How to Stop a Bicycle Rim from Wobbling

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:08
A guide to truing your bicycle wheelThe best way to make sure a bicycle rim stops wobbling is through using a method called "truing" the wheel. The spokes on your bike all work together to keep the rim straight, each one pulling in a...
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The best way to make sure a bicycle rim stops wobbling is through using a method called "truing" the wheel. The spokes on your bike all work together to keep the rim straight, each one pulling in a slightly different direction at the same force in order to keep the wheel straight. Because there are so many spokes to account for, this makes truing a tricky art form. But, if you're patient and go slowly, it is still very doable for any burgeoning bike mechanic.

Things You Should Know

  • Flip the bike upside down, or put the wobbly wheel in a truing stand. Then, locate the bend in the rim by noting where the wheel comes nearer to the brakes.
  • Grip the spokes around your problem area and squeeze lightly, checking for looseness. Then, use your spoke wrench to tighten the "nipple" with a half-turn clockwise.
  • Keep adjusting the nipples using the 3-spoke adjustment process until the wobble is gone.
Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Fixing a Lateral (Side to Side) Wobble

  1. Watermark wikiHow to Unwobble a Bicycle Rim
    Spin the wheel, watching near the brakes to see where the wheel swings to either side. Either stop the bike at this point with your fingers, noting where it is, or use a permanent marker to measure the wobble. Simply hold the marker evenly at one height, and spin the wheel so that any wobbling hits the marker and makes a streak.
    • Looking to protect your beautiful wheels from marks? Take a small piece of masking tape and use it to make the spots where there is some wobble.
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  2. Watermark wikiHow to Unwobble a Bicycle Rim
    If you're not sure what "loose" is, feel your other wheel or the spokes on other sides of the wheel. While not all wobbly wheels have noticeably loose spokes, most do, which will point out the exact spoke where there is an issue. If a spoke is extremely loose, tighten it until it is about the same tension as those around it.
    • If a spoke is extremely loose, you should still go ahead and try to fix it. That said, you may need a new rim if this happens regularly-- it should be a rare occurrence.[2]
    • There are rare cases where a spoke feels too tense, which can cause a wobble as well. The technique to fix it (shown below) is the exact same, just with loosening instead of tightening.
  3. Watermark wikiHow to Unwobble a Bicycle Rim
    The golden rule of rim truing is go slow. Using your spoke wrench, a small tool with notches made to fit perfectly around the "nipple," the small sheath where the spoke meets the rim. Tighten it with a half-turn clockwise, then check again. Remember -- go slowly! This first turn won't fix the issue immediately, but don't keep turning just yet.
    • Don't have a spoke wrench? A pair of needle-nose pliers will work in a pinch, but you should buy a spoke wrench cheaply as soon as you can.
    • Remember to get the right side! If the wobble is to the left, you need to tighten the spoke that pulls the rim back to the right.[4]
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Unwobble a Bicycle Rim
    After every set of adjustments, spin the wheel and check your work. You should be keeping an eye on the wheel frequently -- don't just blindly tighten the spokes without seeing if you're making any progress.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Fixing Radial (Up and Down) Wobbling

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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Troubleshooting

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Warnings

  • Take care! It's easy to make your wheels more out of true (out of alignment) than they were originally if you move too quickly.
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  • When using a spoke wrench, remember to turn the wrench the opposite direction from normal. To tighten, turn left! To loosen, turn right! This is because you're working from the underside of the screw.
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Things You'll Need

  • Spoke wrench or small, adjustable wrench (be very careful)
  • Truing stand or brake pads

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