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Version vom 11. Oktober 2013, 10:04 Uhr
Old English Almost all English 3-speeds have Sturmey-Archer rear hubs, and there have been many different models since the company started in 1902. Sturmey-Archer was a division of Raleigh Industries until autumn, 2000, when the parent company ran into financial difficulties. Sturmey-Archer (U.K.) was rendered homeless by various corporate maneuvers. For a while it appeared that it would disappear entirely into bankruptcy. The land the factory stood on was sold, and Sturmey-Archer was nearly liquidated by a corporate raider. Fortunately, a Taiwanese company called SunRace came to the rescue, and bought the company assets more or less intact. The machinery and stock were moved to Taiwan. SunRace resumed production of Sturmey-Archer hubs -- some pre-existing models, many new ones.
Sturmey-Archer quality had been on a downward slide since the early 1960s, as the company's engineering efforts shifted from trying to make a better product, as they had been through the first half century, to finding ways to make an acceptable product cheaper. Sturmey-Archer's quality peaked probably in the late '50s.
SunRace spent a great deal of money moving the machinery from England to Taiwan, but when it arrived, it turned out that most of the machinery was worn-out junk, no longer capable of manufacturing parts to the degree of precision appropriate to the 21st century.
I heard an interesting anecdote from a Sturmey-Archer veteran employee, now with SunRace/Sturmey-Archer: Back in the day, sometimes a batch of internal parts would be just a bit out of tolerance, maybe a bit too small, or a bit too large, whatever. The production people would take a sample to the engineering department, where a grey-haired engineer would check it out and often say "Well, it is a bit out of spec, but not really enough to cause failure, so let's let it go."
SunRace didn't have those engineers who had grown up with Sturmey-Archer in their blood, so when they found a batch of out-of-spec parts, they would say "That's out of spec! Melt it down, and make new ones, and do it right this time!"
In any case, the quality of Taiwanese production from SunRace/Sturmey-Archer so far has been excellent, generally better than the quality of later English production. Sturmey-Archer's selection of multi-speed hubs is much wider than that of the other manufacturers. Sturmey-Archer hubs tend to be lighter than the competitors'. SunRace has also introduced many new models, including an 8-speed internal-gear hub, a fixed-gear three-speed and an updated version of the Dynohub generator. Many Sturmey-Archer hubs -- even the 8-speed -- can fit the narrow dropout spacings of older bicycles. .
Some folks don't believe that the Taiwanese can make stuff as well as the British did, but there's no factual basis for that belief, and in many cases this attitude may be traced to racism.
Aktuelle Sturmey-Archer Modelle und die meisten anderen seit den 1930er Jahren
Cells with pink backgrounds identify current models as of 2010.
Quick Reference | ||
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2-speeds | 3-speeds | 4-speeds |
5-speeds 1967-2000 | 5-speeds 2000- | 7-speeds |
8-speeds | 1-speed brake hubs | Front hubs |
Individual models Links to individual models are mostly for older models. | |||||||||||
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AB | AB/C | AC | AG | AM | AR | ASC | AT3 | AW | AWC | BF | BFC |
BF/C | BFT | BR | BRC | BRT | FB | FC | FG | FM | FW | GH6 | K |
KB | KBC | KS | KSW | KT | KTC | S5 | S%-2 | S3C | SAB3 | SBF | SBR |
Spr.5 | Spr.7 | ST | SW | T | TB | TBC | TBF | TBFC | TCW | TF | VT |
Zwei Gänge
Drei Gänge
Vier Gänge
Fünf Gänge (1967-2000)
Fünf Gänge (ab 2000)
Sieben Gänge
Acht Gänge
Ein Gang Bremsnaben
Vorderradnaben
Siehe auch
- Sturmey-Archer Web site -- information on current hubs
- Sturmey-Archer Heritage Web site -- information on hubs from 1902 through 2000.
- Tony Hadland's Web Sturmey-Archer pages-- detailed history through 2000, and technical information
Quelle
Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Sturmey-Archer Bicycle Hubs von der Website Sheldon Browns. Originalautor des Artikels ist Sheldon Brown.