What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?
I am wanting to buy a new rear wheel to make my life easier when wanting to use my turbo trainer, so I don't need to change the tyre on my current wheel every time I wish to go out/stay in.
My current wheel is an AlexRims Ace19 with a internal width of 17mm.
As this is my first time buying wheels, what would be some considerations for getting something cheap that fits the bill? I say cheap because I'm using a used adventure bike, so nothing is expensive in my setup.
wheels rims
New contributor
|
show 2 more comments
I am wanting to buy a new rear wheel to make my life easier when wanting to use my turbo trainer, so I don't need to change the tyre on my current wheel every time I wish to go out/stay in.
My current wheel is an AlexRims Ace19 with a internal width of 17mm.
As this is my first time buying wheels, what would be some considerations for getting something cheap that fits the bill? I say cheap because I'm using a used adventure bike, so nothing is expensive in my setup.
wheels rims
New contributor
1
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
1
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
3
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
I am wanting to buy a new rear wheel to make my life easier when wanting to use my turbo trainer, so I don't need to change the tyre on my current wheel every time I wish to go out/stay in.
My current wheel is an AlexRims Ace19 with a internal width of 17mm.
As this is my first time buying wheels, what would be some considerations for getting something cheap that fits the bill? I say cheap because I'm using a used adventure bike, so nothing is expensive in my setup.
wheels rims
New contributor
I am wanting to buy a new rear wheel to make my life easier when wanting to use my turbo trainer, so I don't need to change the tyre on my current wheel every time I wish to go out/stay in.
My current wheel is an AlexRims Ace19 with a internal width of 17mm.
As this is my first time buying wheels, what would be some considerations for getting something cheap that fits the bill? I say cheap because I'm using a used adventure bike, so nothing is expensive in my setup.
wheels rims
wheels rims
New contributor
New contributor
edited 1 hour ago
physicsboy
New contributor
asked 4 hours ago
physicsboyphysicsboy
1756
1756
New contributor
New contributor
1
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
1
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
3
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
1
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
1
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
3
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago
1
1
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
1
1
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
1
1
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
3
3
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
From your other question we know you have a Specialized Tri-Cross 3x9 with an XT MTB derailleur.
This is what you need to know:
Rim brakes and quick release hub.
Rim diameter: ISO 622 or '700c' - you can look up bicycle wheel rim diameter conventions
Rim internal width: You can go a little narrower or wider than 17mm as tires work on a range of rim widths. Check the min and max rim widths of the trainer tire you will be getting.
Hub width (between the frame dropouts); Your bike will either be 130 or 135mm. It's easy to measure with the rear wheel out.
8/9/10 speed compatible. The cassette freehub body width for all those speeds is the same. On 11 speed wheels it's a little wider to accommodate 1 extra sprocket.
You don't care about spoke count, weight or stiffness so you can literally get any wheel that meets those specs. I'd look around on Craigslist or Facebook for a used wheel - but make sure it's reasonably true and the hub bearings are not worn out. Alternately you can get a new cheap wheel from either your LBS or one of the online bike component stores.
add a comment |
Just about any cheap wheel will do for trainer use.
Check your local Craig's List, peruse internet auction sites, and don't forget your local bike store - you may find they have "take offs", or wheels removed from new bikes they sold. Lots of stronger/heavier riders can't really ride some of the lightly-built 24- or 28-spoke rear wheels that come on some road bikes, so they'll buy a bike and a stronger set of wheels, leaving the bike store with a set of lighter wheels to sell.
But even if you're larger/heavier, riding a trainer isn't all that rough on a rear wheel - the wheel isn't supporting your weight, nor is it being subjected to impacts from hitting things while supporting your weight. And even if you're really strong, suddenly hammering the pedals in a sprint effort doesn't put anywhere near the stress on the wheel that doing the same outside does. On a trainer, if you spike your power really hard during a sprint effort, you'll just cause the tire to skip on the trainer's roller instead of passing a huge torque spike from your effort through the wheel to accelerate your and your bike.
One thing that does matter more on a trainer - trueness. You can actually get away with a wheel being quite a bit out-of-true outside, as the tire will absorb a lot. Not so on a trainer, especially if you have any in-and-out or "hop" in your wheel. You want a nice even engagement between the tire and the trainer's roller.
