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#1
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What's wrong with my wheel? Thumping feel when braking (Possibly resolved)
I thought it was the rim, but it looks true and is smooth on the brake track. No obvious seam issue. Ok, thought maybe it was my brake pads so I swapped them over to another bike. It was unrideable on that bike. Thumped, shimmied, and grabbed with that brakeset. I don't feel any unusual play in the hub. Front wheel, if that makes any difference.
WI hubs (Campy) Pacenti rims Last edited by makoti; 09-26-2024 at 05:41 PM. |
#2
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Do you have access to a truing stand? I think the first step has to be actually checking true/round...
If you were local, I'd be happy to look at it for you. Edit: A lot of Pacenti rims (though usually pre forza) had cracking issues. Take a close look at all your nipple holes, etc to see if you can spot anything...
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ Last edited by AngryScientist; 09-15-2024 at 08:33 PM. |
#3
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Quote:
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#4
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In the old days I would wonder if you had some Accelerade dried on the rim.
Do they still sell that stuff?
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Old... and in the way. |
#5
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Not 100% sure based on your description, but is there any chance your tire isn't seated perfectly on the rim or has a high spot? If so, it could be the tire hitting under the fork crown.
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#6
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First thought would be broken or loose spoke, but you said the rim looks true.
Look/feel for a bent spot on the rim, maybe just one side? Sometimes you'll see extra brake pad residue at the problem point on the brake track as well. Last edited by chismog; 09-15-2024 at 10:38 PM. |
#7
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My thought, too.
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#8
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A "flat spot" caused by hitting something hard and making a slight dent into the rim will cause the rim to actually be slightly wider at that spot than the rest of the rim. This will cause braking to be unnerving, especially if it's the front wheel. Can you try another front wheel on the bike to test? Often taking off the tire and looking closely at the rim in a truing stand will help you spot the issue.
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#9
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#10
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So I took it to the shop. He looked it over. Cleaned the rim real nice, adjusted the hub, said the tire was old enough to be starting to dry rot, and he thought there might be too much sealant in it, but nothing seemed to point to a reason for the thumping. I took it home, and the thumping continued. I decided to drain a little of the sealant out, just in case that was a weird reason for it.
As I did and was cracking the bead to drain it, I felt something firm in the tire. INSIDE the tire. If it was alive, I'd have thought it had a tumor. Well, it kind of did. You couldn't tell to ride it. It gave enough that the wheel ran smoothly, No hop every rotation. 67g of old sealant. I pulled another wheel, about the same age as this one, and only got 22g of old sealant out of that one. My guess is the tire had been on for maybe 2 years. Front, so didn't wear as quickly as it would have on the back. Never flatted, so never needed to pull it before this. |
#11
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#12
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It quite possibly could turn out to be an incidental finding |
#13
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"It is not a toomah!"
Yet another reason to use tubes.
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http://hubbardpark.blogspot.com/ |
#14
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Old... and in the way. |
#15
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I used to put sealant in my tubular tires and stopped doing it for that very reason.
It looks like a snake shed its skin. |
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