Finding out the correct axle width
theblarney
Posts: 102
Hi,
This maybe a silly question so apologies but...
I have a Scott Aspect 40 2012 Mountain bike and I am thinking of upgrading the wheels on it to tubeless. I am unsure of the correct axle width as the Easton wheels im looking at have a 9mm and 15mm front option and the rear have options like 10mm and 12mm.
I think my bike will be the standard 9mmQR front and 10mmqr rear but how do I find out. I was hoping there was a more concrete way of finding out apart from getting a tape measure out as when you are working in mm, mistakes would be easy.
Thanks
Gavin
This maybe a silly question so apologies but...
I have a Scott Aspect 40 2012 Mountain bike and I am thinking of upgrading the wheels on it to tubeless. I am unsure of the correct axle width as the Easton wheels im looking at have a 9mm and 15mm front option and the rear have options like 10mm and 12mm.
I think my bike will be the standard 9mmQR front and 10mmqr rear but how do I find out. I was hoping there was a more concrete way of finding out apart from getting a tape measure out as when you are working in mm, mistakes would be easy.
Thanks
Gavin
0
Comments
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If you have standard QR skewers you have standard QR.I don't do smileys.
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
London Calling on Facebook
Parktools0 -
cooldad wrote:If you have standard QR skewers you have standard QR.
Am I right in saying that standard qr for front and rear are 9mm and 10mm?0 -
Yep.I don't do smileys.
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
London Calling on Facebook
Parktools0