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  #1  
Old Today, 01:10 PM
shinomaster's Avatar
shinomaster shinomaster is offline
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BTLOS 30mm wheels for pure climbing?

I noticed they have free shipping and the weight of these is pretty crazy. I'v come to realize I mostly climb (it's very hilly in PDX) and don't do any fast pacelines any more and at 50 years old I am not getting any faster. What I do enjoy is having a light bike and climbing. I weigh around 155 depending on the years. I should weigh 144 and am hoping to bet back down to that soon when I switch from solid foods to lettuce and Soilent (JK). Has anyone been using the 30mm premium wheels for just a climbing bike? Are they any less durable than 35 or 40mm? Thanks!

Also these are rim brake as I have become an old retro grouch evidently.
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  #2  
Old Today, 02:26 PM
nmrt nmrt is online now
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funny you ask whether 30 mm are good for climbing/durability. whenever i buy/build my climbing wheels, i do not go above 30 mm. :-).

in my experience they have been very reliable. but reliability does not depend on the rim depth. and as a matter of fact, i find shallower depth (less than 30 mm) wheels feel much more fun while climbing and descending compared to my 45-50 mm depth wheelsets.

Quote:
Originally Posted by shinomaster View Post
I noticed they have free shipping and the weight of these is pretty crazy. I'v come to realize I mostly climb (it's very hilly in PDX) and don't do any fast pacelines any more and at 50 years old I am not getting any faster. What I do enjoy is having a light bike and climbing. I weigh around 155 depending on the years. I should weigh 144 and am hoping to bet back down to that soon when I switch from solid foods to lettuce and Soilent (JK). Has anyone been using the 30mm premium wheels for just a climbing bike? Are they any less durable than 35 or 40mm? Thanks!

Also these are rim brake as I have become an old retro grouch evidently.
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  #3  
Old Today, 02:30 PM
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shinomaster shinomaster is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Stumptown
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nmrt View Post
funny you ask whether 30 mm are good for climbing/durability. whenever i buy/build my climbing wheels, i do not go above 30 mm. :-).

in my experience they have been very reliable. but reliability does not depend on the rim depth. and as a matter of fact, i find shallower depth (less than 30 mm) wheels feel much more fun while climbing and descending compared to my 45-50 mm depth wheelsets.
Thanks! I rarely break anything, one revolution spoke maybe in 34 years as a cyclist.. I'm currently using Shamal's and Ksyrium ES wheels which have been bombproof.
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  #4  
Old Today, 02:31 PM
Jdm Jdm is online now
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My rides are always 1k feet of climbing for every 10 miles. I've found 45-50mm wheels to be slightly faster overall on hills than shallow wheels despite the slightly lower weight of shallow wheels. I don't know why, though. Maybe it's the higher downhill speed because of better aero?

You can get 45mm rim brake wheels down to about 1400g depending on the hub and nipples.
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  #5  
Old Today, 03:42 PM
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Baron Blubba Baron Blubba is online now
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I don’t believe in climbing wheels. I believe in descending wheels. Shallower wheels give me more confidence and therefore I brake less when descending mountains on even mildly windy days, compared to riding uber-lights 45+mm wheels. On calm days, the overall speed difference is negligible anyway. Existent, but negligible.
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