Hiya folks,
I'm fixing up a 1982 Holdsworth Avanti which is original except for the wheels - Mavic Monthlery Route instead of Super Champion 58.
It was apparently in somebodys shed for about 15 years until recently.
I've done the bearings, replaced the cables, and unstuck the stem and seat post.
Now I'm checking the wheels and they're true to within about 0.5mm, but the spoke tension seems really low.
Using a cheap tension meter I'm getting:
Front wheel left avg 52.6 (min 40.9, max 63.3)
Front wheel right avg 52.8 (min 44.3, max 63.3)
Rear wheel DS avg 61.3 (min 52.6, max 66.5)
Rear wheel NDS avg 37.1 (min 32.8, max 44.3)
DS/NDS ratio 1.65
(2mm round steel spokes)
Looking on the web suggests Mavic say 70-90kgf for their rims (not certain that applies to 1980s though).
And one quote was 95 on the front and 110/60 on the rear.
Apparently using them with low tension will probably result in damage.
So my theory is I should increase the tension evenly to around 90 on the front and 100/60 on the back.
I should also take the tension meter to a LBS and check it against theirs, or try the spoke frequency method.
Does anybody think that makes sense ?
I'm fixing up a 1982 Holdsworth Avanti which is original except for the wheels - Mavic Monthlery Route instead of Super Champion 58.
It was apparently in somebodys shed for about 15 years until recently.
I've done the bearings, replaced the cables, and unstuck the stem and seat post.
Now I'm checking the wheels and they're true to within about 0.5mm, but the spoke tension seems really low.
Using a cheap tension meter I'm getting:
Front wheel left avg 52.6 (min 40.9, max 63.3)
Front wheel right avg 52.8 (min 44.3, max 63.3)
Rear wheel DS avg 61.3 (min 52.6, max 66.5)
Rear wheel NDS avg 37.1 (min 32.8, max 44.3)
DS/NDS ratio 1.65
(2mm round steel spokes)
Looking on the web suggests Mavic say 70-90kgf for their rims (not certain that applies to 1980s though).
And one quote was 95 on the front and 110/60 on the rear.
Apparently using them with low tension will probably result in damage.
So my theory is I should increase the tension evenly to around 90 on the front and 100/60 on the back.
I should also take the tension meter to a LBS and check it against theirs, or try the spoke frequency method.
Does anybody think that makes sense ?