And if you're not using a "smart" trainer that can vary resistance to do things like simulate a real climb - don't use a wide-range cassette on a trainer - no 11-32s. Get something with a closer range. For a 9-speed, I wouldn't want anything much wider than an 11-25 or so, and ideally an 11-23 corncob. The close ranges are necessary so you can closely tune your cadence, power, and effort level. For example, if you want to do a 90-min ride at, say, 90 RPM, you may find a wide-range cassette limiting your options to 81 or 97 RPM at an effort level you can sustain for 90 min. You're not likely to even be able to use a 32 or even a 28 on the trainer, but there are uses for the 11 - simulating steep hill climbs, for example.
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "126"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
physicsboy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbicycles.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f58905%2fwhat-do-i-need-to-consider-for-a-cheap-wheel-for-a-specialized-tri-cross-to-use%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
From your other question we know you have a Specialized Tri-Cross 3x9 with an XT MTB derailleur.
This is what you need to know:
Rim brakes and quick release hub.
Rim diameter: ISO 622 or '700c' - you can look up bicycle wheel rim diameter conventions
Rim internal width: You can go a little narrower or wider than 17mm as tires work on a range of rim widths. Check the min and max rim widths of the trainer tire you will be getting.
Hub width (between the frame dropouts); Your bike will either be 130 or 135mm. It's easy to measure with the rear wheel out.
8/9/10 speed compatible. The cassette freehub body width for all those speeds is the same. On 11 speed wheels it's a little wider to accommodate 1 extra sprocket.
You don't care about spoke count, weight or stiffness so you can literally get any wheel that meets those specs. I'd look around on Craigslist or Facebook for a used wheel - but make sure it's reasonably true and the hub bearings are not worn out. Alternately you can get a new cheap wheel from either your LBS or one of the online bike component stores.
add a comment |
From your other question we know you have a Specialized Tri-Cross 3x9 with an XT MTB derailleur.
This is what you need to know:
Rim brakes and quick release hub.
Rim diameter: ISO 622 or '700c' - you can look up bicycle wheel rim diameter conventions
Rim internal width: You can go a little narrower or wider than 17mm as tires work on a range of rim widths. Check the min and max rim widths of the trainer tire you will be getting.
Hub width (between the frame dropouts); Your bike will either be 130 or 135mm. It's easy to measure with the rear wheel out.
8/9/10 speed compatible. The cassette freehub body width for all those speeds is the same. On 11 speed wheels it's a little wider to accommodate 1 extra sprocket.
You don't care about spoke count, weight or stiffness so you can literally get any wheel that meets those specs. I'd look around on Craigslist or Facebook for a used wheel - but make sure it's reasonably true and the hub bearings are not worn out. Alternately you can get a new cheap wheel from either your LBS or one of the online bike component stores.
add a comment |
From your other question we know you have a Specialized Tri-Cross 3x9 with an XT MTB derailleur.
This is what you need to know:
Rim brakes and quick release hub.
Rim diameter: ISO 622 or '700c' - you can look up bicycle wheel rim diameter conventions
Rim internal width: You can go a little narrower or wider than 17mm as tires work on a range of rim widths. Check the min and max rim widths of the trainer tire you will be getting.
Hub width (between the frame dropouts); Your bike will either be 130 or 135mm. It's easy to measure with the rear wheel out.
8/9/10 speed compatible. The cassette freehub body width for all those speeds is the same. On 11 speed wheels it's a little wider to accommodate 1 extra sprocket.
You don't care about spoke count, weight or stiffness so you can literally get any wheel that meets those specs. I'd look around on Craigslist or Facebook for a used wheel - but make sure it's reasonably true and the hub bearings are not worn out. Alternately you can get a new cheap wheel from either your LBS or one of the online bike component stores.
From your other question we know you have a Specialized Tri-Cross 3x9 with an XT MTB derailleur.
This is what you need to know:
Rim brakes and quick release hub.
Rim diameter: ISO 622 or '700c' - you can look up bicycle wheel rim diameter conventions
Rim internal width: You can go a little narrower or wider than 17mm as tires work on a range of rim widths. Check the min and max rim widths of the trainer tire you will be getting.
Hub width (between the frame dropouts); Your bike will either be 130 or 135mm. It's easy to measure with the rear wheel out.
8/9/10 speed compatible. The cassette freehub body width for all those speeds is the same. On 11 speed wheels it's a little wider to accommodate 1 extra sprocket.
You don't care about spoke count, weight or stiffness so you can literally get any wheel that meets those specs. I'd look around on Craigslist or Facebook for a used wheel - but make sure it's reasonably true and the hub bearings are not worn out. Alternately you can get a new cheap wheel from either your LBS or one of the online bike component stores.
answered 1 hour ago
Argenti ApparatusArgenti Apparatus
33.4k23583
33.4k23583
add a comment |
add a comment |
Just about any cheap wheel will do for trainer use.
