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How to change your wheels for winter

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Putting a tougher set of wheels on your bike for riding in winter will save your summer wheelset from the salt, grit and grime of the off-season months, helping to make your most expensive racing hoops last longer. 

If you're a beginner, and you're thinking of changing your wheels for the first time, here's how to do just that in five easy steps.

1. Remove your front wheel

Let’s get the easy one out of the way. To remove your front wheel, open the front brake caliper's quick-release (QR) – usually situated just below where the cable enters the brake – then flip the wheel's QR lever and unscrew the nut at the other end, until the wheel is loose enough to drop out.

Most forks come with safety tabs to avoid accidental releases these days, so make sure the QR skewer can clear these or remove the lever entirely, taking care not to lose the two small springs that sandwich between the ends of the skewer and the hub.

Quick releasing the front wheel is the easy bit:

Quick-releasing the front wheel is the easy bit

2. Remove the rear wheel

Use your shifter to move the chain onto the smallest sprocket before you start to remove your rear wheel – shifting down into the small chainring will also give more chain length to play with. This will make both removal and insertion easier.

Release the brake caliper's quick release, flip and unscrew the QR and allow the wheel to drop out. You will need to free the cassette from the chain, which can get fiddly, but this is why you shifted onto that small ring. Gloves are useful here to avoid oily hands.

3. Transfer the tyres

If you don’t already have a tyre and tube on your new wheels, you’ll need to swap the tyres from the old wheels onto the new ones – or get some new ones entirely. Bear in mind that wintery roads tend to have more debris that can cause punctures, so switching to a more durable set of tyres can help ensure trouble-free riding during the colder months.

If you're swapping tyres from summer to winter wheels – and assuming that the wheels you're removing and fitting are both clinchers (rather than glued-on tubular tyres) – this is a simple case of deflating the inner tube, using a tyre lever to undo one side of the tyre's bead, pulling the inner tube out, then pulling the other side of the tyre off.

Check out our video on how to fix a puncture for full details on getting your tyres off.

4. Transfer your cassette

The next step is to swap your cassette onto the freehub of your new rear wheel. Make sure the cassette is compatible with your new wheel, as there are differences between SRAM / Shimano and Campagnolo freehubs. You'll also need to make sure your winter wheels are compatible with the number of cogs in the cassette – you may need spacers or another freehub entirely if not moving from like to like set-ups. Check the wheel manufacturer's instructions for compatibility information.

When you're ready to swap cassettes, you’ll need a chainwhip and locknut tool handy. Check out our video of this step.

Wrap the chainwhip around a large sprocket, applying light pressure in a clockwise manner. Place the locknut tool over the locknut and turn it anti-clockwise to begin unscrewing it. Once it's loose, unscrew it by hand and remove the cassette.

Now's a good time to clean the cassette's individual cogs, taking care to place each down in order with its spacers so that you can reassemble easily onto the new wheel. Once the cassette's in place on the new wheel, turn the locknut clockwise by hand, before using the locknut tool to fasten it securely in place.

5. Fit the new wheels

To fit the new wheels in simply reverse the process above. Ensure the chain wraps around the smallest sprocket, and flick the brake quick-release levers down.

You may also need to tweak the alignment of your brake pads if the new rim's braking surface is set at a different height. This is achieved very simply with an Allen key – check out the video here.

This article was originally published in Cycling Plus magazine, available on Apple Newsstand and Zinio.









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