On Headsets
A headset is a relatively simple set of bearings resting in
cups that connect your fork to your frame. It’s one of the most overlooked
components on a bicycle, but it’s absolutely vital, without it there would be
no bikes, and we’d all have to walk everywhere- awful.
How Headsets Work
The most obvious use of the headset is that it enables the
handlebars to gyrate, although you don’t need a lot of refinement to do that.
Plenty of machines turn just fine without fancy ball-bearing interfaces. The
earliest precursors to the bike, hobbyhorses, were given steering by sticking a
wooden dowel through a hole in the frame and adding animal grease to the joint
for smooth operation. But those early, gimmicky devices had relatively light
performance demands compared to our modern machines. The reason every bicycle
needs a clean, precision-manufactured, properly adjusted headset is not just to
turn, but also to go straight.
That might seem counterintuitive; so let me explain from the ground up. To understand how a headset keeps you going in a straight line, we must first understand how the wheels keep you upright. Bear with me here; I’m a bike mechanic, not a physicist.
When a bike is rolling along, and you lean to the side to turn, the wheels are effectively trying to fall over. The bike's center of mass will naturally want to take the quickest possible route to the ground, which necessitates the front wheel turning. (for proof, let go of your bike while it's standing still. See how the handlebars turn while it falls? Great, now bring it in for repairs) However, once the handlebars start to turn, the forward momentum of the bike and the friction of the tire against the pavement will put force on the outer side of the wheel, making it resist the turn. Thus, moving bikes are basically levers. Think of it like this: the mass of the bike falling to one side of the wheel with gravity is on one end of the lever, the forward inertia is on the other end, and where the tire touches the road represents the fulcrum. According to Newton’s first law of motion, the wheels of the bike will always try to take the path of least resistance, which is why the handlebars turn when the bike falls over (makes for a shorter trip to the ground). But since objects in motion want to stay in motion, momentum constantly persuades the front wheel to keep pointing forward, in line with the propelling energy from the rear wheel. It’s a complicated game where all sorts of constantly changing vectors act on the front wheel, requiring it to oscillate back and forth constantly, often at an imperceptible level, to keep you from falling over. The headset assembly is the nexus of communication and translation for all these forces.
To see this in action, take two Pinarello Dogmas, with
carbon Zipp 404 wheels and a full Campy Super Record grouppo, and line them up
at the top of a hill. On one, lock down the headset so the front wheel is
perfectly inline with the back, but can’t move; leave the other bike normal,
and push them both down a hill at the same time. The Pinarello with the locked
headset will always fall over after just a few feet, but the normal Pinarello
will go until it runs out of momentum. You can also try this experiment with a
single, unconnected wheel, and you’ll notice it travels even further than the
normal bike, proving that unicycles are better than bicycles. As if there was
any doubt.
There’s a common misconception that the gyroscopic forces
created by the wheels spinning are what keep the bike upright, but researchers
at Cornell disproved that theory by building a bike with counter gyroscopes to
resist the forces created by the spinning wheels. Their anti-gyro bike was able
to self-correct and stay upright by the process described above. Although
gyroscopic force might still be a vector in the forward momentum vs. gravity
equation, they aren’t necessary to keep the bike from falling over.
How Headsets Wear Out
Now that we know what headsets do, we can get into how they undo.
Companies like Chris King exist to serve the precision headset market. Every
aspect of their headsets are machined to very tight parameters using the best
possible materials to create a bearing assembly that lasts as long, or longer,
than the frame –assuming it’s lubed and cleaned from time to time. I’ve seen
headsets so contaminated by sweat water and corrosion that they expanded and
broke the frame. This is rare, but headsets, like all bearing assemblies,
eventually fail.
The most common indicator of a dead headset is that it
becomes “indexed.” This means that if you pick up the bike at its saddle and
spin the handlebars the fork will naturally want to settle in the
straightforward position. You’ll be able to feel a little hiccup when you turn
the bars at the point where it hits that notch. This is bad because if the
headset has a bias towards one position it will have a hard time transmitting
the oscillations of the front wheel, meaning you’ll have a harder time
balancing.
