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  2. Freehub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freehub

    Freehub vs freewheel hub. The freehub concept answers several drawbacks encountered with the freewheel design: Freewheels are threaded onto an axle hub, using conventional right-hand threads. As the bicycle rider pedals, the freewheel is continuously kept tight, as chain torque is in the right-hand direction. This becomes a problem when the ...

  3. Front freewheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Front_freewheel

    The Shimano Front Freewheel (FFS) was a proprietary bicycle drivetrain design of the 1970s that placed a freewheel between the pedal cranks and the front chainrings – enabling the rider to shift gears while coasting. [2] FFS rear freewheel is different than a standard freewheel because it's "stiff" with more friction than a normal rear freewheel.

  4. Freewheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freewheel

    In the UK, a roller freewheel was patented by J. White and G. Davies of Coventry Machinist Co. in 1881 [7] and fitted to the Chelseymore tricycle, but the pioneers of fitting the freewheel to the safety bicycle were Linley and Biggs Ltd (trading as the Whippet Cycle Syndicate) who fitted a freewheel from the summer of 1894, in part to assist ...

  5. Cogset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cogset

    A freewheel and freewheel hub A freehub (above) for use with a cassette and a threaded hub (below) for use with a freewheel. A freewheel (also known as a block) consists of either a single sprocket or a set of sprockets mounted on a body which contains an internal ratcheting mechanism and mounts on a threaded hub. Threaded rear hubs were ...

  6. Flip-flop hub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flip-flop_hub

    There are a few different variations of flip-flop hubs for BMX bikes that are different from the track style. The most common type of BMX flip flop hub has standard ISO freewheel threads on one side and smaller metric BMX threads (30 mm x 1 mm) on the other side that are designed to work with smaller 14T to 15T BMX freewheels.

  7. Hyperglide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperglide

    The individual sprockets on a Hyperglide cassette or freewheel are designed specifically to work with their neighbours. [3] For example, the 18-tooth sprocket on a wide-range cassette (such as one for a mountain bike) will have a different ramp pattern than the 18-tooth sprocket on a narrow-range cassette, because the number of teeth on the neighbouring sprocket requires a different ramp ...