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You are charging more than a bike shop for pretty much the same service they provide...
What kind of wheel building experience do you have, what is the turn around time and what form of warranty do you offer on your wheel builds?
Is there a bike shop standard for lateral & radial tolerances?
Here is a nice short video about a somewhat famous wheel builder. Apparently he builds to .002mm lateral & .1mm radial tolerances.
Sorry, two corrections:
- please try this link (the last digit was missing earlier):
- .002mm is crazy, and was wrong, I misheard.. He says "five hundredth`s of a mm" for lateral tolerance, so it is .05mm.
Patrick Doherty said:
.25mm is about at good as you can get by eye. And many bikes shops don't use gauges so that is pretty standard. I am currently helping to create a national mechanic certification though the NBDA and Illinois board of education and the test to become certified would involve using gauges to true a wheel to .08mm of true.
For some reason I can't view the video right now but .002 mm seems like a typo I have never seen wheel gauges with that much definition. .02mm is more likely and easily achivable with a new rim, it just takes a lot of time and .1mm radial is easy to achieve even with a used rim.
I cannot think of any shop that charges $75 for a wheel build; most are around $60 for a single wheel.
Wheel-building "deals," from shop to shop and from builder to builder, often depends a lot on the price of their parts.
Either they get you for the labor or they add extra mark-up onto the parts.
TANSTAAFL.
Bullshit.
I cannot speak for other shops but our mark up is exactly the same no matter what the wheel build labor is. In fact when we do wheel build specials in the winter the labor is cheaper and there is a discount on the parts. I know enough people in the reputable shops in the area that I would feel secure in saying that nobody out there worth patronizing is going to gouge you on the parts to make up for cheaper labor.
James BlackHeron said:
Either they get you for the labor or they add extra mark-up onto the parts.
So you are saying that if a customer brought in a new hub, rim, and proper-length spoke set the cost would be the same $60 it would be if they bought the parts through your shop?
If so, could I get this in writing?
notoriousDUG said:
Bullshit.I cannot speak for other shops but our mark up is exactly the same no matter what the wheel build labor is. In fact when we do wheel build specials in the winter the labor is cheaper and there is a discount on the parts. I know enough people in the reputable shops in the area that I would feel secure in saying that nobody out there worth patronizing is going to gouge you on the parts to make up for cheaper labor.
Yes I am saying exactly that and here it is in writing It has always been like that; I have built wheels with all or mostly customer provided parts before. The only time the price of our wheel builds depends on the parts purchase is our winter wheel build specials where if you buy 2/3 of the parts with us it is only $25 to build the wheel and $35 if you bring in mostly your own parts.
If it is a used rim there may be some limitations put on the warranty for the wheel as we do not like to re-use rims unless they are in great shape and were high quality rims to start with.
If you were told anything else by somebody here it was WRONG and I would like to know who told you that.
I would not trust a shop who had a labor rate that varied depending on where parts came from.
James BlackHeron said:
So you are saying that if a customer brought in a new hub, rim, and proper-length spoke set the cost would be the same $60 it would be if they bought the parts through your shop?
If so, could I get this in writing?
notoriousDUG said:
Bullshit.I cannot speak for other shops but our mark up is exactly the same no matter what the wheel build labor is. In fact when we do wheel build specials in the winter the labor is cheaper and there is a discount on the parts. I know enough people in the reputable shops in the area that I would feel secure in saying that nobody out there worth patronizing is going to gouge you on the parts to make up for cheaper labor.
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