earlier this year i bought a new wheelset. site was having a blowout, of I guess new old stock components that were higher end at one time. I couldn't resist as I figured that high end clincher rims may be hard to come by in the future. Nothing aside from the spokes/******* and rim tape were current from the manufacturer.
Ultegra 10 speed hubs (cup and cone), DT Swiss box section rims for clinchers, Sapin spokes and ******* 32 and 3cross, and velox rim tape. I believe they built them when I ordered them, but no substitution were allowed. The only thing I would have changed would have been 14/15/14 double butted spokes instead of straight 14, but for the price I wouldn't complain. I'll be able to fix these and my other wheelsets as they are similarly built. Loose bearings and J-bend spokes . . .![]()
As I'm reading this, I realized I don't even know what the alternatives are. Sometime I'll have to look at a new bike and see what they're using now.
My first W2 job, at age 16, was at a local bicycle shop. Each afternoon once school let out, I'd go to the bike shop and head to the basement, where I shared a double Park repair stand with the boss's 14-year-old son. He did our simple tire/tube repairs. My job was to replace trashed rims. This was the late 1970s when low end-bicycles usually had steel rims. Riders would hit curbs or potholes and dent/bend their rims. I don't recall us keeping many (if any) complete wheels in stock. If somebody trashed wheel, we rebuilt it.
On a typical afternoon I'd have two or three wheels to do. I'd remove the tire/tube and freewheel, cut out the old spokes, lace the new rim with new spokes, true/tension the spokes, reinstall the tire/tube and reinstall the wheel on the bike. Typically, it took me about 45 minutes to an hour per wheel. My boss thought I should be faster. When there weren't enough wheels to fill my time, I would assemble new bicycles for inventory.
Anyway, I thought it was an amazing job and I truly enjoyed standing at the truing stand and bringing a rebuilt wheel into form. There's just something Zen about the whole process. I was disappointed when I realized that these days trashed wheels just get replaced with a new wheel assembled in China and there probably aren't any teenagers lacing wheels in bike shop basements.













