The first sleeve that I stripped was MUCH harder than this one. Be careful and don't hurt yourself Im not responsible if you hurt yourself or mess up your board
You can find these wheels here www.icloudwheel.com/products/cloudwheel-donut-120mm-hub-motor-meepo-diy-sleeve-urban-all-terrain-off-road-electric-skateboard-wheels
WARNING ⚠️! Be very careful!!! Make sure when you order you do not follow the guide for Meepo they have on the web. It seems that sometimes they run out of stock of DIY version for Meepo. When this happens the link points you to another version that will not fit the Meepo wheels. This is what happened to me and then they ask you for another 25 dollars to send to you the correct adapter.
@@TylerAdler No. What I mean is that if you follow their buying guide at the web they will point you at the wrong set. This is what I did and now I have to pay extra 25 dollars to get the correct parts. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Dx0qaYp6x8c.html
I did this a little different and I feel it was a bit easier. I used a bandsaw to cut slits around the PU. On top of the notches and in between them. Then I heated it up with a heat gun. Once nice and hot, I used needle nose pliars and push down and out to pop each little section off. Easy peasy. Just an alternative way.
I just finished doing this mod to my meepo nls pro. Used your video as motivation to get it done. Finished result came out great and rides nicely over rougher roads.
Man, no kidding was this a frustrating experience! The first hub took me about 2hrs to remove and install the cloud wheel. The second one only took about an hr. That glue was just not coming off. I tried using a heat gun but that didn’t help much. I basically just had to chisel the rubber and glue off and then remove any excess with a utility knife. Thanks so much for this video as it definitely gave me the confidence to push through the frustrations and get it done. Now that it’s completed, the board rides so much smoother and is a lot more comfortable. 🤘🏾
For sure, the 2nd wheel I did was way more easy then the first if most go like that then it's easy. This video took about an hour to make and the first wheel took another.
This is going to be easy now because of your video bro. Thanks for doing this video at least we got an idea. I hope there's a stock now. Ive got nls pro and it reallt sucks when I ride here in abu dhabi coz the road here are more bricks and I cannot ride on the main street. Thanks bro. 👍🏼
Be very careful when trying to tear off that PU sleeve, wear eye/face protection; I tried a similar thing when trying to remove a sleeve PU sleeve but the small screw driver flipped into my face/lower eye, still have the slight scar too.
I found that and did this for mine but you can also blow torch them and the pu will just melt off like candle wax...took me less than 1hr to totally remove and clean them... just food for thought for whoever is going to do this diy meepo kit.
A quick Google search tells me to not do this... "It's possible to burn polyurethane safely, but it's not trivial. If you burn it at low temperatures, you get hydrogen cyanide, and if you burn it (or, in air, anything) at high temperatures, you get deadly nitrogen dioxide instead."
I actually used ur method first then I just used a bbq pit and blow torched what ever was left and wiped all the pu off..worked just fine for me and slid right on the cloudwheel donut. Greeat video explaining ur diy.
I waited soooo long for these. I have the meepo mini 2, which is just the v3 on a smaller board. I don’t know if I want to invest in these wheels now because I have had so many problems with my board with the battery, esc and motors. 1 of my motors meepo still refuses to replace which is VERY frustrating. I absolutely loved my meepo but now I don’t know what to think. They already sent a new esc and battery, just trying to get a motor. Then I will finally be able to ride again. Thank you for this awesome video. Keep on riding man. Also my dad has been a BMW mechanic for like 20 years or so, so I love BMW’s, what car do you have?
Technically yes but you need 4 doughnuts instead of 2. The inner diameter of the hubs is the same on all meepo hubs motors(idk about shuffle). 90mm or 100mm is the outer diameter .
This depends on your roads. I've used the '90s, the 100s and then the 120 cloud wheels. I highly recommend the 120 cloud wheels but that's because I have very bumpy roads. If you're within a city and you have asphalt everywhere do the 100s, they were great.
My board rides so much smoother now. No more worrying about the smaller sticks and rocks that could have previously caused a crash. Still getting used to them but they seem to provide the same handling as the stock wheels.
I drilled holes on the sides of the rubber then jammed a flat head through the holes to rip off big chunks. Finished it off with a wire wheel. Wasn't pretty, but that glue was gnarly on mine.
It cannot be this easy. ... I was looking at the cloudwheel donuts and my hubs from my meepo v3 and I kinda thought they should work together Didn't realize it was THAT easy
I miss read your comment at first this is the meepo DIY set cloudwheels did a test batch to see if it was possible for people to DIY their own I don't think these are on sale right now but they might be in the future
@@TylerAdler This board is good for beginners for about a month if your lucky. Also in order to get the full millage usage out of it I wouldn't recommend using speed levels 3 or 4 as those speed levels drastically drain the battery. It's good for cruising around town though at a decent 5 to 15 mph on speed levels 1 and 2 for about 6 miles not the advertised 1o mile range. It would be a decent price for the board I go it did as advertised. Board just took a dump. Defective battery and the Meepo customer support which responds to you a day later maybe sucks big time. still no replacement battery, they don't honor the warranty as advertised and they don't have live chat or a number to call. They also make you jump through hoops watching videos and demand you record videos of you attempting to repair and diagnose the problem with the board on your own with tools you may not even have...