DT Swiss EXP hub: Beginner to Master maintenance
Спорт
Let's go from the simplest basic maintenance, to mastering the DT Swiss EXP rear hub. Bearing change and Ratchet upgrades... master them all!
Chapters:
0:00 Introduction
1:17 Basic maintenance everyone can do
5:49 Advanced: Hub disassembly
6:06 Tools
7:51 Non-drive side bearing removal
8:51 Drive side bearing and ratchet removal
11:00 Drive side bearing and ratchet installation
12:28 Non-drive side bearing installation
13:05 Free hub bearing removal
14:31 Free hub bearing installation
16:38 What about the sealing ring?
🛠️ Special Tools 🛠️
EXP Toolkit (HWTXXX00N2544S)
- EXP Ratchet ring tool (HXTXXX00N8387S)
- Long mounting drift/bush Ø15 / 24x60mm (HXTXXX00N5025S)
- Short mounting drift/bush Ø15 / 26x40mm (HXTXXX00N5314S)
- Assembly / disassembly tool Ø30 / Ø32 (HXTXXX00N6106S)
r2-bike.com/DT-SWISS-Tool-Set...
DT Swiss Special Grease (HXTXXX00NSG20S)
r2-bike.com/DT-SWISS-Spezialf...
Scott Shop paper towels
amzn.to/3EOrZNf
⚙️ Replacement bearings⚙️
180/240 Drive side: 1526 (Ø15x26x7mm)
- DT Swiss Part Number: HSBXXX00N3741S
r2-bike.com/DT-SWISS-Bearing-...
240 Non-drive side: 1526 (Ø15x26 x7mm)
- DT Swiss Part Number: HSBXXX00N3741S
r2-bike.com/DT-SWISS-Bearing-...
180 Non-drive side: 6802/61802 (Ø15x24x5mm)
- DT Swiss Part Number: HSBXXX00N2464S
r2-bike.com/DT-SWISS-Bearing-...
Freehub Bearings: 6802/61802 (Ø15x24x5mm)
DT Swiss EXP Manual
www.dtswiss.com/pmt/00/00/00/...
_______________________________________________
Strava:
/ strava
Instagram:
/ ridesofjapan
T - S H I R T S
ridesofjapan.com
Music is from:
www.epidemicsound.com/referra...
========================
S U P P O R T
☮️Those who really need your support☮️
➡︎ donate.redcrossredcrescent.or...
========================
#dtswiss #maintenance #bikehub
Пікірлер: 143
I love my 240EXPs, and no need for a bell on my bike 😉 Another fantastic video Tobias! Thank you
@mlee6050
Жыл бұрын
I'm looking to go 180exp with 54t I believe it is but also add a bell as I very rarely coast and hornit db140 for those car drivers to enjoy
Again, the most logical presentation of irrational content that I love.
One of the best instructional videos I have seen. Outstanding work. Thanks very much. 👍
About the noisy hub... I totally understand your gripe with it, but at the same time you mentioned it couple times as well that it helps you with the wildlife. At the same time, you're in Japan and being urusai might make you be seen as bad gaijin ;) 240EXP owner btw - loving the noise, mainly because pedestrians aren't paying enough attention to their surroundings and sometimes the loud AF ratchet makes them jump out of the way. PS. I'm in countdown mode - gonna be cycling through Japan 2nd time in my life (29.04 - 05.06) in full bikepacking mode (with a bit of credit card travel when the weather goes to crap). Cheers, Tom
Thanks, I just about crapped myself changing my cassette when the whole thing came right off!
Super clear and neat, not to mention super quality! Thanks a lot for clear steps, as well as all the extra details!
So nice to see somebody else using my favourite Scott shop towels!
Thanks a lot for that superb video 😊❤. Unbelievable how easy that is even the upgrade process. Makes life and the regular maintenance so easy.
Excellent video, I will save it for later when I will service my wheel sets. The last 2 wheelsets i bought have DT Swiss hubs, I bought them because i heard they were easy to service and you've confirmed that. Thanks for the detailed video.
woo new rides of japan. Turn up the volume, full screen and normal speed. Noice
It's a no-brainer to buy once there is a maintenance video by RoJ! Recently received my 240 EXP wheelset by LIghtBicycle and love it so far. Thanks for the great content, as always.
One note is to make sure you wear gloves when using the DT Swiss special grease. The grease is Teflon based and does not break down when in gets into your skin/body (read cancer causing).
