Having rejigged my rear hub setup and repositioned derailleur away from dropouts the rear hub axle now fits much snugger in end of dropouts. No more trips to local bike shop guy to get him to refit it
I have been messing with putting on two torque arms (one each side) and had a few basic questions, trying to get my head around what the best (strongest) way is to counter the opposite torque.
This it what my dropout looks like on drive side (pic below).
1. If I can fit the hammer ebike torque arm (pic below) in one of the two eyelets is this a STRONGER and so better solution that running the arm up the chain stay (or seat stay) and jubilee clamping it in place?
2. Do these eyelets tend to be a standard size of M5 (5mm), this is a decades old Halfords MTB.
3. Does it make any real difference what the order of the torque on the axle is, is it better to slide the smaller axle part next to frame when have other arm on outside or does this not really matter?
4. C-clips - what should they be used for, are they actually needed for any specific task or just another type of spacer washer?
5. Does the orientation of the two arms make any real difference, what I mean is in the two final pics you can see I've orientated the two arms (that make one arm) differently on the drive and non-drive side?
6. I would assume 'mixing' the configuration on both sides isn't a problem, so could mix hammer one side and standard arms other side etc. to get best fit as well as orientations as really it's all about not letting the axles fall out of the dropouts?
Any thoughts/tips appreciated.
Dropouts:
Hammer ebike torque arm - uses eyelets
Drive side - jubilee clip:
Non-drive side - jubilee clip, both parts of arm are orientated differently from drive side above:
I have been messing with putting on two torque arms (one each side) and had a few basic questions, trying to get my head around what the best (strongest) way is to counter the opposite torque.
This it what my dropout looks like on drive side (pic below).
1. If I can fit the hammer ebike torque arm (pic below) in one of the two eyelets is this a STRONGER and so better solution that running the arm up the chain stay (or seat stay) and jubilee clamping it in place?
2. Do these eyelets tend to be a standard size of M5 (5mm), this is a decades old Halfords MTB.
3. Does it make any real difference what the order of the torque on the axle is, is it better to slide the smaller axle part next to frame when have other arm on outside or does this not really matter?
4. C-clips - what should they be used for, are they actually needed for any specific task or just another type of spacer washer?
5. Does the orientation of the two arms make any real difference, what I mean is in the two final pics you can see I've orientated the two arms (that make one arm) differently on the drive and non-drive side?
6. I would assume 'mixing' the configuration on both sides isn't a problem, so could mix hammer one side and standard arms other side etc. to get best fit as well as orientations as really it's all about not letting the axles fall out of the dropouts?
Any thoughts/tips appreciated.
Dropouts:
Hammer ebike torque arm - uses eyelets
Drive side - jubilee clip:
Non-drive side - jubilee clip, both parts of arm are orientated differently from drive side above: