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I have a single speed bike with a flip-flop hub and recently I decided to try out the fixed side. When testing it out in the car-park I was applying backpressure to brake and found sometimes the mechanism slipping. I tried and recreated it a few times but I could not tell whether it was something in the machine slipping or just the tire slipping on the ground.

Is it normal for the tire to slip on the ground a little bit? All I did was to loosen the bolts, flip the wheel over and swap chain, and tighten up the bolts again. Is there any way it's possible to do the conversion 'wrong' or have slipping in the crank/hub? I don't want to ride the bike on the road like this if it could be unsafe.


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  • Just out of curiosity, where did you procure your bike? The reason I ask is because leaving a lockring loose could prove a regrettable mistake and most LBS would double check that it was tightened. (Also, you've posted a bunch of questions about it!)
    – WTHarper
    Dec 4, 2012 at 2:16

2 Answers 2

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It is absolutely possible to skid the back wheel, but you really need to be deliberate about it to do it. In this case, however, it sounds like you were applying back pressure to slow down and noticed something surprising, so it was not likely to be the tire skidding. It was probably the cog slightly loosening.

If you're going to apply any back-pressure at all, you must have a properly installed lockring screwed on after the cog. A lockring is a small device that has a reversed thread, so that it prevents the cog from unscrewing when reverse pressure is applied.

Lockring

The best practice is to ride hard for a while without applying any backpressure to make sure the cog is seated tightly into its threads, then tighten the lockring to make it hard flat against the cog.

Track cyclists sometimes skip the lockring because they usually don't apply much backpressure, but if you're riding on the street and using the pedals to brake, you need a lockring and it needs to be tight.

Here's a youtube video. There are others. I don't agree with the video about using locktite (use grease instead).

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  • Definitely check the lock ring and make sure its tight if you're feeling a slipping sensation.
    – Benzo
    Dec 3, 2012 at 15:00
  • Could you add some details about what/where the lock ring is and how to tighten it?
    – wim
    Dec 3, 2012 at 23:11
  • @Mac, thanks for adding the photo and link.
    – Angelo
    Dec 4, 2012 at 0:47
  • I've edited my question to include a photo of the hub. Is that a clear enough view to tell if that's my lockring in the right place? It looks kinda like the one in this picture, but it has six dents instead of two.
    – wim
    Dec 4, 2012 at 4:30
  • Looks OK. It probably needs tightening: first the cog, then the lockring. Keep in mind that the lockring has LEFT-HAND threads. Any bike shop can do this for you easily if you don't have a spanner and chain-whip.
    – Angelo
    Dec 4, 2012 at 4:54
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The fixed gear mechanism is very simple - the cog is wound onto its thread so that when you pedal forward you are tightening the screw (as well as moving the bike forward).

The opposite is also true, when you apply backward pressure, you're not just stopping, you're trying to loosen the screw. Most often you won't budge the cog, but it is possible that a lot of backward pressure (e.g. slowing down or tricks like track stands) and without a way to inhibit the cog loosening, the cog will loosen (and indeed come off).

This is what I imagine is happening here. A loosening of the cog and lack of connection between your leg direction and the wheel's motion.

You did nothing wrong by just flipping the wheel and using the other side. The key is the lockring - this attaches to the hub but on a contra-thread, so you tighten it when the drive cog is tight, but backward pressure doesn't loosen it.

The issue is safety. I used to ride without a lockring, but after a few instances of the cog coming loose, I relented - it is certainly safer on the road and for the sake of a few dollars/points/local currency units, there's no real downside to a lockring (apart from being a little fiddly to remove, but you don't do that very often).

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  • I think you may be right.. because after it slipped on backpressure, I pedalled forward hard and it actually slipped forwards again. Does my hub already come with a lockring on it? How can I tell / what do they look like?
    – wim
    Dec 3, 2012 at 23:15
  • It is quite possible you don't have a lockring - they are a small bolt type circle with a few notches in them for grip with a specific lockring tool - e.g. wiggle.co.uk/miche-fixed-track-sprocket-lockring - you are able to ride perfectly well without one - but for road use it is safer to use one.
    – Unsliced
    Dec 4, 2012 at 9:05
  • See the picture I've edited into my original post. It looks pretty much like what you've described
    – wim
    Dec 4, 2012 at 12:42

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