If you're the kind of person who likes to tinker then a wheel jig like Park’s TS-8 makes the whole process of fiddling with your hoops a whole lot easier, and building them from scratch a lot less stressful. This stand is aimed at home mechanics. It isn’t particularly cheap but it's very sturdy and simple to use.
Weighing in at 4.5kg the TS-8 is a hefty beast, constructed from three substantial steel plates. There's a neat sliding dropout arrangement to fit any width of hub (up to 170mm), and the stand is long enough to cope with anything from a 16" wheel to a 29er with a tyre. One side of the stand is slotted, and into the slot fits a gauge to help you get your wheels just so.
I used the TS-8 to build a couple of 700C wheels. The stand certainly made the job a whole lot less fiddly and annoying than trying to use an old fork with an allen key Blu-Tacked to the blade. The gauge is fairly basic: a sliding metal plate with a knob on the end that you can use to judge lateral and radial wobbles. The plate was a bit sticky out of the box and needed some judicious filing to get it to move smoothly but once fettled it was fine.
Checking the dish of your wheel is simply a case of flipping it in the dropout, and checking both sides with the gauge in the same position. The gauge is sprung, so you can rotate it out of the way while you turn the wheel round.
The TS-8 is designed so that it can be bolted into place as a permanent fixture, or clamped to a table. It's pretty well behaved even if you just rest it on a flat surface.
So do you need one? At £125 it isn't a cheap bit of kit but it's half the price of the pro level TS-2, and very usable. There are cheaper wheel stands out there but you can rest assured that this one will last; it's certainly well built. The gauge is a bit basic but works fine, and the wheels I've built seem to be pretty round…
Verdict
Very sturdy jig for the wheel-fettling enthusiast
road.cc test report
Make and model: Park Tool TS-8 wheel truing stand
Tell us what the product is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?
Designed especially for the home mechanic, the TS-8 allows accurate wheel truing at an economical price. Accepts wheels from 16” to 29”, with or without the tire mounted. Innovative sliding dropout allows quick wheel installation, no matter what the hub width (up to 170mm). Dishing (centering) is performed by simply flipping the wheel in the stand. Constructed from heavy gauge steel to resist flexing, the TS-8 can be used freestanding or bolted to a bench for extra stability.
Rate the product for quality of construction:
8/10
Rate the product for performance:
7/10
Rate the product for durability:
9/10
Rate the product for value:
6/10
Did you enjoy using the product? Yes, did the job just fine
Would you consider buying the product? Yes
Would you recommend the product to a friend? Yes
Age: 38 Height: 190cm Weight: 98kg
I usually ride: whatever I'm testing... My best bike is: Genesis Equilibrium with SRAM Apex
I've been riding for: 10-20 years I ride: Every day I would class myself as: Experienced
I regularly do the following types of riding: time trialling, cyclo cross, commuting, sportives, general fitness riding, fixed/singlespeed, mtb, Mountain Bike Bog Snorkelling, track
and those stem bolts are far too tight, you should be able to turn them by hand!
So it's got to the stage that even a pedestrian can be responsible for a cylists death but not held accountable. The fact a retrial had been...
This is all standard stuff as we all know. What is worse is while they work on improving these existing routes they pretend like we don't exist....
As a large and heavy person who strides out when walking I have had people walk out in front of me from shop doorways without looking, some of...
Careful what you wish for tory boy.
Especially :- "the cyclist, Brian Fitzgerald, who works as a banker with Credit Suisse," He's not got a lot going for him - a cyclist AND a banker.
These days mate, if you say you're a motorist you get arrested and thrown in prison.
Generally "made from bamboo" means Rayon/viscose. It's not made from oil, but it can still make microplastics.
This increase is good news for the cycling industry it will drive people off zwift back onto rl riding and hopefully resume buying clothing and...
£2,299 seems like a bargain for a carbon bike, with 105 and disc brakes in the current market. and the purple colour is lovely