Rear wheel power spoke pattern

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP











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1
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This is my first time posting here.



I have been biking for a few years now and learning little by little how to repair my ride myself.



My latest problem is 4 spokes of my rear wheel (36 spokes) broke, making it like a potato-chip.



It's a pretty old aluminum wheel but people told me the rim and hub were good, so I figured I might as well try to repair it, considering how cheap a spoke is, at least it would be a good learning experience.



I tried the traditional 3x cross but half way through I read about the powerwheel pattern on Sheldon Brown's website, 2 pulling spokes for 1 pushing.
But that is the only information I got.



I'd really want to try lacing my wheel that way but am clueless of how to cross spokes (over, under...) and I don't know what length to buy, etc.



Would anyone know how to do or is it held secret because patented and my only option is to buy one somewhere?



Cheers










share|improve this question









New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago










  • ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
    – frances rhodes
    8 hours ago










  • @francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
    – Criggie
    6 hours ago










  • If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
    – ojs
    5 hours ago














up vote
1
down vote

favorite












This is my first time posting here.



I have been biking for a few years now and learning little by little how to repair my ride myself.



My latest problem is 4 spokes of my rear wheel (36 spokes) broke, making it like a potato-chip.



It's a pretty old aluminum wheel but people told me the rim and hub were good, so I figured I might as well try to repair it, considering how cheap a spoke is, at least it would be a good learning experience.



I tried the traditional 3x cross but half way through I read about the powerwheel pattern on Sheldon Brown's website, 2 pulling spokes for 1 pushing.
But that is the only information I got.



I'd really want to try lacing my wheel that way but am clueless of how to cross spokes (over, under...) and I don't know what length to buy, etc.



Would anyone know how to do or is it held secret because patented and my only option is to buy one somewhere?



Cheers










share|improve this question









New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago










  • ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
    – frances rhodes
    8 hours ago










  • @francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
    – Criggie
    6 hours ago










  • If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
    – ojs
    5 hours ago












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











This is my first time posting here.



I have been biking for a few years now and learning little by little how to repair my ride myself.



My latest problem is 4 spokes of my rear wheel (36 spokes) broke, making it like a potato-chip.



It's a pretty old aluminum wheel but people told me the rim and hub were good, so I figured I might as well try to repair it, considering how cheap a spoke is, at least it would be a good learning experience.



I tried the traditional 3x cross but half way through I read about the powerwheel pattern on Sheldon Brown's website, 2 pulling spokes for 1 pushing.
But that is the only information I got.



I'd really want to try lacing my wheel that way but am clueless of how to cross spokes (over, under...) and I don't know what length to buy, etc.



Would anyone know how to do or is it held secret because patented and my only option is to buy one somewhere?



Cheers










share|improve this question









New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











This is my first time posting here.



I have been biking for a few years now and learning little by little how to repair my ride myself.



My latest problem is 4 spokes of my rear wheel (36 spokes) broke, making it like a potato-chip.



It's a pretty old aluminum wheel but people told me the rim and hub were good, so I figured I might as well try to repair it, considering how cheap a spoke is, at least it would be a good learning experience.



I tried the traditional 3x cross but half way through I read about the powerwheel pattern on Sheldon Brown's website, 2 pulling spokes for 1 pushing.
But that is the only information I got.



I'd really want to try lacing my wheel that way but am clueless of how to cross spokes (over, under...) and I don't know what length to buy, etc.



Would anyone know how to do or is it held secret because patented and my only option is to buy one somewhere?



Cheers







spokes rear-wheel power






share|improve this question









New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Argenti Apparatus

28.7k23271




28.7k23271






New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 9 hours ago









frances rhodes

61




61




New contributor




frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






frances rhodes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











  • BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago










  • ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
    – frances rhodes
    8 hours ago










  • @francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
    – Criggie
    6 hours ago










  • If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
    – ojs
    5 hours ago
















  • BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
    – Daniel R Hicks
    8 hours ago










  • ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
    – frances rhodes
    8 hours ago










  • @francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
    – Criggie
    6 hours ago










  • If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
    – ojs
    5 hours ago















BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
– Daniel R Hicks
8 hours ago




BTW, the "official" term is "tacoed" -- your wheel is tacoed.
– Daniel R Hicks
8 hours ago




1




1




As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
– Daniel R Hicks
8 hours ago




As to replacing the spokes, it's hard enough for a beginner to do a simple pattern. I'd recommend you first simply try to replace broken spokes, and if they keep breaking (usually because the wheel is "worn out" at 20-50k miles) then re-lace using the original pattern. Using the 2x1 cross that you describe would be very tricky and likely cause more problems than it would solve. (And, as Rider_X hints, Sheldon is given to jokes and may be making one here.)
– Daniel R Hicks
8 hours ago












ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
– frances rhodes
8 hours ago




ok, thank you for the advice. I'll relace it like it was originally, a 3x cross pattern.
– frances rhodes
8 hours ago












@francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
– Criggie
6 hours ago




@francesrhodes did you unlace the wheel completely or something?
– Criggie
6 hours ago












If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
– ojs
5 hours ago




If it's not obvious from the POWerwheel page itself, it and other joke ShelBroCo products are listed on sheldonbrown.com/bicycleHumor.html
– ojs
5 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote













If you are only replacing the 4 broken spokes then you will need to duplicate the wheel's spoke pattern.



