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4 comments
if you're using an alloy freehub it's really important to make sure that the lockring is *really* tight and there's no play, like SiD says above. if you do the lockring up tight enough you can minimise the notching on the splines.
some alloy freehubs (american classic for example) have steel inserts to prevent the notching.
Yip - recently had new groupset put on bike. Went from 9 to 10 speed. The 10 speed cassette is narrower than the 9 speed and needs a 1mm spacer between cassette and body to make a snug fit when lockring gets tightened. Mechanic didn't insert spacer. There was a bit of lateral play in the cassette.
The cassette cogs then started moving independently rather than as one single unit and completely ate the free hub body. Managed to get it replaced fairly cheap and got a few spacers - problem solved.
Check there's no movement in the cassette (side to side) when lockring is tightened.
Cassette is an Ultegra and the freehub's a Carbon Ti
Whats the cassette & free hub?
I know the Hope Pro II freehubs are softer for the MTB's so getting decent wheels and then putting a 'heavy' casette on it is not a good idea as it will bite into like you described.
Sounds like you have a softer freehub (weight saving) and a 'heavy' cassette on it.