I will say that the leaning video is pretty good. It helps if you are good mechanically. My only suggestion in addition ito the vid is to count holes, not crosses. All you need to remember for most normal wheels are the numbers
4 (all wheels),
10 for 3 cross wheels and
14 for 4 cross lacing, no matter how many spokes are in the wheel & hub....28hole, 32hole, 36hole, etc. She counts spoke crosses in order to determine the correct hole to use on the rim for starting the 1st crossing spoke placement.....all the others follow, so if you screw this up, you will fail. I would not advise this, but instead count 14 holes over
on the rim from the installed spoke (at the rim) that you are crossing over
at the hub.
If it is a 3-cross lacing pattern, count 10holes over. 4-cross, 14 holes over on the rim. One more tip to be aware of. See the photo below.
After you loosely lace the wheel, take the bows out of the spokes at the flange by force bending them to align with the flange, exiting straight. As you can see above, this one needs work. Make sure every spoke comes out straight and clean from the hub. For every wheel, I measure the ERD of the rim and all required hub dimensions, double checked then written down. Determine how many "crosses" you intend to use, go to prowheelbuilder.com and enter your measurements into the calculator. IT is never wrong. I do this for All wheels no matter new or old. Going backwards or making mistakes is common and we have all gone backwards with wheels before. Good luck!
"Everything Wheels" thread seems missing so I will add one. Everything and anything.
I just finished up a nice custom 26" set for a bike and could not get any brand 559 tire to seat on them. Turns out the bead seat diameter was not 559mm(22"), but 664mm(22.1875")! 1st ever out-of-spec rims for me. Salsa Delgado 26" clinchers. I was pressuring up the tires to 65lbs (ballooner) and they still would not seat, even with grease. This really stumped me until I compared them to a good wheel. . So I bought some similar rims to replace them. Deconstructed and...
Truing the wheel to dead straight is where the rubber hits the road and that really tests your Zen skills...especially an "old wheelset".