#46
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Campagnolo Levante wheels have mini hook that is compatible with ETRTO clincher and tubeless standards (from the specs) so that looks like a reasonable approach to dealing with various tire requirements.
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#47
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For example, aerodynamics - for wheel aerodynamics, matching tire width to rim width matters a lot. But as we've seen, tires on hookless rims have to be wider than tires on a hooked rim (of the same rim width), so if anything, hookless rims have an aerodynamic disadvantage. As far as being both lighter and stronger, this post from the Weight Weenies forum sums up the incongruity: Quote:
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#48
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yep...as a user of both clincher and tubulars...this right here.
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#49
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If you are using latex tubes, you are not giving away any watts to tubeless users. And you may be saving a few watts compared to a tubeless user that has topped off their sealant a few times.
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#50
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This article is linked on the WW page that was just linked. It's an excellent article:
https://escapecollective.com/thomas-...arning-to-all/ There is a comment in there that Zipp has now filed for a patent on a method to bond a hook onto the rim after the initial molding. This would get them the cheaper method for the main mold process plus the safety of a hook. Going to be a riot if they all change back to hooks in the end and start telling us hooks are great again.. figuring out a better way to make the hook seems like a better solution than eliminating it. |
#51
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#52
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Bicycle product technology has moved in oscillating cycles for decades. First it was short cranks, then it was long cranks, now its short cranks again. First it was round chainrings, then it was eccentric chainrings, then it was round chainrings again, then it was eccentric chainrings again, then it was round chainrings ... And for clincher rims, first it was hookless, then it was hooked, then it was hookless again, and for all we know it may go back to hooked. |
#53
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https://youtu.be/YJc3DVVcTuM?si=n_kzjopaKol-Y2nx&t=277
Actually SRAM was granted the patent. This guy talks about it and if you were motivated you can get the patent # out of the video. |
#54
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Hookless is so obviously a margin grab by the manufacturers. It's clearly less safe. What benefit do we get for accepting a less safe alternative? none. not even cheaper or lighter wheels. Yesterday I read this velo article and it just seemed so silly to me that people would go out and buy these hookless rims, surely people will vote with their pocket book and buy the clearly safer alternative... Reading this thread, not so much.... gotta look pro and rock those zipps. |
#55
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I think the bottom line for me is this: I can have a hookless rim issue or I could have a front tire flat while descending at 30+ mph.. I'm not sure either one would be that different in the result.. either case, you are probably going down hard.. you might be able to make a case for a rear wheel issue, but a decent bike handler could probably come ok with either set-up.. a hookless issue or front tire blowout while cruising along at my sub-20 mph (usually closer to 16mph) doesn't really concern me to be honest.. but to each their own for sure on this one! *I'm really not for or against, I just don't see the big issue..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed Last edited by fourflys; 02-26-2024 at 11:46 AM. |
#56
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I think rim hooks are a marvelous piece of engineering. Something so simple that weighs almost nothing enables lightweight, high pressure tires with a flimsy bead to stay on the rim without blowing off and results in an increase in safety to boot. Bravo!
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#57
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Manufacturing hooked rims was made more difficult by the resins that were needed to make rim brake rims that were more resistant to being destroyed by braking heat. The properties of and additives introduced to these resins didn't flow as readily as simpler resins do. So our arc was seeing a lot less brake heat damage, but a ton more rims with unacceptable hooks. We saw this across a lot of brands, too.
Since disc brakes allow simpler resins to be used and the cooking procedures are much less fidgety, I built like 1000 rims without ever seeing other than a perfectly molded hook. We never saw impact damage to hooks on hooked disc rims. Hooks still require a more complex mold and molding/demolding process. If hookless is going to be stronger than hooked, the rim will be nominally heavier than an equivalent hooked rim because the sidewall in that hookless rim is thicker. The material makes it stronger, the lack of material makes it lighter. If can't have more material and be lighter. Aero impacts will be dominated by the inner and outer width of the rim and how they compare to the tire's width. How the bead of the tire interacts inside of the rim below the hook will have at most a small effect on tire shape. I suspect that people are pulling this claim of better aero out of their backsides, but who knows? There's no doubt that molding hookless rims is more efficient than molding hooked rims. I personally use hookless on mtb and hooks on everything else. |
#58
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While this sounds like a good idea, I think the use of "mini hook" is also going to lead to a lot of problems. Seems like that same terminology is being used by some folks to describe a rim that's compatible with all clincher/tubeless tires, while others are using "mini hook" to describe a rim that's only compatible with hookless compatible tires but with slightly higher blow-off protection.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#59
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#60
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The Escape Collective article linked is very informative and well worth reading. I'm still feeling no anxiety riding my two sets of BTLOS hookless wheels, as I'm running compatible 650B tires at either 38 or 42mm, at a max of 40 psi, on 22mm inside width rims. If I were buying wheels today I would probably look harder for a hooked version for that extra safety factor.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
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