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Another spoked wheels tutorial
Hello,
There has been one spoke tutorial earlier, but this time we are going the harder way to get the spokes exactly like they look in real wheels. A bicycle wheel consists of rim, hub and spokes. Usually there are 36 spokes, which means exactly ten degree spacing. Spokes alternate on the rim: even ones make left side and odd ones right side (or vice versa, never mind). On every side they alternate further: even ones go clockwise and odd counterclockwise. Every spoke crosses three other ones. A complete wheel looks like this: First step is to create a rigging template. Start by drawing inner diameter of the rim and outer diameter of the tyre - we usually know these dimensions exactly. Then guess the diameter of the hub (if the crossing goes wrong, we'll correct it - more about it later) and draw first 9 spokes. Draw the lines from points on the inner side of the rim (40° spacing), tangentially to the hub: Try to draw several spokes with opposite orientation (green on this picture) and check how many times they cross: If twice or less, make the hub bigger. If four or more times or if the third crossing is too far from the centre, shrink it. When you like the result, draw the remaining spokes: Now the template is complete. Glue it to some thick material, ideally several layers of corrugated cardboard. Stick some nail in the centerpoint, it should have about the same diameter as the hub you have previously drawn (it doesn't have to be a nail, but it must be something the glue won't stick to). Prepare a cardboard ring the size of rim and tyre, place it on the template and secure it by three pins around it: Get a spool of sewing thread (usually the thinnest one you can find). It's a good idea to run it between your fingers with a drop of glue to make it less furry (I didn't do it here and you can see the result :-)). Start to glue the thread onto the ring: Joint by joint, let the glue set before you proceed to next one: Don't tighten the threads too much - just keep them straight, but no excessive tension, because you will later have to push the whole spoke web to one side by half the width of the hub and that will tighten them quite firmly. Etc. (it's quite tedious work, but the result is worth the time). There is no need of any particular order of gluing the spokes. Finished: Carefully glue the spokes together in the center (don't pour the glue too far): When the glue is dry, take it our from the template: Repeat the gluing on the other side to make sure no thread remains loose: When the glue is perfectly dry, twist the nail out carefully and cut the excess glue away with a sharp razor blade: Cut the excess threads away with some sharp scissors: Half of the work is done. Now do the same once more... When both halves are finished, roll the hub from a stripe of paper: Glue it to one half of the wheel, keep it square to spokes with a piece of wire (future axle): Pedants may add tyre valve as well :-). If you want to paint the spokes and hub with a brush, do it now - after assembling the halves together, your only option would be airbrush or spray can. Glue both halves together by whole rim/tyre surface (don't glue the hub yet!). Position it so the spokes are spaced evenly. Secure it by clothes pegs or something similar and let the glue dry perfectly: The grip must be quite strong. The smaller the wheel, the wider the hub or the more preload in the spokes, the stronger. And be careful, the wheels like to twist. (continued in the next post because of the 20 images limit)
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...to boldly glue what no man has glued before... Any criticism of my work is welcome. |
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#2
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(continued: )
When the glue is dry (letting it overnight is the best choice), remove the pegs: Slide the wheel on the axle, align the hub to be perpendicular to the rim and glue it on the remaining side to the spokes. Sand the tyre round. You can also glue small circles of paper to the sides of the hub so it stops to look as if the bearing balls fell out. Cross-section of the finished wheel for the sake of completeness (threads are red): Hope this helps.
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...to boldly glue what no man has glued before... Any criticism of my work is welcome. |
#3
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Most excellent. Thank you Mirco. This would be completely possible for me.
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Ray Respect the Paper, RESPECT IT! GET OFF MY LAWN! |
#4
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Nice work! and thanks for the tutorial
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Previously build; R.M.S. Titanic, 1:200 scale Currently building; S.S. Nomadic 1:250 scale |
#5
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What a remarkable HOW TO ! this really is excellent, i could use this someday - but you have helped by taking a lot of the working out how to achieve the result with this. Thank you.
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#6
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Thanks Mirco, this will help when I build my BMW motorcycle w/sidecar model.
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#7
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Thank you very much! I understood it completely the first time I read it, and that's a new experience for me when it comes to spoked wheels tutorials. It seems eminently doable, particularly since I don't have to make the wheels quite so fiddly and small (I usually work in 1/16).
Just a control question - it is possible to use white glue throughout, yes? Leif PS. And you clearly have a sense of humour about what you're doing. What a relief. PPS. I took the liberty of immediately making up a nice pdf tutorial of the text and photos in your two original posts. I'd like to upload it to the downloads section of the site, your name as author of course. Is that alright, or would you rather like to take care of that detail yourself? Last edited by Leif Ohlsson; 01-27-2011 at 02:26 PM. |
#8
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Wow, very thorough. I would like to try that with left over guitar string wire I have.
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#9
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Great tutorial, I understand it just fine and I have a new project that I'm going to give it a try on.
Thanks, SFX |
#10
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I didn't think I could attach a pdf due to size, but it seems to be OK if you zip it first, so here's the pdf of your tutorial for your inspection. I think you should upload it, or one of your own making. It is really good stuff!
Before you do that, however, check this section at the beginning (third image): Quote:
An easy way out would be to mirror the preceding, second, image. Or am I simply getting more senile by the day...? It would be a pity if people get hung-up on this point and leave the whole thing (doesn't seem to be a risk of that, but still...) Leif Last edited by Leif Ohlsson; 01-27-2011 at 03:59 PM. |
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