I had the very same problem a few years ago breaking spokes on the same side and the same spokes. Turns out the hub was screwed up. Had two holes (were the spoke goes through) that had more wear then the others. So no matter how many times I replaced the spokes they would break right at the elbow after about a week.
I finally bought a Husky wheel with 12g spokes and have thousands of miles with no problems.
Here is the post from http://motorbicycling.com/f3/rear-wheel-spokes-bearings-570-3.html
I finally bought a Husky wheel with 12g spokes and have thousands of miles with no problems.
Here is the post from http://motorbicycling.com/f3/rear-wheel-spokes-bearings-570-3.html
I just tried something and I think I found the problem thank's to Joe and cityevader. Welcome to the forum by the way
It is so obvious now but I guess sometimes you just need someone to point it out. I used another spoke and noticed there seemed to be more play in the hub were the one spoke alway's breaks. The diameter of that hole is bigger then the other's. I most have damaged it before but never noticed. There just does not seem like the head of the spoke has enough shoulder there which makes sense why the head always breaks off.
I'm just going to get a new set of wheels these are over five years old.
Thank you cityevader and godfather
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