Cable Housing Part II: Installation
As I mentioned in the previous article, the key to getting
the best possible shifting and smoothest breaking is to have fresh, well-prepared
cables and housing. In this article we’ll go over how housing is properly
installed, but I’ll also show you some tricks that will lengthen the lifespan
of your housing. For this article, Adam, one of the mechanics at The Bike Lane,
graciously provided his knowledge and the shop provided the scenery. The goal of this piece is to give you a
solid understanding of what the mechanic is doing with your bike and money, but
if you want to use this article as a supplement to a how-to, that’ll work.
Tools:
If you want to do your own cable replacement, normal diagonal
sheers like the kind you see near the hinge on a pair of needle nose pliers
won’t have the bite to cleanly snip through stainless steel cables and housing.
You need hardened, purpose-built cable cutters, and a good pair will set you
back about $50. You’ll want a sharpened spoke or similar poking device too. And
a bench grinder or file is necessary for preparing brake housing. A tape
measurer will come in handy too.
Due to the high cost of quality cable cutters, I like to
protect my investment with occult methods:
Measuring:
The basic rule for measuring housing is that you want to use
as little as you can without impairing the function of any other component.
What this means for every component is different, so here’s a quick rundown:
Shifters: cut the housing just short enough so that you can
turn the handlebars all the way to the left and right without binding or
kinking. If you think you might raise your handlebars, add a little extra length.
It’s better to have too much housing than too little.
Here’s Adam measuring before cutting:
Brakes: The trick with brakes, whether they be front or
back, is that the housing should go straight out of the barrel adjuster for about
two thumbnail lengths before any kind of bend.
This one’s too short:
This one’s too long:
This one, cut by The Bike Lane, is just right:
The front brake housing should go straight down to the brake
with a nice parabolic curve to the handlebar, like so:
Avoid having the front and rear housing touch when the
handlebars are straight, or else they’ll make creaking noises when they get
dirty and rub against each other.
Rear derailleur lasso: In the previous article we learned that
tight bends tend to wear housing out quickly, and the rear derailleur housing
is usually the tightest bend on the bike. You don’t want the housing to enter
the rear derailleur with any angle to it at all or it will put stress on the
ferrule –the end cap. If the ferrule is plastic the little shifter wires will
bust out the side. If the ferrule is metal the housing will kink just before
entering the derailleur. There is a mathematical formula for finding housing
length based on where the frame stop is in relation to the derailleur hanger,
but it’s really boring and doesn’t account for design differences in derailleur
models. Look up “outer housing length chart” if you’re curious. A Shimano tech
rep once told me that you want the length of two thumbnails of straight housing
right at the barrel adjuster and again at the point where the housing enters
the frame. This isn’t possible on certain frames, like the Trek Domane and
Cervelo R3, where housing exit hole is so close to the rear derailleur that the
best you can do is trace an oblong half-circle. In my experience, bikes fresh
out of the box from Taiwan or wherever they were assembled almost always come
with too short of rear derailleur housing. If you’re trying to figure out why
your new bike is having shifting issues within the first hundred miles that
can’t be resolved by fiddling with the barrel adjuster, the rear lasso is a
good place to start your investigation.
Here are two good examples:
Preparation:
In the last article I talked about how shift housing wears
unevenly when subjected to a sharp bend, so that some of the wires at the ends
will start to poke out beyond the plastic. To help mitigate this issue, the
mechanic will bend the derailleur housing prior to cutting it.
Before a cable is ever run through a piece of housing, there
are special preparations the mechanic does. Both brake and shift housing need
to be perfectly flat at the ends. For shift cable that’s easy: just snip the
housing perpendicular to the cutters, using a straight edge or the corner of a
table as a guide. The inner plastic sometimes gets pinched, so a sharpened
spoke or similar pointy thing will open it back up.
Some cable cutters come with a pointy thing:
And here’s what the end should look like, with an aluminum
ferrule:
Brake housing is tricky. Here’s what a freshly cut piece of
brake housing looks like:
That metal gnarl there at the end will make the brakes feel
terrible when it scratches against the cable. In this case the mechanic will
probably cut the end again to make it cleaner, but then he’ll take it to the
grinder:
And the finished end will be flat so that it sits evenly
against the ferrule:
A Note on Ferrules:
Brake and shift housing have different outer diameters, so
they need different ferrules. Brake ferrules are almost always made of metal,
usually a steel alloy. Some brakes don’t require a ferrule.
Shift housing gets weird though: there’re plastic, aluminum,
and brass ferrules. There’re ferrules with noses. There’re ferrules that are
keyed to a specific component. And there’re special rules for when and where
you should use each type of ferrule. These rules vary from manufacturer to
manufacturer, of course, so it’s best to check the manual or ask a company
representative. Generally speaking, you use plastic ferrules whenever the housing
ends are pressed against the frame so that if the cable gets a little loose the
rattling ferrule won’t scratch or chip any paint. Another time you might use a
plastic ferrule is if the component you’re connecting the housing to is plastic
–the hard ends of metal ferrules can dig into the soft plastic and create play
over many years of use. Again, refer to the owner’s manual. Before putting a
ferrule on a cable end I like to add a dollop of brand-specific cable grease to
the inside.
Finishing up:
Putting the housing onto the bike is easy, just fill the
holes in the frame and components with one end of the housing or the other.
Finding the right holes on some shifters is tricky, so I like to thread a cable
through first. Before you do that, always shift into the smallest cog on the
front and rear shifters. It’s easier to get the cable through that way.
Once you get all the housing on and the cable routed and
secured with the fixing bolt, but before you tune anything, squeeze the brakes
and give the shift cable a tug. This will press the housing into the ferrules
and prepare the system for final adjustments.
A note on frames with internal cables or housing and no internal guides:
This stuff is best left to the professionals and their
specialized tools. But if you must do it yourself, get a powerful magnet, a
spoke bent into a hook, and a small LED light that can fit into tight spaces. Here's an article I wrote about it a while back: http://bikeblogordie.blogspot.com/2013/06/toolz-of-trade.html Basically, you’re going to thread the cable in first and let it get picked up
by the magnet on the outside of the frame, near the exit hole. Then you search
for the cable with your LED and grab it with the hook. Use that cable as a
guide for the housing. Professional internal routing kits work a little
differently and make the job easier, but with practice the method above works
fine.
Last step, tuning your bike:
That’s a massive topic we’ll save for another article.
Thanks for reading!
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