This happens because headsets, like all ball bearing
assemblies on your bike, are composed of little metal balls surrounded by
lubrication and sandwiched by an inner and outer race. Headset bearings, unlike
the other bearings on a bike, don’t spin around much; they stay in one area,
wiggling back and fourth as the wheels make their minute course corrections. Unlike
on a hub bearing assembly, where no single area of the race is subjected to
pressure and friction from the bearings for more than a moment, the same little
millimeter-wide area on the headset’s bearing races are subjected to constant
friction in the same spot. The problem is compounded by the fact that the
little movements of the bearing tend to push lubrication away from the
micron-thick contact point where the ball touches the race, and temperatures at
that itty-bitty pinhead spot can get hot enough to deform steel. Miniscule
fractures appear when the ball bearing micro-welds to the race, then pulls
away, creating a notch. As the little divot increases in size, the contact
point becomes larger, which makes more friction, which makes more heat, which leads
to more deformation. What starts as an imperceptible nick quickly becomes a
dent, and then the headset is ruined. This phenomenon is known as “false
brinelling.”
Quick aside: “brinelling,” as opposed to “false brinelling,”
is what happens when a ball gets squished into a race to cause a dent. This
doesn’t happen very often with modern headsets, but I’m sure it can, especially
if the bearing is adjusted too loosely and you’re riding on a bumpy road. The
majority of dead headsets, however, are caused by the bearings digging material
out of the race, a la “false
brinelling.” This process is also referred to as “fretting.”
Oh, but there are more ways to kill a headset: dirt
contamination, water contamination, using the wrong type of lube, and even the
flexing of the fork and frame can damage a headset in more varied and
interesting ways than I have space to write about or you have patience to read
about.
What To Do about a
Worn Out Headset
If you have an indexed headset, and are using open ball
bearings contained in races, you will probably need to replace the whole
assembly. If you’re desperate, you can take the bearings out of their cages and
add some more and that will give you a few extra miles of smooth-ish operation. If you have an old French bike, like a Peugeot,
you’ll need a special “French Standard” headset. Velo Orange makes one. If
you’re replacing the fork, stem, and handlebars too then you can switch to an
English headset. French head tubes usually have an inner diameter of 30.2, same
as the old English, Italian, and Japanese bikes.
If you have a headset with sealed bearings, just buy a new
set and plop them in with plenty of grease; it’ll cost you about $40 to do it
yourself. Just keep in mind that there are at least four internal diameters
that correspond to steerer tube sizes: 1”, 1 1/8”, 1 1/5”, and the rare 1 3/8”.
There are also several outer diameters: 38mm, 41mm, 42mm, 52mm, and some others
that were developed before the “Standardized Headset Identification System”, or
S.H.I.S. There are also internal and external tapers to consider, usually 36 or
45 degrees. And of course, the weirdos at Campagnolo don’t follow the S.H.I.S.
rules and prefer their own sizes. Take note that some companies, like
Specialized, use Campy bearings for some of their integrated headsets, even
though they’re spec’d with SRAM or Shimano shifty bits. Most sealed bearings
are 6.5mm tall, but some are different. The specifications of your headset
bearings are usually indicated on the side of the bearing case, written in
light paint that wears off long before you need to read it. So, good luck.
What separates the crappy headsets most bikes come with from
an excellent headset, like a Chris King or a Cane Creek 100, is the application
of smart engineering. By using articulating sleeves and appropriate race
angles, sophisticated materials, and exacting quality control standards
manufacturers are coming out with headsets that last longer and oscillate more
smoothly all the time. Checking your headset should be part of your annual
tune-up, and if you trust your mechanic and s/he says it’s time for a new
headset, buy quality, keep it clean, and never worry about it again.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Hey if you are wanting to comment, please be aware that Blogger (the host site) needs an update, and right now I cannot respond. Visit my facebook page if you are looking for direct feedback: https://www.facebook.com/bikeblogordie/