Laterally Stiff Carbon Wheels

bigburnsgeoff
bigburnsgeoff Posts: 35
edited February 2017 in Road buying advice
I've got a pair of Reynolds Assault and Strike SLG's carbon clinchers that are both <2yrs old mated to my Ridley Noah SL. Having had most of 2016 off the bike due to illness i'm back on it with a vengeance. But the old frustrations come back.

I'm a 90kg rider and both sets of Reynolds wheels display the same characteristic in that when i'm climbing or out of the saddle giving it some, I get really irritating levels of brake rub. I've set the brake pads back as far as possible. I've had the wheels checked for spoke tension and ensured there is minimum play in the hubs. However at the rim you still get excessive lateral flex that results in brake rub giving you that annoying noise in the knowledge that its sucking away your power. Given that it is present in both sets of wheels and I have had everything checked I have come to the conclusion that it in the design.

Has anyone got similar experience?

Who makes carbon wheels (40-60mm deep) that have the least amount of lateral flex?

Comments

  • mugensi
    mugensi Posts: 559
    I have a pair of Quattro Carbons and had a similar issue on the rear but only had to open up the brake block gap to roughly 1.5mm to eliminate any rub. I had read numerous reviews on the wheels previous to buying them, with all reviewers saying they got no brake rub with the wheels even when the brakes were set as close as possible. I then brought my wheels to my LBS who checked them and said they were perfect and that there was no play in the hubs.

    I came to the conclusion that it was the frame that was causing the rubbing when the brakes were set too close and that stiff frames would induce more brake rub than less stiff frames. My frame is a 2011 Felt F5 (same frame as the F4 and F3 of that year) and while I don't find it too stiff, it is apparently a very stiff frame. The Noah is supposedly a very stiff frame also, so perhaps that's why you get brake rub, if the frame allows no flex then the wheels are going to soak up all lateral movement and cause the brakes to rub on climbs/sprints....maybe.
  • teebs_123
    teebs_123 Posts: 357
    I've got a pair of Reynolds Assault and Strike SLG's carbon clinchers that are both <2yrs old mated to my Ridley Noah SL. Having had most of 2016 off the bike due to illness i'm back on it with a vengeance. But the old frustrations come back.

    I'm a 90kg rider and both sets of Reynolds wheels display the same characteristic in that when i'm climbing or out of the saddle giving it some, I get really irritating levels of brake rub. I've set the brake pads back as far as possible. I've had the wheels checked for spoke tension and ensured there is minimum play in the hubs. However at the rim you still get excessive lateral flex that results in brake rub giving you that annoying noise in the knowledge that its sucking away your power. Given that it is present in both sets of wheels and I have had everything checked I have come to the conclusion that it in the design.

    Has anyone got similar experience?

    Who makes carbon wheels (40-60mm deep) that have the least amount of lateral flex?

    I'm gonna sound like a broken record, but get some hand-built wheels, made for your weight and riding style. Speak with Derek at www.wheelsmith.co.uk and tell him your issues. Cheaper than factory (usually), replaceable rims, easy servicing, good service. The only thing you won't get is some fancy stickers..
    Orbea Orca OMX DI2 MyO
    Kinesis 4s Di2
  • tomisitt
    tomisitt Posts: 257
    I've got some Spins, hand built, nice and stiff, not too expensive, lovely wheels. http://ridefullgas.com/wheels/
  • Nod to the comment on a stiff frame making the issue worse. If there is no give in the frame then the wheels have got to cope with transmitting the power to the road, hence exposing the faults of a weaker wheel design. I'd love to get away with just 1.5mm offset of the pads to the rim, you could fit a small animal between my pads and the rim.

    Having got so irritated in the rain and and road muck that was present on UK roads yesterday i've already started to look at the custom option but keen to see if there is an off the shelf solution.

    Cheers for the input.
  • cycleclinic
    cycleclinic Posts: 6,865
    The problem is not so simple as buy a set of stiffer wheels. Deep rims show more movement at the pads when loaded than a shallower wheel experience the same load. There is only so stiff you can make such a wheel. In my own set i could make them stiffer buy using sapim race spoke instead of cxrays for the rear wheel but i would still need the pads to be 1.5 to 2mm from the rim.

    With any 50mm ish deep wheel and i dont care who makes it the pads must be 2mm from the rim or brake rub may result. There is no good way around this. One solution is tom use a single pivot brake for the rear. This is the set up i have on two bikes and it works a charm. Even with the pads 2.5mm from the rim the levers dont pull back to bars.

