SRAM has just announced the launch of a new MTB-specific rotor. The SRAM HS2 promises to improve performance, provide more power and dissipate heat mo ...
By identitizombie
Get the full story here:
https://singletrackworld.com/2021/09/sram-launches-new-hs2-rotor/
62 quid for a 220mm rotor? Are they on crack?
62 quid for a 220mm rotor? Are they on crack?
Maybe the price is a tribute to the other HS2...?
Those are quite some claims for what is still a steel rotor. I wonder how much of it come from the extra thickness? (I had real issues when my hope rotors got closer to 1mm than the 1.5 you’re supposed to replace at)
Brake track looks *very* similar to the ancient Avid G2Cs rotors sitting in front of me that came with a set of juicy 5 cable discs.
Price wise I just picked up some avid 160mm HS1s (wavy with holes) for £6 each (lots about on eBay. Might be fake but they seem to work and last well enough on the road bike).
The heat management claims are pretty impressive to be fair... Steel is just the right way to make a bike rotor but getting a lot more heat out of it is a good trick. Though I suppose it depends what you mean by "heat management", just adding more metal means it takes more energy to create the same amount of heat so that alone could give a big improvement in testing.
The "standardness" of the rotor pattern does make me smile a bit, they went to town on the centreline rotors and made a funky pattern and said that was all great, and now they've just gone "yeah, slots are good, boring slots just like we used to and everyone else does"
Wonder what it means by "recessed spokes"? I thought it'd mean that they were thinner than the friction surface but it doesn't really look that way
Wow Srams marketing boys have certainly gone to town on this one 🙄 Heat dissapting paint? 🤔 Jeez! 🙄 From £42 do they think weve just come up on the banana boat! 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄
Just seen supposedly genuine Sram rotors on Ali Express for £6 whats the catch?
Heat = Energy. I think you mean temperature…?
give it 12 months and they will be selling 1.5mm thick rotors claiming they are x% lighter.some things are genuine innovation and some things are just marketing to try and sell us what we already have. Are people really struggling with heat management of their brake rotors?
its a pity they didnt come with a new mount standard then we could have bought new hubs too
The catch? The level of genuine-ness
https://singletrackworld.com/user/oldfart/ Banana boat? What era are you living in?
wheelsonfire
Yep sloppy reference, apologies, what i should have said was im not that green / gullible / and am old enough to smell BS a mile off that sort of thing.
From £42 do they think weve just come up on the banana boat!
Indeed. How can it be quality when it’s so cheap?
https://www.intend-bc.com/products/aero/
https://winstanleysbikes.co.uk/hope-v4-vented-disc-brake-rotor
Bound to be better as its new and much more expensive come on guys wake up 🙂 there's a whole industry out there that needs feeding.
Indeed. How can it be quality when it’s so cheap?
https://www.intend-bc.com/products/aero/
/blockquote>The mathematical reason behind that is the exponentially growing surface area by using holes with a smaller diameter than rotor thickness. To be precise: 672 holes on 203mm & 528 holes on 180mm rotors equals around 30% greater surface area and similar improvement in heat dissipation.
That sounds a lot more believable than a bit of black paint on the rotor arms - they've in theory created a better heat sink with the same amount of material. Though it also has a 'larger friction surface'.
Given lots of other drilling patterns are meant to create better braking/shit clearance there might be disadvantages of lots of small holes but it is something different
That sounds a lot more believable
There's nothing exponential about it for a start.
There’s nothing exponential about it for a start.
indeed. I missed the misuse of that term.....but I'm happy to accept that lots of small holes will have increased the surface area over a smaller number of larger holes