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22 Comments

  1. HoeDownHootinanny on

    Is it pinned/welded? Judging by the seam not matching evenly top to bottom, I would put it in the worry bin..😬

  2. GazelleNo1836 on

    Junk. The seem is uneven and the brake track is compromised and uneven. Biggest thing is like rust corrosion is alway worse under the pant and where you can’t see it, the odds of the spoke/nipple eyelet giving way are to high to say it’s good from seeing the outside.

  3. Looks like a rim brake wheel and it has a noticeable gouge out of the centre of the track which would only have been made worse by you sanding it back.

    If it was mine I would have scrapped it without taking time to sand it back

  4. Obvious_Professor867 on

    Just ride it. Looks good enough to me I see sketchier stuff on dump trucks and most government vehicles. Replace it if you want peace of mind but if it fails just remember FAFO.

  5. If it holds tension, stays true, and the brakes aren’t making any concerning noise at the joint… I’d ride it.

    Some joints look like shit but aren’t a concern. The bubbling was the concern and that was clearly a paint issue.

  6. MrSnappyPants on

    I feel like it would look a lot less alarming if the whole thing was sanded. You don’t have access to a light sandblaster setup do you?

  7. positive-delta on

    spray paint over the alu if you want. keep an eye on the brake track for wear. assuming this is for a beater bike, I wouldn’t fuss too much about it.

  8. I’m still a tad concerned but less than before, how does the rest of the seam look?

  9. I’m sticking with my earlier assessment. Grab some epoxy and go over the joint seam so that you don’t have more ingress ( literally just to close it, you aren’t glue-ing the halves together, it’s pin joined and slightly off from factory because these were cheaper rims ). Rattle can on some new black. Keep the wheel rolling. Not the prettiest wheel but functional and great for a bike that gets locked up in places where there’s a chance of it being stolen.

  10. Mental_Contest_3687 on

    looks perfect for your uses! if it were my wheel, I’d clean and fill that seam gap with some filler like JBWeld to keep the brakes running smoothly over that section and to keep gunk from filling that space, but that’s kinda superfluous if you don’t feel a “tap-tap-tap” from your wheel under braking. nice to confirm your wheel wasn’t flaking away from some odd corrosion!

  11. We1come2thesyst3m on

    Now that you’ve sanded it down and made it look worst, we’ll all agree that its completely fine.

  12. It’s looking like it’s worn past the wear indicator so I can’t recommend you keep riding it..
    Also can’t say I personally wouldn’t FAAFO.

  13. i ride sorta rough sections of road and sometimes need to lift the front wheel unexpectedly over potholes/tarmac/gravel transitions.. i would not chance this wheel for sake of my health lol

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