Check your local Craig's List, peruse internet auction sites, and don't forget your local bike store - you may find they have "take offs", or wheels removed from new bikes they sold. Lots of stronger/heavier riders can't really ride some of the lightly-built 24- or 28-spoke rear wheels that come on some road bikes, so they'll buy a bike and a stronger set of wheels, leaving the bike store with a set of lighter wheels to sell.
But even if you're larger/heavier, riding a trainer isn't all that rough on a rear wheel - the wheel isn't supporting your weight, nor is it being subjected to impacts from hitting things while supporting your weight. And even if you're really strong, suddenly hammering the pedals in a sprint effort doesn't put anywhere near the stress on the wheel that doing the same outside does. On a trainer, if you spike your power really hard during a sprint effort, you'll just cause the tire to skip on the trainer's roller instead of passing a huge torque spike from your effort through the wheel to accelerate your and your bike.
One thing that does matter more on a trainer - trueness. You can actually get away with a wheel being quite a bit out-of-true outside, as the tire will absorb a lot. Not so on a trainer, especially if you have any in-and-out or "hop" in your wheel. You want a nice even engagement between the tire and the trainer's roller.
And if you're not using a "smart" trainer that can vary resistance to do things like simulate a real climb - don't use a wide-range cassette on a trainer - no 11-32s. Get something with a closer range. For a 9-speed, I wouldn't want anything much wider than an 11-25 or so, and ideally an 11-23 corncob. The close ranges are necessary so you can closely tune your cadence, power, and effort level. For example, if you want to do a 90-min ride at, say, 90 RPM, you may find a wide-range cassette limiting your options to 81 or 97 RPM at an effort level you can sustain for 90 min. You're not likely to even be able to use a 32 or even a 28 on the trainer, but there are uses for the 11 - simulating steep hill climbs, for example.
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Just about any cheap wheel will do for trainer use.
Check your local Craig's List, peruse internet auction sites, and don't forget your local bike store - you may find they have "take offs", or wheels removed from new bikes they sold. Lots of stronger/heavier riders can't really ride some of the lightly-built 24- or 28-spoke rear wheels that come on some road bikes, so they'll buy a bike and a stronger set of wheels, leaving the bike store with a set of lighter wheels to sell.
But even if you're larger/heavier, riding a trainer isn't all that rough on a rear wheel - the wheel isn't supporting your weight, nor is it being subjected to impacts from hitting things while supporting your weight. And even if you're really strong, suddenly hammering the pedals in a sprint effort doesn't put anywhere near the stress on the wheel that doing the same outside does. On a trainer, if you spike your power really hard during a sprint effort, you'll just cause the tire to skip on the trainer's roller instead of passing a huge torque spike from your effort through the wheel to accelerate your and your bike.
One thing that does matter more on a trainer - trueness. You can actually get away with a wheel being quite a bit out-of-true outside, as the tire will absorb a lot. Not so on a trainer, especially if you have any in-and-out or "hop" in your wheel. You want a nice even engagement between the tire and the trainer's roller.
And if you're not using a "smart" trainer that can vary resistance to do things like simulate a real climb - don't use a wide-range cassette on a trainer - no 11-32s. Get something with a closer range. For a 9-speed, I wouldn't want anything much wider than an 11-25 or so, and ideally an 11-23 corncob. The close ranges are necessary so you can closely tune your cadence, power, and effort level. For example, if you want to do a 90-min ride at, say, 90 RPM, you may find a wide-range cassette limiting your options to 81 or 97 RPM at an effort level you can sustain for 90 min. You're not likely to even be able to use a 32 or even a 28 on the trainer, but there are uses for the 11 - simulating steep hill climbs, for example.
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Just about any cheap wheel will do for trainer use.
Check your local Craig's List, peruse internet auction sites, and don't forget your local bike store - you may find they have "take offs", or wheels removed from new bikes they sold. Lots of stronger/heavier riders can't really ride some of the lightly-built 24- or 28-spoke rear wheels that come on some road bikes, so they'll buy a bike and a stronger set of wheels, leaving the bike store with a set of lighter wheels to sell.
But even if you're larger/heavier, riding a trainer isn't all that rough on a rear wheel - the wheel isn't supporting your weight, nor is it being subjected to impacts from hitting things while supporting your weight. And even if you're really strong, suddenly hammering the pedals in a sprint effort doesn't put anywhere near the stress on the wheel that doing the same outside does. On a trainer, if you spike your power really hard during a sprint effort, you'll just cause the tire to skip on the trainer's roller instead of passing a huge torque spike from your effort through the wheel to accelerate your and your bike.
One thing that does matter more on a trainer - trueness. You can actually get away with a wheel being quite a bit out-of-true outside, as the tire will absorb a lot. Not so on a trainer, especially if you have any in-and-out or "hop" in your wheel. You want a nice even engagement between the tire and the trainer's roller.
And if you're not using a "smart" trainer that can vary resistance to do things like simulate a real climb - don't use a wide-range cassette on a trainer - no 11-32s. Get something with a closer range. For a 9-speed, I wouldn't want anything much wider than an 11-25 or so, and ideally an 11-23 corncob. The close ranges are necessary so you can closely tune your cadence, power, and effort level. For example, if you want to do a 90-min ride at, say, 90 RPM, you may find a wide-range cassette limiting your options to 81 or 97 RPM at an effort level you can sustain for 90 min. You're not likely to even be able to use a 32 or even a 28 on the trainer, but there are uses for the 11 - simulating steep hill climbs, for example.
Just about any cheap wheel will do for trainer use.
Check your local Craig's List, peruse internet auction sites, and don't forget your local bike store - you may find they have "take offs", or wheels removed from new bikes they sold. Lots of stronger/heavier riders can't really ride some of the lightly-built 24- or 28-spoke rear wheels that come on some road bikes, so they'll buy a bike and a stronger set of wheels, leaving the bike store with a set of lighter wheels to sell.
But even if you're larger/heavier, riding a trainer isn't all that rough on a rear wheel - the wheel isn't supporting your weight, nor is it being subjected to impacts from hitting things while supporting your weight. And even if you're really strong, suddenly hammering the pedals in a sprint effort doesn't put anywhere near the stress on the wheel that doing the same outside does. On a trainer, if you spike your power really hard during a sprint effort, you'll just cause the tire to skip on the trainer's roller instead of passing a huge torque spike from your effort through the wheel to accelerate your and your bike.
One thing that does matter more on a trainer - trueness. You can actually get away with a wheel being quite a bit out-of-true outside, as the tire will absorb a lot. Not so on a trainer, especially if you have any in-and-out or "hop" in your wheel. You want a nice even engagement between the tire and the trainer's roller.
And if you're not using a "smart" trainer that can vary resistance to do things like simulate a real climb - don't use a wide-range cassette on a trainer - no 11-32s. Get something with a closer range. For a 9-speed, I wouldn't want anything much wider than an 11-25 or so, and ideally an 11-23 corncob. The close ranges are necessary so you can closely tune your cadence, power, and effort level. For example, if you want to do a 90-min ride at, say, 90 RPM, you may find a wide-range cassette limiting your options to 81 or 97 RPM at an effort level you can sustain for 90 min. You're not likely to even be able to use a 32 or even a 28 on the trainer, but there are uses for the 11 - simulating steep hill climbs, for example.
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
Andrew HenleAndrew Henle
1,27649
1,27649
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
2
2
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
The OP has indicated in another question that he is using a smart trainer - in this instance a larger cassette can be desirable when it simulates a climb. For oldschool 'dumb' trainers however I agree 100%
– Andy P
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
@AndyP Thanks. Updated
– Andrew Henle
1 hour ago
add a comment |
physicsboy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
physicsboy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
physicsboy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
physicsboy is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to Bicycles Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbicycles.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f58905%2fwhat-do-i-need-to-consider-for-a-cheap-wheel-for-a-specialized-tri-cross-to-use%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
1
I'm afraid we don't do product recommendations here, as they are prone to becoming quickly outdated.
– Andy P
3 hours ago
1
For this purpose, consider a used wheel. Try your local bike shop (LBS) or search around your city for a bike recycler. Or try ebay/gumtree/whatever auction/local listings sites there are in your city.
– Criggie♦
3 hours ago
1
Possible duplicate of Rear wheel needed
– ojs
2 hours ago
Questions asking for product recomendations are likely to get closed. You can avoid this by making the question more generic, i.e., 'What do I need to consider for a cheap wheel for a Specialized Tri-Cross to use on a trainer?'
– Argenti Apparatus
1 hour ago
3
Edited the question and title to make it more generic and less closeable.
– physicsboy
1 hour ago