That's was awesome. Thanks for making that so informative and entertaining!
I never managed to get that bearing underneath the ratchet. Now I know. Thx.
Man what a great tutorial video!! Even includes the fuck ups we all make. I love this guy.
DT Swiss hubs and wheel, are the best to ride, maintenence, and quality for the money. Hassle fre and reliable, I have DT Swiss on my road bike riding off road and tarmac never had to true them for years!
i upgraded from 36 to 54T and initially the ratchet sound was very quiet (but not ALL the time, just suddenly it lost almost all sound lol.) i removed the grease from one ratchet and left the other one with a LITTLE lube, that made the sound way louder. its not THAT big of a difference to upgrade from 36T to 54T but its definately worth it imo. its 9° less crankmovement required for a click! :) 54T is especially AWESOME for technical climbing
Well done amigo. Great info & demo. Exactly what I was after. Cheers
Loved this video, perfect content design, very calm and clear descriptions, and great music. Thanks!
One of my fav Cycling channels
Perfect !!!. Thank you. New DT Swiss wheels/hubs are in the garage, awaiting a new tubeless valve stem. I bought them for the ease of replacing the bearings, as you've shown. Glad to see I wont need to buy a bearing press :-)
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Good to hear! With some regular "basic" maintenance, it will probably be years before you need to think about replacing bearings 👍
Excellent tutorial
Great tutorial and according to DT Swiss youtube channel, it´s Approved! It´s really easy to service the ratchet and for what I read and heard I would advise sticking to the original EXP180 34 ratchet. Slightly worst angle of engagement, sure, BUT way bigger contact surface between the teeth of the ratchets. Cheers RoJ, looking for the Ti~series!!
Great content... Thanks.
Love your vids, man.❤
Great swiss engineering 🤙🏼👍🏼
Great tutorial, thanks!
Awesome video, by the way!
Many thanks forn sharing what's a super helpful video. :0)
Nice tutorial!
I learned the hard way that the DT Swiss tools make the job of replacing all the bearings easier. I ended up purchasing a hub bearing Press which was less expensive. The DT Swiss bearings are so overpriced and I ended up buying the NTN 6802LLB bearings from an industrial supplier local to me. Also, a breaker bar significantly helped in removing the ratchet from the axle.
Excellent Video! Please make a video for front too.
Thank you!
nice! thank you
Perfection.
100% agree - this is why I have 350s on multiple bikes.
@jamble7k
Жыл бұрын
same not tried an exp though
insane production on your videos! do you shoot and edit yourself or have a company doing this for you? stunning!
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Cheers mate! Everything is done in my little torture dungeon 🤫
Superb Video! Could you also do a tutorial on how to do this service on the front hub?
9:05 This is the most difficult part of the disassembly. This nut is self tightening because when you stand and pedal your bike you are actually tightening this nut with extreme torque.
Brilliant video as always. Would love to see a same video done for the older 240s hub (perhaps on your carbon XMC 1200 wheels) as these are the best bang for buck hubs to live with and would apply to a huge number of your viewers as it would work for 350 (updated to be essentially the old 240s) and 370 (updated to be the old 350 and now comes OEM on many bikes).
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
For basic maintenance there’s already this: kzread.info/dash/bejne/pXdhl4-df9nMiaQ.html Cheers!
@lenolenoleno
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan Yeah remember that old gem. Was just keen to see full bearing replacements etc/I think it would be particularly useful for most people with DT hubs. Hey we just want more Rides of Japan content mate ;).
@mlee6050
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan seeing you say put grease in before bearing, does it have to be grease? I been thinking on some stuff to apply anti seize instead
The hubs on my el-cheapo Mavic Aksium disk wheelset, although a pain in the arse because of corrosion, are as easy to maintain as these DTSwiss.
Good guide. Would be even better with a tally of the parts in its own overlay.
Hi. I watched this to see if you do it the same way as I do :-). As you are one that likes a quiet hub, I thought I'd share a tip, I got from an engineer at Tune (the german brand that makes neat stuff for bikes): I had some issues with a Tune Mag rear hub. He advised me to use "Molykote Longterm 2 Plus Extreme Pressure Bearing Grease". I used that stuff in de DT Swiss 240 EXP and got the hub virtually silent. With use the noise came back a little, but no where near as much as with the DT Swiss grease. Give it a try and let me know if you do. Cheers
@11:40 it is useless too keep the bearing sticking out. It goes under the assumption that the bearing gets equal with the mounting face while turning the rathcet in. The spacing on the axle however is 0.6mm larger than the spacing in the hubshell for the bearings, so you push the driveside bearing back further while tapping in the non drive side (you have +/-0.3mm in the rachet house). The result is that the hubshell can move on the outside of the bearings when there is enough side force while riding (not by hand) by at least by 0.6mm. Their is not thought how the hub is build in their manual while writing it I think.
