
Oooops , haha Joe I stand corrected. You are right though hubs should last much much longer!
Good maintenance to your Bike, can make it like the wheels are, true and smooth!