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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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interestingly though, while searching for the bike online I found that someone else had exactly the same problem.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:05, 1 reply, 16 years ago)
If you have Hope hubs with a bolt through then they do seem to snap axles.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:08, Reply)
I will get my bike out tonight and investigate it I think.
what category of parts should I be looking at on bike websites to find a replacement axle?
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:11, Reply)
in which case it might well be easier to buy a whole new wheel. Take it to a bike shop and ask them what they would do.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:13, Reply)
as I am a complete biffer when it comes to the workings of a bike, beyond the most minor adjustments to the brakes.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:14, Reply)
Somewhere where the bloke running it wears greasy overalls and has lots of bits of bikes lying around. If it's really clean then they'll just try and sell you a new hub.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:18, Reply)
I haven't the foggiest how much this is likely to cost me, what sort of ball park should I be expecting would you say?
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:22, Reply)
if you need a new wheel then around 50-60 would be reasonable, obviously you can spend hundreds on a wheel, but for what you want more than 50 quid and it's probably not worth putting something that good on a shit bike.
Edit - looks like £50 is the very bottom end of a new MTB wheel, so if you look at up to £70 as your cut off point.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:34, Reply)
particularly as the whole thing only cost me £180
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:43, Reply)
any repairs appear massively disproportionate to the cost of a new machine. Of course the new machine would suffer from exactly the same problems. Can you get on the Cycle to Work scheme at your job?
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:45, Reply)
but even with that I can't really afford a new bike. fairly hard up at the moment even without saving for the wedding.
I'm going to take stock of what is up with my bike tonight and then see about sorting it. I suspect the wheel and hub are ok. might just need to get a few new balls for the bearing, and a new axle, then straighten things a bit.
new tyres can wait!
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:48, Reply)
It'll cost you something like £15 a month. And a £400 bike ought to last you years and be pretty good to commute on.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:50, Reply)
about a month after I bought a bike.
£15 a month does sound quite reasonable. I'll check out what might need doing with the current bike first though, because it's not actually as shit as I make out.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 15:53, Reply)
plus the cost of new wheels for my car to replace the ones stolen when I park it outside her place.
(, Mon 28 Jun 2010, 16:13, Reply)
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