Thomas,

I'll tell you soon how this works out, i have a Phil Wheel IRD FW hub
and i'm about to replace it with a sunrace one, at least until i can
figure out if my IRD is trust-worthy or not.

>From my research before, i couldn't find any deal-breaker differences
between the IRD specific free-wheel phil hub and the regular one.

On Jun 8, 1:38 pm, Thomas Lynn Skean <thomaslynnsk...@comcast.net>
wrote:
> I will soon be faced, though, with getting a new rear wheel for a new
> bike. I haven't really decided whether I'm going to go with the IRD-
> specific Phil freewheel hub or whether I'll go with the (what I
> presume to be) "standard" Phil freewheel hub. If I understand
> correctly, the spacing on the latter would probably allow the
> Shimanopore freewheel to fit my frame without finagling, at the cost
> of increasing the dish somewhat. I haven't investigated how much it
> increases it. (If anybody knows, I'd love to know too!) If it
> increases it to near cassette levels... well, then I'd probably say
> goodbye to freewheels entirely. My *main* reason for using them in the
> first place was that the near-dishless nature made the wheel more
> robust than a cassette wheel (now... discuss! :)). Distantly
> secondarily, the front-wheel-ish simplicity of the rear wheel per se
> appeals to me also; a freehub seems inelegantly relatively
> complicated. (Again... discuss! :)) (I gave no thought to bikes until
> cassettes were already the norm; the appeal may not make sense. But it
> isn't born of retro-grouchy nostalgia.)
>

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