If you are re-lacing the wheel with new spokes, a 3-cross spoke pattern is time proven pattern that is great for a first time wheel build. It is easy to implement, it builds a very strong wheel and it makes re-truing the wheel a straightforward. All of these are great features for your first wheel build.



After building, ride it a bit, and see how you did before trying to chase more exotic spoke patterns.



My reading of Sheldon's POWerwheel page is that the pattern is a bit of a joke, but may actually work. Even if it does work, it wouldn't be a good first time build as tension the wheel would be more difficult than a standard symmetrical pattern such as a 3-cross.



——



Update: check Jeffery Bell’s answer this was an April fools day joke (it’s a bit hard to spot now with all the ads, but at the bottom it is dated for April 1. Crazy that some have apparently tried the pattern in real life.



Please give Jeffery an upvote.






share|improve this answer






















  • ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
    – frances rhodes
    9 hours ago











  • Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
    – P. Barney
    6 hours ago










  • The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
    – cmaster
    5 hours ago










  • @p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago










  • @cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago

















up vote
2
down vote













The most important part of the page is "Since April 1".



This is Sheldon Brown's annual April Fool prank.



Search for the rest of the ShelBroCo articles in rec.bicycles.tech and they were all posted on April 1.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
    – Rider_X
    1 hour ago











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
5
down vote













If you are only replacing the 4 broken spokes then you will need to duplicate the wheel's spoke pattern.



If you are re-lacing the wheel with new spokes, a 3-cross spoke pattern is time proven pattern that is great for a first time wheel build. It is easy to implement, it builds a very strong wheel and it makes re-truing the wheel a straightforward. All of these are great features for your first wheel build.



After building, ride it a bit, and see how you did before trying to chase more exotic spoke patterns.



My reading of Sheldon's POWerwheel page is that the pattern is a bit of a joke, but may actually work. Even if it does work, it wouldn't be a good first time build as tension the wheel would be more difficult than a standard symmetrical pattern such as a 3-cross.



——



Update: check Jeffery Bell’s answer this was an April fools day joke (it’s a bit hard to spot now with all the ads, but at the bottom it is dated for April 1. Crazy that some have apparently tried the pattern in real life.



Please give Jeffery an upvote.






share|improve this answer






















  • ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
    – frances rhodes
    9 hours ago











  • Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
    – P. Barney
    6 hours ago










  • The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
    – cmaster
    5 hours ago










  • @p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago










  • @cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago














up vote
5
down vote













If you are only replacing the 4 broken spokes then you will need to duplicate the wheel's spoke pattern.



If you are re-lacing the wheel with new spokes, a 3-cross spoke pattern is time proven pattern that is great for a first time wheel build. It is easy to implement, it builds a very strong wheel and it makes re-truing the wheel a straightforward. All of these are great features for your first wheel build.



After building, ride it a bit, and see how you did before trying to chase more exotic spoke patterns.



My reading of Sheldon's POWerwheel page is that the pattern is a bit of a joke, but may actually work. Even if it does work, it wouldn't be a good first time build as tension the wheel would be more difficult than a standard symmetrical pattern such as a 3-cross.



——



Update: check Jeffery Bell’s answer this was an April fools day joke (it’s a bit hard to spot now with all the ads, but at the bottom it is dated for April 1. Crazy that some have apparently tried the pattern in real life.



Please give Jeffery an upvote.






share|improve this answer






















  • ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
    – frances rhodes
    9 hours ago











  • Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
    – P. Barney
    6 hours ago










  • The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
    – cmaster
    5 hours ago










  • @p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago










  • @cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago












up vote
5
down vote










up vote
5
down vote









If you are only replacing the 4 broken spokes then you will need to duplicate the wheel's spoke pattern.



If you are re-lacing the wheel with new spokes, a 3-cross spoke pattern is time proven pattern that is great for a first time wheel build. It is easy to implement, it builds a very strong wheel and it makes re-truing the wheel a straightforward. All of these are great features for your first wheel build.



After building, ride it a bit, and see how you did before trying to chase more exotic spoke patterns.



