- Wire wheels
Wire wheels, (wire spoked wheels), invented by
James Starley , are still used on manymotorcycles and mostbicycle s. Such wheels have a hub connected to a rim by wirespoke s. Although these wires are generally stiffer than a typical braided wirecord , they function mechanically the same astension ed flexible wires, keeping the rim true while supporting applied loads. The process of assembling wire wheels is calledwheelbuilding ."The fundamental fact is that the hub, and thus the vehicle borne by the wheels, in fact "hangs" on the spokes, which thus have to be tensioned not to break. The spokes can only be put under a pulling strain, otherwise they break."The above statement illustrates the common perception that the hub of a wire wheel "hangs" from the upper spokes. Although a properly tensioned wire wheel is kept true and round by its spokes that transmit forces between hub and rim by changes in tension, upper spokes in a wheel show no significant change in tension when the wheel is loaded. A vertical load on the hub causes the rim to flatten slightly at the ground, causing spokes in that region to lose some tension by shortening (compressing).
For explanations, computer models, and tests confirming this odd behavior, see [http://www.astounding.org.uk/ian/wheel/index.html this analysis] which shows the lower spokes of pre-tensioned bicycle wheels compressing (losing their pre-tension) as they roll under a loaded hub.The alternative to wire wheels are cast light alloy wheels often called
mag wheels .Before 1960, sports/racing cars often had wire wheels equipped with "knockoff" (central wing nut) hubs, that could be unscrewed by striking a wing of the nut with a mallet [http://www.welshent.com/category.aspx?SID=1&Category_ID=11442&Page=6 (knockoff hammer)] . In the 60's, cast light-alloy , or "Mag(nesium)" wheels, became common and now predominate. These may have knock-off hubs or power driven hexagonal central nuts, mostly on racing cars. (Racing teams spend large sums to save a few seconds in a pit stop: seconds that can win a race.)
Bicycle manufacturers build millions of wheels annually, using the common crossed-spoke patterns whose crossings of adjacent spokes are governed by the number of spokes in the wheel. Wheelbuilders of racing teams and in good bicycle shops build wheels to other patterns such as two-cross, one-cross, or no-cross (also called radial). All these patterns have been used for more than 100 years, their value appearing in the publication of
Jobst Brandt 's book, [http://www.avocet.com/wheelbook/wheelbook.html the Bicycle Wheel] , in 1980. Brandt is a demanding cyclist who has experience in racing and touring and is also a mechanical engineer forHewlett-Packard . His stress analyses of wheels concluded that crossed patterns had more strength and stability than the other patterns, while irregular patterns were art forms and have little structural merit.In the 1980's, cast wheels with 5 or 6 rigid spokes began to appear in the Olympic Games and professional racing: these have advantages in specialized applications, such as time trials, but wire-spoked wheels are used for most purposes.
References
* "The Bicycle Wheel" 3rd Edition, by
Jobst Brandt . ISBN 0-9607236-6-8.ee also
*
Bicycle wheel
*Wheelbuilding External links
* [http://www.daytonwirewheels.com/ Dayton Wire Wheels]
* [http://www.astounding.org.uk/ian/wheel/index.html http://www.astounding.org.uk/ian/wheel/index.html]
* [http://www.duke.edu/~hpgavin/papers/HPGavin-Wheel-Paper.pdf http://www.duke.edu/~hpgavin/papers/HPGavin-Wheel-Paper.pdf] (PDF format.)
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