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  #1  
Old 10-06-2014, 12:58 AM
sfscott sfscott is offline
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Wheel strategy

I currently have 2 bikes and I switch a set of Enve tublars between them. Both bikes have Enve brake pads.

Because of the issue of running alloy wheels and carbon wheels on the same brake pads, I keep a 10-year old set of Open Pros laced to Campy silver hubs in wheel bags.

I am about to take delivery of a new Peg Marcello and am trying to figure out whether to just keep rotating the Enves or put the Open Pros on the Peg or the Ottrot.

I also am thinking about another wheelset, so each bike has a set. If I went this route, what is a good wheel to complement a Marcello for a heavy guy?

The other route would be to rebuild wheels around the campy hubs. I'd switch to a tubular rim, but unless I go with Ambrosios, I don't think there are any 32 hole tubular rims out there...let alone in carbon.

Any advice or which direction? Should I jump on the Boras that Competitive Cyclist has on sale?
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  #2  
Old 10-06-2014, 01:08 AM
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fogrider fogrider is offline
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I would get wheels for each bike. I run carbon rims on both my weekend bikes but on windy days I go with the 32mm rims. on claim days, I go with 46mm deep rims. I'm rebuilding a bike with aluminum rims for when the rains come back.
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  #3  
Old 10-06-2014, 05:51 AM
makoti makoti is offline
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I really, really like my Pancenti SL23's laced with White Industries hubs. I've got 20/28's, but you could get what you need built.
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  #4  
Old 10-06-2014, 06:15 AM
FlashUNC FlashUNC is offline
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There's a decent number of tubular rims out there in 32 hole that aren't Ambrosio.

No reason you can't just keep swapping the Enves around. How many bikes can you ride at once after all?

But get new wheels if you want them. Life's short.
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  #5  
Old 10-06-2014, 07:13 AM
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redir redir is offline
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Just use the Swiss Stop yellow pads and ride what ever wheels you like. I've been doing that for a few years now and have no problems stopping on AL or carbon rims.
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  #6  
Old 10-06-2014, 07:17 AM
Gummee Gummee is offline
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Swapping wheels in and out is a PITA when all you have time for is a quick spin.

So... More carbon is in your future 'cause swapping pads out is an even bigger PITA than swapping wheels.

You already have deeper rims now, so do something different. Thought about some shallow carbon? 24-30ish mm deep? Nice and light yet can be semi- aero too.

My $.02

M
self-admitted wheel whore
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  #7  
Old 10-06-2014, 07:34 AM
thirdgenbird thirdgenbird is offline
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Boras are sweet, but I think I would want one bike with traditional aluminum wheels around.
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  #8  
Old 10-06-2014, 09:21 AM
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berserk87 berserk87 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gummee View Post
Swapping wheels in and out is a PITA when all you have time for is a quick spin.

self-admitted wheel whore
I have to agree. It's not a major deal but it is a minor pain.

And I, too, am a wheel slut. I have a few sets...
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  #9  
Old 10-06-2014, 09:51 AM
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oldpotatoe oldpotatoe is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sfscott View Post
I currently have 2 bikes and I switch a set of Enve tublars between them. Both bikes have Enve brake pads.

Because of the issue of running alloy wheels and carbon wheels on the same brake pads, I keep a 10-year old set of Open Pros laced to Campy silver hubs in wheel bags.

I am about to take delivery of a new Peg Marcello and am trying to figure out whether to just keep rotating the Enves or put the Open Pros on the Peg or the Ottrot.

I also am thinking about another wheelset, so each bike has a set. If I went this route, what is a good wheel to complement a Marcello for a heavy guy?

The other route would be to rebuild wheels around the campy hubs. I'd switch to a tubular rim, but unless I go with Ambrosios, I don't think there are any 32 hole tubular rims out there...let alone in carbon.

Any advice or which direction? Should I jump on the Boras that Competitive Cyclist has on sale?
Record hubs, Ambrosio tubies, bob's yer uncle for the Pegoretti.
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  #10  
Old 10-06-2014, 12:51 PM
Gaucho410 Gaucho410 is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: San Bernardino, CA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sfscott View Post
I currently have 2 bikes and I switch a set of Enve tublars between them. Both bikes have Enve brake pads.

Because of the issue of running alloy wheels and carbon wheels on the same brake pads, I keep a 10-year old set of Open Pros laced to Campy silver hubs in wheel bags.

I am about to take delivery of a new Peg Marcello and am trying to figure out whether to just keep rotating the Enves or put the Open Pros on the Peg or the Ottrot.

I also am thinking about another wheelset, so each bike has a set. If I went this route, what is a good wheel to complement a Marcello for a heavy guy?

The other route would be to rebuild wheels around the campy hubs. I'd switch to a tubular rim, but unless I go with Ambrosios, I don't think there are any 32 hole tubular rims out there...let alone in carbon.

Any advice or which direction? Should I jump on the Boras that Competitive Cyclist has on sale?
In the interest of not driving yourself crazy, I'd echo the sentiment that you should have a set of wheels for each bike, and dedicate certain bikes to be used with carbon or alloy rims so you don't have to change pads or wheels all the time.

The riding characteristics of any wheel are going to come through regardless of what frame they're attached to, so I'd just go for whatever wheels are most unlike what you've got now; if you have shallow carbon and aluminum, I'd give deep carbon a go, or vice versa. Once you've got one of each, you can try each of them on each of your bikes, and when you figure out combos that you like, you can just leave those wheels on that bike.
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