My reading of Sheldon's POWerwheel page is that the pattern is a bit of a joke, but may actually work. Even if it does work, it wouldn't be a good first time build as tension the wheel would be more difficult than a standard symmetrical pattern such as a 3-cross.



——



Update: check Jeffery Bell’s answer this was an April fools day joke (it’s a bit hard to spot now with all the ads, but at the bottom it is dated for April 1. Crazy that some have apparently tried the pattern in real life.



Please give Jeffery an upvote.






share|improve this answer














If you are only replacing the 4 broken spokes then you will need to duplicate the wheel's spoke pattern.



If you are re-lacing the wheel with new spokes, a 3-cross spoke pattern is time proven pattern that is great for a first time wheel build. It is easy to implement, it builds a very strong wheel and it makes re-truing the wheel a straightforward. All of these are great features for your first wheel build.



After building, ride it a bit, and see how you did before trying to chase more exotic spoke patterns.



My reading of Sheldon's POWerwheel page is that the pattern is a bit of a joke, but may actually work. Even if it does work, it wouldn't be a good first time build as tension the wheel would be more difficult than a standard symmetrical pattern such as a 3-cross.



——



Update: check Jeffery Bell’s answer this was an April fools day joke (it’s a bit hard to spot now with all the ads, but at the bottom it is dated for April 1. Crazy that some have apparently tried the pattern in real life.



Please give Jeffery an upvote.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago

























answered 9 hours ago









Rider_X

23.1k14386




23.1k14386











  • ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
    – frances rhodes
    9 hours ago











  • Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
    – P. Barney
    6 hours ago










  • The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
    – cmaster
    5 hours ago










  • @p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago










  • @cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago
















  • ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
    – frances rhodes
    9 hours ago











  • Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
    – P. Barney
    6 hours ago










  • The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
    – cmaster
    5 hours ago










  • @p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago










  • @cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
    – frances rhodes
    3 hours ago















ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
– frances rhodes
9 hours ago





ok, thanks for answering so fast. I already laced the wheel with a 3x pattern (the way it was laced originally) but wanted to try a supposedly better one, so I disassembled everything to start a new one... I'll relace it with a standard 3x crossing pattern and see how it turns out.
– frances rhodes
9 hours ago













Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
– P. Barney
6 hours ago




Are you planning to true the wheel yourself?
– P. Barney
6 hours ago












The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
– cmaster
5 hours ago




The idea of the POWerwheel is new to me, but it does fit with my experience: There are two factors that make a spoke likely to fail, 1. that the spoke attaches to the hub from the inside (higher bending force at the bend), and 2. that the spoke is an accelerating one mounted on the rear wheel. I already mitigate these two factors by ensuring that no spoke is both an inner one and an accelerating one, but the accelerating ones remain the ones that break. However, the only benefit of a POWerwheel should be less danger of breaking spokes. Also: Disk brakes may change this into the opposite.
– cmaster
5 hours ago












@p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
– frances rhodes
3 hours ago




@p-barney yes, I want to do it myself, I want to learn how to fix everything alone to eventually be able to build bikes from scratch
– frances rhodes
3 hours ago












@cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
– frances rhodes
3 hours ago




@cmaster I looked into changing the breaks to a more modern system but my bike is from the 70s, so it would require serious modifications in order to do that, including replacing parts such as the fork... which I don't want to do
– frances rhodes
3 hours ago










up vote
2
down vote













The most important part of the page is "Since April 1".



This is Sheldon Brown's annual April Fool prank.



Search for the rest of the ShelBroCo articles in rec.bicycles.tech and they were all posted on April 1.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
    – Rider_X
    1 hour ago















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Search for the rest of the ShelBroCo articles in rec.bicycles.tech and they were all posted on April 1.






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New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
    – Rider_X
    1 hour ago













up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









The most important part of the page is "Since April 1".



This is Sheldon Brown's annual April Fool prank.



Search for the rest of the ShelBroCo articles in rec.bicycles.tech and they were all posted on April 1.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









The most important part of the page is "Since April 1".



This is Sheldon Brown's annual April Fool prank.



Search for the rest of the ShelBroCo articles in rec.bicycles.tech and they were all posted on April 1.







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered 4 hours ago









Jeffrey Bell

212




212




New contributor




Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Jeffrey Bell is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











  • Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
    – Rider_X
    1 hour ago

















  • Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
    – Rider_X
    1 hour ago
















Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
– Rider_X
1 hour ago





Good catch! I missed that date reference at the bottom of the page (there is so much advertising, it’s almost unreadable now). The crazy part is that people claim it worked in real life
– Rider_X
1 hour ago











frances rhodes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









 

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frances rhodes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












frances rhodes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











frances rhodes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













 


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