Kingfish
100 MW
liveforphysics said:Kingfish said:The function of spokes is to provide a modicum of suspension, combined with the rim and tire. It’s a complete lightweight system that works up until the point where a good solid jolt causes the material to fail (the spoke), and it should happen long before the rim will fail and taco.
Radically incorrect. You could think of the rim like a flexy noodle, or like a stone arch with no cement. It's rigidity alone is relatively nothing compared to the loads, in fact, you can just grab a mt.bike rim and try to sit on it and it just collapses under your weight like a pile of goo.
The only way the system works is the stress from the spokes pulling inward. In the same example, you try to sit on the laced wheel, and it could perhaps support 20 of yourself rather than collapsing under some small fraction of your weight alone. This is because the spokes create a system of stress distribution over a wide area of the wheel, enabling the forces to be shared over the whole perimeter.
To have this function work, the spokes MUST all be high in the elastic region of the strain/stress curve, this allows the compliance in the wheel without causing spokes to become unloaded.
A bicycle rim can not put a large diameter spoke into this stress zone, the rim itself collapses (I've tried a few different good eye-lit rims, there is a reason motorcycle rims are about 5x thicker).
Say you set the same ~100lbs of tension on a thick spoke wheel as a thin spoke wheel. Now you load the wheel. The moment event the most tiny bit of deformation occurs, the thick spoke wheel has huge patches of spokes completely unloaded, because they are so low on the material strain curve, that even 0.01mm (or whatever) of compression distance can drop the 100lbs tension to 0lbs, now it can't distribute it's strength through the perimeter of the rim, and it's going to fail from the stress risers that get created in the places that are carrying the stress. You put the same load on the rim with thinner spokes high in the stress curve, and hey! No problem, you have substantial deformation distance you can travel while still staying in tension and functioning to distribute load. The distributed load doesn't create the stress risers that cause failures.
The thicker spoke wheel would be stronger if you could put it in the same part of the stress curve, but for thicker spokes, that can be ~400-900lbs of tension required to achieve it, and bicycle rims simply buckle or pull nipples through at those tensions. Hence why if you have a motorcycle rim you should go for bigger spokes, as they can handle 400-900lbs of load per spoke, putting it in the proper range of the strain/stress curve, and allowing the wheel to distribute loads.
Kingfish said:OK, so there you have it: Rims with hub motors are at least 13 gauge, if not 12 gauge. Using a lighter gauge with hub motors is unsafe. I can personally attest to that. :wink:
Wrong. See above.
Luke, radical is a person that expresses or believes in the extreme. Radical is the expression you have used to label me, directly misinform, and debase my contribution. This is an unfortunate choice of words and I have no idea why you would take such a position… :?
I am a Mechanical Engineer, you can find me on the web… it’s in my bio, and I’ve worked with some fantastic clients. So I’ll start simple and work upward in hopes that you’ll understand me better:
Basics:
- Take a primitive Circle, extruded it becomes a Tube: Fold the sides inward or outward and it becomes stronger – it becomes the shape of a Rim.
- A Hub (sans motor) is essentially a smaller version of the above described Rim, though functions as the point of revolution and attachment to the fork via the Axle.
- Spokes are small diameter alloy rods that connect Hub and Rim. Spoke Tension, equidistant constrains the hub concentric to the perfectly round Rim.
- Under normal load, sitting statically, no rotation, there should not be any appreciable deflection with the rim or the spokes.
- Rolling forward, under normal load, there still should not be any appreciable deflection.
- If I hit a small stone, the tire (and inner tube, if applicable) should absorb the majority of the impact, and the rim and spokes should not deflect.
- If however, I impact the curb, a pothole, or some other immovable object at some modest speed, and if the tire is deflected to the maximum, in ideal conditions the point load at the rim-impact will cause the rim to bow inward and the spokes directly in line between the impact point and the hub to deflect outward, whilst the on the opposite side, those spokes go into hypertension, with the spokes at 90/270* into partial tension. High-speed photography clearly displays this action, however slight.
Applying more force:
If the impact is of low enough energy, and the materials we chose for the rim and spokes and hub are strong, though not brittle and having elasticity, the rim and spoke system will spring back to normal, and no harm is done. However if the impact is greater than the system elasticity, we will have deflection to the point of yielding, micro-fracturing, cracking, plastic deformation, and finally failure.
The value of spoked wheels is that they uniquely are suited to provide small levels of shock absorption and deflection in bikes and in cars. This feature was fully expressed during the early years of wheel production when bikes and auto first came into being. Today, it is more difficult to realize the value of spokes because in many cases spokes are often cosmetic (example: car wheels).
Another example of suspension; taking a curve:
Let’s say I’m taking a curve on my deluxe road bicycle and I have my full weight into it leaning wicked hard into this curve. My wheels are deflecting through the axis of rotation perpendicular to the surface in contact; the wheel is warping a measurable amount. The deflection is slight, but visibly apparent. If we drew a line from the point of contact between the road and the tire, then extend it through the hub to the axle, the spokes on top of this imaginary line are bowed, and the spokes at the bottom are in tension. This is active suspension at work.
If the spoke tension wasn’t high enough, the wheel would not be able to withstand the deflection and could fail. If the tension was too high, then likely the attachment at the rim or hub would fail, or the spoke would deformate and yield to the point of failure and break.
What I’ve just explained is elementary structural and materials engineering; stuff we learn in the first year of college. There’s no mystery here.
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Luke, You concluded on your last sentence that I am wrong on a second observation.
I’ll try again to keep this simple for you.
Bicycle rims are not normally designed to handle the mass and momentum of an electric hub motor, and this is made worse by traveling at greater than normal speeds carrying greater than normal loads (e.g. batteries). Adventuresome, possibly risky, though hopefully ~ still safe.
Broken spokes, a personal experience:
The failure I had in 2010 was on a normal bike rim; I had 50 lbs. of batteries draped over the rear wheel in panniers. My bike was tuned before I departed (spokes included). It’s possible the spokes were under duress after I received the bike from Amtrak in Klamath Falls because it was at the bottom of all the unloaded cargo. It’s possible the spokes began to fail when I went on that horrible dirt road to visit my family near Johnsville, or maybe it happened when I was run off the road by reckless youth on their dirt bikes and took a spill, or possibly on the way back out trying to get back to the main road. What I do know is at the summit of the highest pass on the last day heading toward Sacramento that I had at least one broken spoke. I know that when I hit that little dip in the road at Grass Valley, two more snapped right then and there and that ol’ wheel was wobbling all over the place; it’s a wonder I was able to coax it to Auburn and have the entire wheel replaced. They’ve made a lot of changes in MtB wheels in 20 years, namely they the rims are stronger and the spokes larger, possibly better fabricated. This fact is unassailable; it got me home. :wink:
But I am still hugely confused that you think I am wrong with my first-hand experience. How could you possibly know? You weren’t there.
To the best of my knowledge, you’re into racing, not cross-country. For you and racing, your conditions are going to be different than mine. And, it’s not for me to lecture you on how to go about racing and what’s right or wrong with your knowledge. I mean, if I got into racing, perhaps we'd have something in common worth sharing.
But clearly Luke, you seem obsessed with proving me wrong, even though you can’t explain it well.
I’ve seen all sorts in the 30 years of engineering. I appreciate brilliance. I even accept eccentricity and quirky odd behavior, so long as my team mate can produce and there is no malice, no sabotage. I’m here to contribute and share harmlessly along with my little quirks.
I’ve presented the facts, directly quoted right from the supplier the information germane to the topic, and I’ve shared my direct experiences.
So I have to ask: What’s the story?
~KF