02-20-2010, 04:08 AM
Hi all. Apologies if this has been asked and answered already...
I bought a pretty cheap truing stand[1] - not brilliant but it does the job. But one thing I'm really not sure of, in terms of making adjustments, is how to tell/decide which direction is 'correct'? As in, if a wheel section is moving laterally (eg) left, how do I know that it should be adjusted toward the right and not that *it* is true and other sections of the wheel should actually be adjusted toward the *left*? If you imagine a case where a wheel is more or less out of alignment across one half, how do you tell which direction is true? And the same for high vs low spots in radial alignment too.
I don't have a dishing tool, but is that how you should decide which direction is correct (or use the on-frame method Alex shows in his vid)? For radial alignment, does that come down to spoke tension (too tight then you know you've pulled the rim too far toward the hub)?
Thanks!
[1] http://www.ooocycles.com.au/item-20.htm
I bought a pretty cheap truing stand[1] - not brilliant but it does the job. But one thing I'm really not sure of, in terms of making adjustments, is how to tell/decide which direction is 'correct'? As in, if a wheel section is moving laterally (eg) left, how do I know that it should be adjusted toward the right and not that *it* is true and other sections of the wheel should actually be adjusted toward the *left*? If you imagine a case where a wheel is more or less out of alignment across one half, how do you tell which direction is true? And the same for high vs low spots in radial alignment too.
I don't have a dishing tool, but is that how you should decide which direction is correct (or use the on-frame method Alex shows in his vid)? For radial alignment, does that come down to spoke tension (too tight then you know you've pulled the rim too far toward the hub)?
Thanks!
[1] http://www.ooocycles.com.au/item-20.htm