Very detailed video as always. I’m wondering where to buy original NTN bearing in Japan?
NTN bearings, HAMBINI approves. LOL
16:51 on the non-EXP version of the ratchet hubs this ring will be removed when you remove the threaded ring
I’m curious to know the other greases you’ve experimented with to quiet down the noise.
Be careful not to add too much DT grease. I put a lot on in hopes of quieting things down. It ended up spinning and not engaging. Sort of like the initial recall issue they had. Once I cleaned it out and used just a light smear things worked fine. I love the simplicity but miss the quietness of my Campy and WI hubs.
@tomasp3394
Жыл бұрын
Unless you have literally drown it in grease and it had nowhere to go the problem is bad grease type rather than amount. Heavy lithium ball bearing grease can clog up cogs pretty easily, low friction silicone grease make it possible for cogs to swim in grease and still engage just fine while damping the sound.
@andrewlucas246
Жыл бұрын
yep- the hubs need a light grease to run optimally, most normal bike greases will cause spinning as described. There is plenty of room for freewheel sound tuning via grease choice, though unfortunately mostly in the louder direction.
Hi thanks you so much for the video, help me 100%,how can I do the service to the front wheel?God bless you I'm from San Diego California
How much end float should you expect in the free hub ?
Great video tutorial (watched till the end)! 🔥🔥👏🏻 Follow-up question: how much different would the steps, and tools used, be for a DT Swiss GR 1600 Spline (with DT Swiss 350 hub, ratchet) wheel? Maybe you already have a video on that (I could not find it)? With kind regards, Erik
@ridesofjapan
11 ай бұрын
For the old style ratchets, I made cleaning video years ago: kzread.info/dash/bejne/pXdhl4-df9nMiaQ.htmlsi=5bWOMo29RgJOp1iQ That dose not cover the bearing swap though. Sorry!
😎
It is interesting that completely silent freewheel hub mechanism is used in conventional bicycles, but for some reason the annoying, noisy and inneficient one is used for most geared bicycles. I never understood the reason for this.
Parabéns pelo video, mas a dt swiss dificultou muito a manutenção do cubo. O modelo anterior tinha a manutenção mais simples.
Hello, the red washer goes right through the hub and stops against the bearing? Is there a gap between the bearing and the toothing? It happens to me that the red washer moves laterally and the ratchet jumps when pedaling, could that be the problem
Loving your videos 🤓 are the live streams ever coming back again?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Cheers! Not sure I have anything worth sharing in a live steam that I couldn’t do better as a video… but you never know :)
@mediocrecyclist
Жыл бұрын
I really did enjoy those livestreams. Good people talking about bikes is always welcomed 👌
So, does anybody know if the Mavic iD360 should be treated another way? I have had some issues with sub-zero temperatures, so I guess I need to ensure that the lubricant is frost free.
Great video and easy to do on the rear hub.Did I miss something or how do you do the maintenance on the front hub?
@ridesofjapan
6 ай бұрын
Basic front maintenance is just pulling out the end caps, giving it all a clean and pop them back together. Bearings rarely need replacing as they are not subject to either the same forces or same amount of grime as the rear. My front bearings has not yet required any replacement 3-4year in. But disassembly is similar to the rear in that you knock out one bearing with the axle itself. Dt Swiss has a few specific tools for the front as well depending on axle size etc. you can check the service manual here: www.dtswiss.com/pmt/00/00/00/00/00/00/00/10/00/00/04/01/1/MAN_HXD10000004011S_WEB_EN_001.pdf
I wanted to replace my old DT Swiss 370 bearings to a hybrid bearings. How many bearings do i need to get for the front and rear? And what size and model? Thanks
I thought the subject was "meh... " personally, until I found myself comparing DT 240 exp to other hubs today, and I remembered your video. Now it's like a gift from heavens ! ^^ By the way, what are the advantages of going to 54T, besides making the whole thing a lot louder ?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
To me, absolutely nothing ;)
When I changed the bearings on a DT Swiss Hub (broken after less than a year) I used the hard side of the hammer and all the force i got. Only then it moved by fractions of a millimeter. Of course not much help from DT Swiss. Quality!
