Experiences of road...
 

[Closed] Experiences of road wheels

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Looking for a reasonably cheap, but strong rear wheel for my road bike. Weight not a huge concern but spoke strength is as I seem to pop them with alarming regularity. 9 speed shimano compatible.

No strict shortlist as such, but would probably be one of these:
Mavic Aksium (£100ish)
Mavic Cosmic Elite (£175ish)
Mavic Ksyrium Equipe (£170ish)
Shimano RS10 (£75ish)
Shimano RS20 (£80ish)
Shimano RS30 (£110ish)
Shimano R500 (£65ish)
Shimano R600 (£100ish) actually 10 speed only, no good.

Maybe a fulcrum, but don't know much about them. Somehow the shimano wheels just seem 'too' cheap.

Interested in your experience of these, has it put up with abuse or failed miserably?

Thanks

M


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 8:50 pm
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First, why are you popping spokes? You can knack even the bestest, strongest wheels by riding like a big chubby mechanically unsympathetic mountain bike background hairy legged gorilla.

So look where you are riding and don't crash into/over things; graceful and light is the style...

Mavic Ksyrium Equipe (£170ish); good enough but heavy.

Shimano R500 (£65ish); excellent training wheel, but waaaaay to flexy for any serious steaming along.

Pair of decent handbuilts; 105/ultegra hubs with mavic rim seems to be the best compromise in terms of reliability and re-buildable-ness.

But, as above, if you ride like a gibbon, you will go through any wheel.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:01 pm
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Agree with Crikey, get yourself a handbuilt from a good wheelbuilder. I might not be as pretty but it can be built nice and strong.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:09 pm
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How rude, I am disgusted by your response....my legs are smooth.

I could be riding like a gibbon, but what confuses me is that I previouly had a set of ksyriums SSC SLs which were perfect and I rode on a 28hole open pro rim all winter with no problems.

Current wheels causing concern are hope road hub, mavic open pro and 32 spokes, this is used on a much stiffer road 'race' bike but I don't think that is the problem, probably just the combination of hub and spokes?

M


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:09 pm
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Forgot to say, the hope/open pro combo was built by a very good local wheelbuilder.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:10 pm
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what he said ^^

plus you should work out what you want from your wheel. You've got cosmics and kysrium in the same list up there. One's a aero wannabee, the others a climber. For fast and flat take aero over weight, to climb like wiggins take weight over aero.

Are you truing your own wheels?
What do you weigh?


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:12 pm
 69er
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I've just done the marmotte on fulcrums and I weigh in at 16st. Good solid wheels. I 'train' on Askiums and highly recommend them too. absolutely bargainacious.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:12 pm
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[i]Forgot to say, the hope/open pro combo was built by a very good local wheelbuilder. [/i]

Maybe he had an off day?


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:13 pm
 cp
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who built your current wheels, and do you tweak them often? Uneven spoke tension could lead to some being super tight and others relatively slack. I had issues with a rear wheel i bought on a second hand bike - popped a few spokes in the early weeks of ownership, replaced them and made sure the wheel was relatively even tension, and not had a problem since. Bike gets abused (ss track bike on the road commute, opping off kerbs etc 🙂 )


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:14 pm
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Mmmmmm.
First, an apology, I presumed I was addressing one of the unpleasant smelling primates that frequent this site, whereas it appears you are of a much more sophisticated background.

I suspect that you've maybe tweaked the wheel a bit and one or two spokes have decided to come loose.
I'd opt for a re-truing first, or a re-spoking if ness.

As above, the Shimano cheapo wheels are pretty good, but are a bit flexy; I've ridden a pair for a couple of years without problems; the hubs are a bit poor tho and do need attention.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:16 pm
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I never touch them to be honest, the one part of bike maintenance I dont touch, but if they go out of true they are returned for a tweak.

I weigh 12 1/2 stone.

These wheels dont really get abused as not for commuting just for best.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:17 pm
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Oh and your prices are a bit out. The equippes are £190 a pair so £170 for a rear sounds high. But then £190 is still a lot for a pair of bricks.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:17 pm
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your presumption was correct first time


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:18 pm
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Where abouts do you live?

Cos I've got cheapo shimano wheels, mavic ksyrium equipes, and old mavic heliums, and ultegra/open pros that you could try out..


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:25 pm
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I'm surprised you're breaking spokes on that combination cos I use the same (Hope hub, 32H Mavic Open Pro) on my CX and that's coped with the Three Peaks CX race plus all sorts of other (ab)use!

I'd go for a rebuild first TBH - bad batch of spokes, builder having an off-day, corroded nipples, it could be any or all of those. the wheel itself should be plenty strong enough.

Aksiums are nice (and cheap) but they're fairly weighty.


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:46 pm
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crazy-legs, what spokes are you using on your combination? Is it a road or mountain bike hub you use?

Thanks


 
Posted : 16/07/2009 9:49 pm