Re: Re:
xerxes":1qiup01w said:
Nothing wrong with freewheels and threaded headsets
''...and some stuff...''
Bad comparison with cars. They are under a far more strict safety regime with millions of pounds of development before they are even allowed near a public road. All that millions can be blown by a cheap set of pads where they are not to standards and the material comes off the pad itself...
Cars are widely available with drum brakes and there were plenty of vehicles with leaf springs, especially commercial vehicles as late as 2010.
Your experience of freewheels and threaded headsets wont match that of others. IRD still do quality freewheels, these mated to Campagnolo or even most Shimano hubs of old will give decades of service. Mavic Dakar MTB hubs are screw-on and are more than capable. Hope even had the option.
Its only at the low and BSO end of things do your troubles crop up - especially when 8 and even 9spd freehweels were lobbed on to cheap GT's and so on. You need to understand it the
materials involved and not the
methods used.
Hubs are pretty benign but as soon as you make these out of steel instead of aluminium, you get the hub flanges eating into the spokes after a few months - a Favourite of Giant on their popular 2011 entry level range of MTB and Hybrids - £220 and £300 bikes coming back in after a few rides with broken spokes.
2011 Mongoose bikes at around £350, a really popular model with discs and 'spenshun but the worlds shittiest aheadset that would simply stretch and undo itself because it was made from monkey metal.
So its not how things are done, its the cheapest nastiest materials
used from plastic brake levers to pressed steel chainsets that cause the problems.