Comment in support of the channel✋
Mate, do you have a video of your wheel specs that you got from Lightbicycles? Going to order a set of wheels from them but not sure about the 36T or 54T options for the 240 hubs.
@ridesofjapan
10 ай бұрын
The wheels in this video: kzread.info/dash/bejne/X4Vpm5KGfrfgZrA.htmlsi=rimgnFCzijhuTS-t Light bicycle wheelset: kzread.info/dash/bejne/opOA26ahZLqnebQ.htmlsi=f3wfsYodPgZGzHWA
suprt production - great to see your wheels are not plastered with manufactors advertising.
do you have a favorite bearing? i'm not sure those 1526 bearings in the rear 240exp are really that great and none of the normal industrial companies like SFK , NSK or NTN make that size. also LOL on the ring tool and the axle. i made the same mistake and killed a tool not having the axle installed my 1st time too. works MUCH better with the axle installed. also have found some permatex anti seize to be useful on the threads. the copper version makes disassembly the next time even easier. the first time it felt like i was applying north of 100ft/lbs to break it free
What is the function of the spacer?
My local bike shop in Japan after an unrelated service told me they found that all the grease in my hub had gone bad and turned red, so they did me a favour and replaced it....
Quick thought: Why not remove the ratchet ring before knocking the left-hand bearing out to avoid all the tool instability issues?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
It would be more "unstable" to knock the non-drive side out if I already had removed the ratchet first. But of course, if you only want to get the ratchet out, no need to do the non-drive side 👍
@paulbijen
11 ай бұрын
Or just loosen the ratchet ring with an impact (only loose but keep it mostly in), knock out the non drive side bearing and then remove the ratchet ring by hand. The axle should be kept in place by the bearings (sideways) and there shouldn’t be any tension or impacts on other parts… Or am I missing something?
GRAM Master though
I enjoyed watching it. When I clean... I use...What kind of alcohol is it????? ^^::
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Just use some kind of degreaser.
Good video, thanks for the tutorial! Out of curiosity, where did you buy the tool you called the drift to punch out the bearing from the free hub? Can you provide the part number so I know to buy proper tool?
@ridesofjapan
9 ай бұрын
It’s a generic punch bought at a hardware store. Nothing bike specific or bearing specific.
@Adonis-qj1nq
9 ай бұрын
@@ridesofjapan ah ok, thanks. Also does the same kit work for servicing the front wheel?
@ridesofjapan
9 ай бұрын
@@Adonis-qj1nq There's different tools depending on hub model. You can check the technical manual here www.dtswiss.com/pmt/00/00/00/00/00/00/00/10/00/00/04/01/1/MAN_HXD10000004011S_WEB_EN_001.pdf
Were you happy with the ultra low friction 6806 llb bearing for your bb30, or should I go for the llu/2rs seals?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
I didn’t use ultra low friction llb, I put llu in the freehub body. But I’d probably use the original llb+llu combo if I could.
@al-du6lb
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan I heard you say that for the freehub, but what about the older video you did for your bottom bracket?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
@@al-du6lb had no problems for the rest of the time I had the frame. (Sold now) Personally, unless I’m doing some kind of time trial race… witch I’ll never do, I’d probably put LLB sealed bearing in a bottom bracket…. I like to wash my bike pretty aggressively ;)
@al-du6lb
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan Thank you. That's exactly what I was thinking, but like you I was curious. I think i'll go LLB, and I'll definitely use your amazon link for the bb press.
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
@@al-du6lb cheers!
Hello. I think your video is very good, thank you. I have tried to disassemble the thread that carries the integrated bearing, but it is very strong, I have not been able to unscrew it. Any trick or help? It is a Dt Swiss 180 Exp for MTB.
@edumm-jv5cq
8 ай бұрын
Is it necessary to remove the black rubber ring on top of it?
@ridesofjapan
8 ай бұрын
If it’s really stubborn, I think using the vise method, grabbing the tires and using the whole wheel for momentum is the best way. Often requires more force than you think. And remember counter-clockwise :)
anyone else disappointed we didn't get a little freehub soundcheck after all that?
Any update on the bearings? Are they as good as the oem parts? Cheers!
@ridesofjapan
6 ай бұрын
No problems
Have you ever considered onyx hubs for silent coasting?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Too heavy 😉
@peterv3198
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan Lol always sacrifices
@yonglingng5640
Жыл бұрын
There's an alternative: Foss (Taiwan).