    So buy a single pivot brake or get used to a lever than pulls more than you prefer, new wheels may not make a huge difference.

    So the op has said he has set the pads as far from the rim as possible but how far is that.
    http://www.thecycleclinic.co.uk -wheel building and other stuff.
  • ENVE
    I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles
  • sungod
    sungod Posts: 16,434
    or lightweight :)
    my bike - faster than god's and twice as shiny
  • Corima MCC 47mm S+

    Stiffest wheels I've ever seen. Top of a French magazine test, way above all others for lateral stiffness. I have a pair and they are way stiffer than my Lightweight Meilensteins. Too stiff for me in fact, a bit unforgiving.

    But for a big, powerful rider, perfect.
  • It's a while we haven't had a thread about lack of lateral stiffness...

    It all sounds like a lot of baloney... both the eroic efforts that bend the rim and the proposed solutions to the perceived problem
    left the forum March 2023
  • fenix
    fenix Posts: 5,437
    How often does this happen ? Are you overgeared ? Always best to stay in the saddle rather than grind it out of the saddle.
  • It's a while we haven't had a thread about lack of lateral stiffness...

    It all sounds like a lot of baloney... both the eroic efforts that bend the rim and the proposed solutions to the perceived problem

    Odd you should say that, tales of rims touching brake pads on out of saddle efforts are all over the place.

    Personally, and unfortunately, I don't make enough power to bend mine significantly, but I totally get it for a 90kg sprinter.

    That French mag test applied weights and stresses to the wheels and measured lateral deflection at the rim with a wide range of performances from different wheels.
  • Bobbinogs
    Bobbinogs Posts: 4,841
    Makes me wonder how the pros overcome this. Let's face it, folks like Sagan/Kittel, et al, put out a damn sight more power than us lot on here and yet I haven't heard Sagan moan after a race "Yeah, could have won MSR if only my pads were a mm further away from the brake track".
  • Odd you should say that, tales of rims touching brake pads on out of saddle efforts are all over the place.
    .

    I know, I experienced it myself... was it a major problem? No
    Was it something I lost sleep over and even more importantly lost speed over? Not really
    Would it be something that make me part from a set of wheels worth in excess of a grand? Certainly not
    Would a different pair of the same thing make such a massive difference? Probably not

    In essence, even if the pads lightly rub the rib whilst climbing out of the saddle, it really is nothing to worry about... in this respect, It is indeed all baloney
    left the forum March 2023
  • okgo
    okgo Posts: 4,368
    Is it not just more spokes that are required?

    What the pro's will have probably isn't all that similar to what we can buy in a lot of cases, I've had brake rub putting out similar peak power to Sagan assuming its around 1600w, I don't know whether I can be arsed to get it looked at and most of the time its just been hub preload that needed attention. But you know 100% that if he or any of them ever had any issues then it would be fixed, more spokes, welding them together (which is what Griepel had?) or whatever, its not going to be an issue for them.
    Blog on my first and now second season of proper riding/racing - www.firstseasonracing.com
  • Bobbinogs
    Bobbinogs Posts: 4,841
    okgo wrote:
    ...you know 100% that if he or any of them ever had any issues then it would be fixed, more spokes, welding them together (which is what Griepel had?) or whatever, its not going to be an issue for them.

    ...but that is where I am coming from, as in, how do they resolve this in the pro peleton? The number of spokes is not the solution if one looks at the sprinters wheels. I don't see any cross bonding in place and most of the wheels do indeed look to be off the shelf (although looks can be deceptive).

    Perhaps the simplest fix for the pros is they just back off the brakes in the last 5 km??
  • ryan_w-2
    ryan_w-2 Posts: 1,162
    Been up to 107kg on my 2016 404s and they've been faultless.
    Specialized Allez Sprint Disc --- Specialized S-Works SL7

    IG: RhinosWorkshop
  • Hi Ugo, I take issue with your rant and suggest its ill informed.

    Being a rider for 30 years, and also an experienced mechanical/engineer, I have a well looked after crop of bikes. Whilst some maybe happy to have a bit of brake rub (I have in the past) when it becomes excessive (allowing for (7mm+ of pad offset) I personally find it annoying and it highlights a design weakness. These are the kind of things we dont except when we design aircraft, cars etc so why should I accept it on one of my bikes. You may not, but I do...It tends to be less of a problem, or no problem at all on my other bikes.

