#46
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Tim |
#47
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A PR is certainly nice but day in, day out performance over time tells the tale… factors out the psychological aspect.
__________________
Old... and in the way. |
#48
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#49
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Unrelated to average speed or weight, but if I got another set of wheels from BTLOS, I won't go with glossy again. My bikes are rarely clean other than the drivetrain. The glossy finish shows everything. I'll do matte next time. Otherwise, the Bitex hubs spin smooth and allow for direct pull spokes. I'm not sure if I'm faster but once we relocate to central Wyoming in the spring, I can do comparisons between the two wheel sets I have for my Open Min.d., OG Boyd Altamont or the BTLOS. The bike has a powermeter crankset so I can ride the same loop and compare power versus speed.
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#50
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I'm not going say I know the physics behind it, but I'm speaking from experience. I've recently set PRs on segment and a 8.5 mile segment and a 0.2 mile segment, both uphill. In general, I know I climb faster with lightweight wheels and the bike just feels more responsive and fun to ride. Last edited by fogrider; 10-23-2024 at 12:15 PM. |
#51
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what data are you referring to? to specific, are we talking about weight or rotating weight?
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#52
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Lighter weight wheels can feel faster but I think it is partly an illusion.
In my case rider plus bike weight is 160 lbs. If I save 300g in wheelset weight that is 0.4% lighter. At some point you are spending a lot more money and sacrificing robustness to lose a few hundred grams. Aluminum nipples on carbon rims are a recipe for corrosion. |
#53
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Lighter wheels are faster. For some riders, these savings mean a lot. But for many of us mere mortals, how much faster they are does not really matter in our hobby riding.
Even if I many not be significantly faster on my light 1100 g wheels, they sure do FEEL faster to me. And I would definitely pay for the FEELING of a faster speed. I have only had carbon wheels built with aluminum wheels. My oldest set is about 6 years old. There has not been corrosion yet. Also, among my bikes, I have 8 carbon wheelset with aluminum nips. No corrosion yet. I understand the science of why the corrosion can happen. But it has not happened yet. Quote:
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#54
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As far as your recent PRs - there are many, many factors that effect performance, including the external factors of equipment, weather, road conditions, traffic, etc., and internal factors such as fitness, training, motivation, etc. Many of these factors can play a much larger role in performance than 200 grams of wheel weight. |
#55
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Last edited by fogrider; 10-24-2024 at 05:19 PM. |
#56
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Btlos 30/35
Not chiming in on the whole you’ll be faster or not discussion….
Just chiming in to say I’ve always had great luck with my BTLOS wheels. I had a nice set built up last year. DT240 GX 30/35 rims (30mm front 35mm rear) Pillar spikes Aluminum Nips Came in at 1276g for disc brake wheels, no rim tape needed. Have been perfect. We all know how nice DT240s are and the wheels are just fun. Have them on my 1x Open Mind with 30mm Corsa Controls, measure 31mm for me. No complaints. True, light, have lasted well so far and no issues.. My two main wheelsets are WTO45s and these and these clearly feel lighter when climbing and are more fun to climb and haven’t noticed any appreciable issues carrying speed on the flats over 20ish mph…. Feel like is a good mix of lightweight with some aero…
__________________
If I can bicycle, I bicycle |
#57
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Do you ride with a power meter?
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#58
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Let me ask you this: Say you are in an elevator moving upward to higher floors. Your identical twin is in another duplicate elevator, moving upward in parallel to your elevator. Both of you are holding identical bicycle wheels in your hands. Only, your wheel is spinning, and your twin's wheel is not spinning. Are you saying that your elevator takes more force or energy to travel to a higher floor than your twin's does, just because your wheel is spinning? |
#59
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I think the weight of the wheels are the weight of the wheels. Where energy is sapped is when rotating momentum is scrubbed by applying the brakes. It takes slightly more to accelerate back up to speed. So in a pure climb, whether weight is located in the rims or hubs or the frame does not change how much energy it takes to climb up. However, as soon as brake are used, then lighter wheels have slight advantage of getting up to speed quicker and lose less when brake applied.
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#60
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if you haven't tried lightweight wheels, you just don't know. |
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