I just got the tool to measure the spoke tensions, it's an interesting tool and I found it very useful. This is me taking some measures one by one on each side.
I asked about it in several bike stores they didn't even have it. To my surprise, my manually adjusted spokes were not so bad in tension in the 20% variance (let's say, within the recommended tolerance level). Here the first measurements of my wheel:
Ideally, when you keep decreasing the tolerance to a lower %, more alerts will show up where you can keep adjusting the tension on each spoke to achieve equal values against an adjacent one:
I don't think is very easy (and necessary) to achieve equal tension on each spoke (as long as you don't surpass the tolerances) as the more you adjust, the more untrue your wheel becomes, so it's kind of hard to keep a good truing-spoke tension level balance. There lies the trick. I'll keep you posted when I can refine my adjustments and take further measurements in the future.
The standard measurement according to the app was 28 for the left side and 32 for the right side (these values are from the tool, there's a conversion table to kg) and I suspect these values are not far from the limit of tension of these spokes (Specialized to not publish the turbo spoke specifications, only the diameter which could be between 2 or 2.3 mm. It was 2.3 in my case). The app starts asking the diameter, shape, and material to calculate an approximate recommended value for the tension if you don't have that from your manufacturer (it was easy to deduce the spokes were steel with a magnet).
With this tool and a cheap centering device (which didn't fit very well for the back wheel of the Turbo bike BTW, because the hub is larger than a normal wheel but I could manage) I now feel much more confident in doing this myself. I even changed the 2 broken spokes without much issues (I just needed to replace some worn spoke nipples in the process).
I know I should leave this task to the dealer as the bike is still under warranty, but I just felt I wanted to do this myself for two main reasons:
- I want to learn how to do it (I love doing bike maintenance and mechanics myself)
- I don't trust my dealer as they're not a spoke specialists, they're just a regular sports store.
Now I feel like if I buy a new rim and a few extra spokes, I can do a new wheel all by myself.