Saw a KZread video of an upcoming video game called PaxDei, the game director looked a lot like you. Wondered if you were brothers?
After using the Carbon Ti X hubs, what's your opinion against the DTs 240
@ridesofjapan
9 ай бұрын
I have yet to do any maintenance on the x hub, so can’t comment on that. As for riding, they are both loud as crap… but no obvious problems otherwise. Carbon Ti has the 6bolt option that I prefer. Don’t remember if the 6bolt are an option on the new exp road hubs or not. Xhub smokes the 240 on weight, But by reputation and spare part availability the DT Swiss is pretty hard to beat.
@docmccoy9813
9 ай бұрын
@@ridesofjapan Thanks a lot for your feedback.
How would you compare them to Carbon-t X-hub ?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Have not used my x-hub yet so can’t really say much. But in terms of complexity the exp hub is still easier to deal with.
Wait… I was fully expecting you to at least weigh the Very Light Grease?! Bonus points if you had weighed all the tools.
It would appear that Giant branded hubs are just rebranded DT Swiss. Can anyone confirm this?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Many brands use dt Swiss internals, but if its the old ratchet or the new exp version it’s hard say until you open them up, and depending on model year it can change. So it really hard to say all giant branded hubs have the same dt Swiss internals.
What is the preferred bearing in Japan? NTN?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Ntn is Japanese, so it’s easy to get your hands on.
Are all DT Swiss hubs serviceable without special tools? Because for the life of me, I cannot pull my casette off the hub.
@ridesofjapan
4 ай бұрын
Star Ratchet hubs should come right off with a good tug. I’ve read about people putting the end caps in a vice and pulling the wheel straight up. But I’d be careful to not squeeze the end cap to hard in a vice. Older pawl based hubs like the old 350 might be different( I have no experience with those personally.)
8:29 Does it need 2x each of bearings? 6802 and 1526 ?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
2x 6802 for the freehub body. One of each on the hub itself. Check the description for bearing dimensions/part numbers, note that they differ between 240exp and 180exp hubs on the non-drive side
@mikemercado1957
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan Oh didnt see that. Thanks! Do you have the fronts too? My hubs are built in Xentis Mark1 road wheels. I just read its using DT 240 but not aware there are many 240 models. Mine is a standard old school 2006 hub.
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
If it’s 2006 model, definitely need to look that up… probably very different bearing specs.
So it's like a freewheel hub but more expensive
can i know what type of scott toilet paper you using for cleaning?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Sorry, I was not really clear in the video. but It's not toilet paper, it's their "shop towels" amzn.to/3EOrZNf
Will doing this not damage the bearings?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
In theory you can damage bearings when removing them by tapping the inner bearing race, that's why you generally only remove them when they need to be replaced. When installing new bearings you do it by the outer race which doesn't put any stress on the bearing balls or carriers. But if you use wrong tools or are installing them carelessly by tapping the inner race, then yes in theory you can still damage the bearings.
@dinunclv
Жыл бұрын
@@ridesofjapan should i just try to clean and regrease then without taking them out? They are probably still good and I do not want to damage them.
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
If you think they are still good and don’t feel “crunchy” there’s no need to clean and re-grease them in my opinion. If they feel crunchy but you still want to try and “save” them, I’d first see if you can remove the seal with the bearing in place and give it a good clean and re-grease. If that is impossible, try and remove them as carefully as you can. If they somehow get damaged by you removing them it’s not the end of the world, a new bearing is not that expensive. I’ve yet to damage a bearing by carefully removing them and I’ve reinstalled bearing I removed without issues. But I can not guarantee that this will always be the case.
240's on 2 bikes , no Problems at all...
Which cassette is this?
@ridesofjapan
Жыл бұрын
Ultegra r8100 11-34t
What is the bearing code on a prehub body?
@ridesofjapan
8 ай бұрын
All in the description Freehub Bearings: 6802/61802 (Ø15x24x5mm) (Shimano HG Freehub)
@nadt2711
8 ай бұрын
@@ridesofjapan thank you!
EXP have smaller bearing, I prefer non-exp DT Swiss hubs
No interest in this specific hub. Just here for the high quality tutorial and filmography
Pretty much the same as Mavic hubs.
The ratchet ring removal on exp is a pain, the tool doesn’t sit very far in considering how tight they are in a well used hub. This is my only dislike for their hubs.