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I'd stay away from Dura-Ace though as they use different/rarer/more expensive freehub bodies. Nothing more recent will fit DA 7400 hubs, and 7700 onwards are Ti except for 7800 which were alu and aren't compatible with most cassettes. The hubs themselves are excellent, but spares are not cheap, assuming you can find any.
Later,
Stephen
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If you don't like loud freehubs look to Shimano. You won't get high flange of course but the 9 speed era road hubs are very classic in appearance, reliable and inexpensive. 105 5500, Ultegra 6600, and DA 7700 are all classy, silver with a slim middle section. They are well sealed and have easy to service loose bb bearings. The freehubs are very quiet. That era of hub takes 8/9/10 speed at 7 with a spacer.
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On Jul 27, 2016 09:59, "William Lindsay" <tape...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Personally, I'd recommend NOS Dura Ace 7700 and drop the requirement of High Flange:
>
> Example Ebay Link
>
> I think those are classic enough looking and work great.
>
Yes, those are nice. Also if 50g doesnt matter much 105 5500 or Ultegra 6600 is 99% as good (and good looking). The main difference being a titanium freehub body (that does notch more than steel) and slightly better bearing races and finish.
On Jul 27, 2016 10:06, "Chris Cullum" <cullum...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Jul 27, 2016 09:59, "William Lindsay" <tape...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Personally, I'd recommend NOS Dura Ace 7700 and drop the requirement of High Flange:
> >
> > Example Ebay Link
> >
> > I think those are classic enough looking and work great.
> >
> Yes, those are nice. Also if 50g doesnt matter much 105 5500 or Ultegra 6600 is 99% as good (and good looking). The main difference being a titanium freehub body (that does notch more than steel) and slightly better bearing races and finish.
>
That should be Ultegra 6500 that has the narrow hub waist. 6600 is similar but with a thicker middle section that's less svelte and classic looking.
Yeah, me too. The quieter the better IMO.
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Whatever you do, don't get a Chris King hub if you want quiet! I rode near a guy with one for a while in PBP last year, and it was by far the noisiest hub I'd ever heard; I vowed never to own one, not that that was likely anyway.
BTW, there used to be high flange 600 EX hubs (5/6 speed only) but don't buy these - the freehub body was a loose press fit to the hub shell and unfixable play sometimes developed. This has never been an issue with Shimano hubs other than 600EX, and perhaps some of the even cheaper early hubs prior to AX.
Later,
Stephen (who likes quiet, reliable Shimano hubs)
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sell the house an buy Phil Woods:)
I'm going to bump this up because I'm going to build up a wheelset in the 'near' future, maybe, but I want a light set, so I am not set on hubs or rims, but I was looking at the Grand Bois pricing direct from Japan, and it's not the worst pricing, $220 for a front and rear, depending on what shipping costs are, may be better to buy from Compass (but what I am looking at is not available/not in stock).
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Let me be more specific:High flange100mm OLD QR front. non dynamo130mm OLD QR rear 9-speed ShimanoFrame of reference: I am coming to this from the vintage racing bike world. My other two bikes ('74 Masi and '68 Cinelli) have Campagnolo hubs, freewheels and tubulars.I am building up a new frame, but want to maintain the classic look. I will use a mix of new and vintage parts. I originally planned on 126mm 6 speed, but the builder recommends 130mm 9 speed.Another question: when I ride with friends who have modern bikes, I am often struck by how loud their hubs are when they coast. Is there a way to make a freehub quieter? I have used Phil Tenacious Oil on freewheels with very satisfactory results.Marcus Helman
On Tuesday, July 26, 2016 at 3:48:08 PM UTC-4, William Lindsay wrote:
What are your other physical constraints? 100mm OLD QR I assume in front? Non-dynamo? 120mm in back? 126mm? 130mm? 135mm? something else? Cassette or freewheel? Campy/Shimano/SRAM?
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Does anyone recall the Suzie hubs?? Are they still around? ( new) .. Double check spelling, might be fun as well, classic look modern..( by the way I'm a fan of that as well, buy new when you can to support the guys who do this still).,
Sent from my iPhone
Personally, I'd recommend NOS Dura Ace 7700 and drop the requirement of High Flange:I think those are classic enough looking and work great.
Bill LindsayEl Cerrito, CA
On Wednesday, July 27, 2016 at 7:30:08 AM UTC-7, Marcus Helman wrote:Let me be more specific:High flange100mm OLD QR front. non dynamo130mm OLD QR rear 9-speed ShimanoFrame of reference: I am coming to this from the vintage racing bike world. My other two bikes ('74 Masi and '68 Cinelli) have Campagnolo hubs, freewheels and tubulars.I am building up a new frame, but want to maintain the classic look. I will use a mix of new and vintage parts. I originally planned on 126mm 6 speed, but the builder recommends 130mm 9 speed.Another question: when I ride with friends who have modern bikes, I am often struck by how loud their hubs are when they coast. Is there a way to make a freehub quieter? I have used Phil Tenacious Oil on freewheels with very satisfactory results.Marcus Helman
On Tuesday, July 26, 2016 at 3:48:08 PM UTC-4, William Lindsay wrote:What are your other physical constraints? 100mm OLD QR I assume in front? Non-dynamo? 120mm in back? 126mm? 130mm? 135mm? something else? Cassette or freewheel? Campy/Shimano/SRAM?
On Tuesday, July 26, 2016 at 7:21:42 AM UTC-7, Marcus Helman wrote:I'm planning to build a set of vintage looking wheels. I have decided on Grand Bois rims, but I could use some help on hubs. I am leaning toward SunXCD, but I'm also considering Grand Bois and Velo Orange. Does anyone have experience with, or recommendations for any of these? I like the looks of the Grand Bois, with the round holes and the red dust caps, but I have found the SunXCD's for about $50 less. Velo Orange components seem to have a bad reputation, but I would like to be open minded. Is there anything else I should consider?Best regards,Marcus Helman