Wheel building

Thanks Frankenorange I have a read mate twozaskars I was watching a video on tubeless he said that gorilla tape worked just as well as rim tape that's the exact answer is why I asked thanks on another one I have hope ti hubs with a screw on freewheel I think so I need a different one to them push in one with the 4 spring clips that sit in all them teeth in the hub has any one got a pic of what I need thanks
 
And I’ve just seen how much money people are asking for it online. It’s a good book but not 100 to 200 quids worth of good. I bought mine a long time ago for an awful lot less. Perhaps I’ll look after it a bit better now.
 
It doesn't make much sense to do a Hub Swap
- this means dismantling a (probably) professionally built wheel to make an amateur, "first-go" one, using quality vintage parts.

if you've got the wrong wheel, sell it and buy the right one.

If you want to learn wheelbuilding, take apart a basic or obsolete one and rebuild it.

Twice.

You dont even need a spoke key,
or a jig, but they make it a lot easier.

I only use a tension meter when dealing with alloy, carbon or bladed spokes, or a superlightweight rim with limited spokes, as you need to reference manufacturers' figures- challenging if the parts are 25 years old plus.

If you're starting with a built wheel, you can feel and ping the spokes for your point of reference on tension

The fingers and ears do the job perfectly - they are incredibly accurate tools.

The most vital tool for wheelbuilding is experience.

Your first wheel will not be your best.
 
The latest iteration of a spoke length calculator thats been around for years. Has a lot of retro parts in the db so very useful for this community
https://leonard.io/edd/
Also the thing that took me from building ‘ok’ wheels to ‘very ok’ wheels was a spoke tension meter. Getting the right and equal tension massively increases the strength of your wheel.
I have just inherited a VAR jig to replace my Park one ..but no wheels to build yet 😕
 
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Ye mate I agree with that but it's very difficult to find the wheel combination you want cheers
my main point is this:
Don't do this one as your first.

You'll need similar hub flange size if you want to reuse the spokes.
Many Freehubs are significantly wider.

Have a close look at spoke condition by the hub on the drive side
Screenshot_20250626-135218_Firefox.webp - they've often been chewed by the chain,
it's not worth reusing them if so.

Check nipple quality and condition too.
Screenshot_20250626-135142_Firefox.webp Low quality nipples and spokes aren't worth reusing.

If you're fitting a "used" hub, you want to make sure the spokes are in exactly the same pattern as previously, as the flange will have grooves from the spoke tension,
Screenshot_20250626-135030_Firefox.webp
and if you lay spokes across those ridges, your going to get awful settling and stability.
 
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