    The point on the pro's is a relevant one. The monster amount of power that Griepel will generate will require special attention and I'm sure someone takes this into consideration. Whether he get wound-up by a brake rub on his sunday club ride is up to him.

    WRT the Reynolds wheels, yes they are not cheap but they are not at the really expensive end of the carbon wheel market and I think this will contribute to the problem. At ~£1k more for a pair the Zipps may have a more robust engineering design, better assembly, lower tolerances and better materials. I may have to check them out or a pair of custom builds.

    For everyone else who replied I appreciate your input and comment. thanks.
  • mugensi
    mugensi Posts: 559
    edited January 2017
    ...Whilst some maybe happy to have a bit of brake rub (I have in the past) when it becomes excessive (allowing for (7mm+ of pad offset) I personally find it annoying and it highlights a design weakness...

    Crikey, 7mm is HUGE! Do they still rub at 7mm? If they do then that suggests a total of 14mm lateral flex which would indicate a problem, I believe.

    Slightly off topic but what is the usual gap between pad and rim? I have always approx. 1mm gap although on some older wheels in the past I've increased that to roughly 2mm but nothing ever bigger.

  • WRT the Reynolds wheels, yes they are not cheap but they are not at the really expensive end of the carbon wheel market and I think this will contribute to the problem. At ~£1k more for a pair the Zipps may have a more robust engineering design, better assembly, lower tolerances and better materials. I may have to check them out or a pair of custom builds.

    For everyone else who replied I appreciate your input and comment. thanks.

    If you go for a spoked wheel, given all rims on the market are very similar in size, what determines stiffness are:

    1) bracing angle of the spokes, which is pretty much the same across the board

    2) SPoke gauge, which is pretty much the same as they all use the same spokes

    3) Spoke count, which is always the same 24 or 20 depending on rim depth

    4) Spoke pattern, which occasionally is different, but it is the least important among all the parameters and to be honest it makes almost zero difference.

    If you want a real difference, then you have to look at a non spoked wheel... something like the stuff Lightweights make... I am not saying the latter ones are stiffer, I am saying they are different, so the rules above do no apply.

    Personally I would have your wheels checked in case the spokes have gone slack and if that's not the case, then I would assume that a similar wheel with a similar depth rim will be more or less the same thing. If you are an engineer, you certainly don't believe in miracles
    left the forum March 2023
  • paul1000
    paul1000 Posts: 190
    Ha ha, that's put me off the Reynolds strike, had a look at spin, quite impressed.
  • Mugen,
    I set mine up with a credit card in between the pad and the rim so that you get ~1mm of space which can work in an ideal world, and then maybe backing off the pads just a little further with the adjuster barrel. In an attempt to avoid the brake rub i have had to back my pads off a significant amount using the 3 step adjuster on the Sram Red calipers I use.

    A neat trick is to partly slide the CC out from the pad and this then allows you to set a little toe-angle between the pad and the rim.
  • Paul1000,
    The other problems with the Reynolds is the tubeless compatibility. Its not great when compared to other wheels. Its clearly a bit of an after thought as you can see from the design of the rim at the point where the valve mounts. You can get them to seal eventually but its a faff and they are a bit temperamental. I have found other tubeless wheels to be much better in this respect. They also come in quite heavy (significantly heavier than its says on the packet anyway). But they're fast and brake well (for carbon anyway).
  • paul1000
    paul1000 Posts: 190
    tomisitt wrote:
    I've got some Spins, hand built, nice and stiff, not too expensive, lovely wheels. http://ridefullgas.com/wheels/
    Hi, had a look at spins website, very impressed, these can be built to your weight, I might give them a go, which ones do you have?
  • tomisitt
    tomisitt Posts: 257
    I've got the DMX440s (20/24 with CX Ray spokes) with the "stealth" graphics. I'm around 82kg, the wheels weighed 1520g on my scales, am very impressed. Give Drew a ring and have a chat...he's very approachable, nice bloke, and will make the best wheels for your weight, power and riding style.
    32528176522_0428dcebb0_h.jpg
  • shortfall
    shortfall Posts: 3,288
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    That is a very, very nice looking bike.
  • tomisitt
    tomisitt Posts: 257
    Thanks. I'm pretty pleased with it!