Edit: Thanks for support! Right now my plan is to try and replace the grease in the hub with something known to work in low temperatures.
So I got some new wheels for my commuter and on my first ride, after ~3 miles it feels like I'm getting some chain skipping - I wasn't - then soon after the hub completely stops engaging and I walk home.
Never had that happen before. Thought it might be a cold temperature issue but bringing the bike indoors overnight didn't seem to resolve it right away, but eventually something did. A short test ride later and the hub froze up again.
They're Hunt wheels, I reached out and they said it's unexpected but probably not because of the cold temperatures (about 20F). They sent a new set and the exact same thing happened on the first ride, about the same distance.
I'm leaning toward it being a temperature thing, and they just have too thick of a grease in the freehub that is getting thicker in the cold? If this is the case, would it be simple to pull apart, clean, and replace with a different grease?
I hate driving to work, so I'm tempted to try and pick up a hub locally this weekend to swap (if that's possible, I've never tried and haven't looked into standards or anything).
If it is a temperature thing, it can get to -40F here, and I (usually) still bike to work in those temps, so let me know if there's anything I should "shop for" in a replacement.
If anyone has any other ideas what could cause this, let me know! I'm worried I used the wrong cassette or something dumb that I don't know about (Hunt support didn't seem to think so). I suppose there is the chance that I just got 2 bad sets in a row.
More info:
- HUNT 4 Season Gravel wheelset
- Shimano/SRAM HG Splined
- Cassette: Shimano CS-LG300 CUES LINKGLIDE HG 9sp Cassette 11-41t
- The wheel's freehub came with a spacer for compatibility with different cassette types and I am not using the spacer: A guide on when to use the spacer
For what it's worth, Hunt has been great to work with
I doubt longevity would be a problem. LinkGlide is supposed to be so much chunkier than Hyperglide that it should be incredibly durable. After all one of the purposes for it is to withstand electric mid drive torque. Those put torque similar to standing pedaling through the drivetrain on a regular basis.