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Replacing a spoke

If a spoke breaks, try to repair it as soon as possible. Strip the wheel down as described above, so that the rubber strip that runs around the wheel trough is exposed. If the broken spoke's pinhead sits in an eyelet on the hub flange directly behind the freewheel/cassette on the rear wheel, you will have to remove the latter. Remove the nipple of the broken spoke beneath the rubber strip and the spoke itself, paying attention to the way the old spoke is aligned (under or over other spokes). Replace the spoke, threading a new one through the eyelet on the hub flange up to the new nipple, repeating the correct alignment of the old spoke. The pinhead of the curved end of the spoke should sit well in the eyelet. Use a spoke wrench or flathead screwdriver (depending on the nipple head) to tighten the nipple onto the spoke thread. Do not overtighten – the new spoke should ‘ring’ the same as the other spokes when you pluck it.

Occasionally you may not be able to carry out roadside repairs, or need to replace a broken or damaged component, and be a long way from the nearest bicycle shop. If it happens, stand back and review the situation and work out how you can adapt, improvise, overcome. On the Marne and Picardy tour one of my pedals sheared off because I had misthreaded it onto the crankarm before leaving the airport. As I was only a kilometre away from the village of Montreuil-aux-Lions I wheeled my bicycle there in pouring rain and found a garage. I asked the mechanic if he had a long bolt with two locking nuts that could act as a temporary pedal until I reached a good bike shop. He came up trumps, and although it didn't rotate as a pedal does this bolt got me to Château-Thierry, some 30km away, where there was a good bicycle shop. My cycling companion on the Alps tour suffered a stripped thread in the steerer tube resulting in a total loss of steering, but managed three cols before reaching a good bicycle shop in Albertville. He overcame the problem by tightly tying two webbing straps from his handlebars to the fork crown, thereby being able to control front-wheel direction. Whatever the dilemma, there is always a temporary solution.

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