Cube Stereo 160 S 750 2022 Specs Modifications

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
The other 40 wheels around here, from our cars, traktors, kids trailer, kids bikes, lawn mower,... all have normal Schrader valves, and I inflate them with a tyre inflator like you sometimes see at gas stations.

The Decathlon Rockrider E-st900 came with strange valves named Presta, so I drilled the wheels to accept Schrader too.

The Cube also came with those road bike Presta valves, but drilling the wheels made me hesitate a bit, because they are narrower, and the surface is a bit more pointed.
I always used a hand pump or these small adapters, which have to be removed first to open the presta valve, then put on again, inflate, take off, close the Presta, put on, cap on.
20230428_113307rs.jpg


But now I bought this:
20230428_111851rs.jpg



The trick here is that the ennoying Presta valve is removed permanently, and the adapter itself has a
Schrader valve.
20230428_113512rs.jpg


It's simply bolt on and self-sealing, so nothing to drill, modify or seal.
The inner valve is removable like all Schrader valves, for filling up tubeless fluid.
 
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E-MAD MALC

Active member
Subscriber
Nov 16, 2021
405
239
EAST SUSSEX
The other 40 wheels around here, from our cars, traktors, kids trailer, kids bikes, lawn mower,... all have normal Schrader valves, and I inflate them with a tyre inflator like you sometimes see at gas stations.

The Decathlon Rockrider E-st900 came with strange valves named Presta, so I drilled the wheels to accept Schrader too.

The Cube also came with those road bike Presta valves, but drilling the wheels made me hesitate a bit, because they are narrower, and the surface is a bit more pointed.
I always used a hand pump or these small adapters, which have to be removed first to open the presta valve, then put on again, inflate, take off, close the Presta, put on, cap on.
View attachment 112975

But now I bought this:
View attachment 112967


The trick here is that the ennoying Presta valve is removed permanently, and the adapter itself has a
Schrader valve.
View attachment 112977

It's simply bolt on and self-sealing, so nothing to drill, modify or seal.
The inner valve is removable like all Schrader valves, for filling up tubeless fluid.
Another quarter of a gram you've added to your bike can you tolerate it 😀
 

Eliadn

Member
Jul 25, 2022
95
41
Croatia
What's right with them. They are flimsy, fiddly to use and completely pointless on a MTB wheel. Can understand it on a road bike with razor thin wheels but unnecessary on a MTB.
I dunno, never had problems with any valve type. I take care not to break the valve off when using a small hand pump. Perhaps they could be shorter though...
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
I dont really like the Prestas, but for me it's basicly ease of use of the Schraders because the inflator on compressed air is always ready for the rest of my vehicles.
 

Bummers

Well-known member
Mar 12, 2022
584
539
UK
That's the thing, there was nothing wrong with the Schrader valve and the presta doesn't improve on it at all, feels more like a step backwards.
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
The Pirelli M back tyre is worn out.
In the compromise between mud, asphalt, traction, rolling resistance,... it suited me better than the Pirelli R.

At the front I keep the S with the big knobs.
And at the back, trying the Pirelli Scorpion H now.

There was only 10mL of the +-60mL tubeless milk remaining.
20240203_142750rs.jpg
 
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E-MAD MALC

Active member
Subscriber
Nov 16, 2021
405
239
EAST SUSSEX
I'm running the maxxis shorties front and rear in this shite weather bloody marvelous in the mud gòe grip don't know how long the wiĺ last on other surfaces
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
Pirelli Scorpio M vs H

The M looks like the Maxxis Ikon,
the H looks like the Maxxis Rekon-Race.
20240203_144447rs.jpg


Looking at the pattern, it will be better on asphalt, and similar in mud.
20240203_144455rs.jpg


20240203_144616rs.jpg
 
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BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
I'm running the maxxis shorties front and rear in this shite weather bloody marvelous in the mud gòe grip don't know how long the wiĺ last on other surfaces
I do +-30% asphalt, with that profile my teeth fall out of my mouth :)
 

Bummers

Well-known member
Mar 12, 2022
584
539
UK
The Pirelli M back tyre is worn out.
In the compromise between mud, asphalt, traction, rolling resistance,... it suited me better than the Pirelli R.

At the front I keep the S with the big knobs.
And at the back, trying the Pirelli Scorpion H now.

There was only 10mL of the +-60mL tubeless milk remaining.
View attachment 133777
60ml?! I use 140😂
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
Since a few times, the fork steering fights back a bit, feels like the steering has a few set positions, no continuous anymore.

Who knows which bearings kit do I need?

I found things online, but never a reference to what bike exactly it fits

Any tools I need? I saw this:

 

E-MAD MALC

Active member
Subscriber
Nov 16, 2021
405
239
EAST SUSSEX
Evening Buddy
All I know is the steerer tube on the Cube bikes are 56mm top and bottom
You've got the internal ròuting headset so can't suggest anything all I know is the tools I used to swap the headset out were these two tools didn't buy into park tools for these cos not really used that much
1708291078510.png

1708291135751.png
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
It seems my bike has the: ACROS AZF-1035 headset.

240224_145856_screenshot.jpg


This is the zs56 icr at the top, and the zs56 blocklock at the bottom.

This shop on Ebay sells the bearings separate, but unfortunately no stock.

For all bikes using the ACROS AZF-1035 Headset Bearing Kit
Upper Bearing - MH-P03K
Lower Bearing - MH-P25K


240224_153223_screenshot.jpg
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
52mm/40mm/6.5mm/36gr/45gr

41mm/30.15mm/36gr/45gr/7mm
41mm/30.20mm/36gr/45gr/6.5mm

Which one is the best fit?


The bearings of this set looks similar too:
 

E-MAD MALC

Active member
Subscriber
Nov 16, 2021
405
239
EAST SUSSEX
It seems my bike has the: ACROS AZF-1035 headset.

View attachment 135088

This is the zs56 icr at the top, and the zs56 blocklock at the bottom.

This shop on Ebay sells the bearings separate, but unfortunately no stock.

For all bikes using the ACROS AZF-1035 Headset Bearing Kit
Upper Bearing - MH-P03K
Lower Bearing - MH-P25K


View attachment 135089
Are you still trying to source these bearing
Cos this is where I can pick these up
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
Still trying to get them. Or better said: I was still trying to be sure the references are OK.

Did you buy and install them on a Cube with ICR and blocklock ?
 

E-MAD MALC

Active member
Subscriber
Nov 16, 2021
405
239
EAST SUSSEX
No mate
I must admit I still like to run my cabling out side to me it's just more convenient when swapping things out and servicing
I have slackened the head angle to 64°
I'm finding it ok
 

BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
So I measured the bearing, 52mm/40mm/7mm is the one at the bottom of the ACROS headset.
Ordered Sunday evening 21h, delivered Monday 10h30. Incredible.

Besides these, I ordered multiple others, to be sure to have one that fits.

240305_112554.jpg



With some precision mindset, it was easy to replace.
 
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BeBiker

Active member
Aug 26, 2020
700
421
Belgium
This is how the old bearing looks, after cleaning.
My guess is that some water got above this lower bearing, and slowly entered through the upper sealing to the inside.

20240303_194701rs.jpg


The ICR Internal Cable Routing is a bit messy, but with some patience it's ok.

20240303_185643rs.jpg


The new bearing inside:

20240304_184223rs.jpg
 
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