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Now that I have the BMC Teammachine it's time to get those Aero wheels and replace the 2100g Shimano RC-170 wheels that came with it. Would be open to pay £200 more to get DT350 hubs (ideally straight pull), as I've read reports of Novatec hubs disintegrating under power, but one could always rebuild the wheels with better hubs later. Allegedly Bitex are a bit better than Novatec.
Needs
25 mm outer width
22-28 spokes (ideally aero)
Brand name center lock hubs, Bitex > Novatec? Can pay more for DT350, a new pair costs £150 Prefer straight pull.
12x100 front 12x142 rear through axle
Tubeless ready
50-60mm front, 60-88 mm deep rear (ideally disc rear, but don't think that would fit the budget and it's a bit ridiculous even for me)
Want
High engagement hubs (DT350 54t would be ideal)
Noise freewheeling brzzzzzzzzz
Not much more than 1800 grams for the set
Undecided
Matte or glossy carbon (bike is matte black but I hear glossy is easier to clean)?
3k or no-weave AKA UD?
Any good Ebay vendors to contact? CSC wheels? Kingbike888? Any non-ebay options at this price point?
Example: https://www.ebay.com/itm/700C-50mm-Disc-Brake-Carbon-Wheels-Road-Bike-Clincher-Bicycle-Carbon-Wheelset/273925873744?hash=item3fc7412050:m:mIANiRRWBe72RwSa-Z65N0Q (would need to ask to get a different weave, a deeper rear wheel and center lock hubs).
If you want to use DT350’s with decent spokes and rims you’re looking nearer £700 than £300.
Are you sure you want such deep rims? The Team Machine is a aero road bike, not a TT bike. I’d not want more than 40-50mm in front for day to day stuff. That would save a bunch of weight too.
Why? A Pair of new DT350 center lock hubs costs £150, so it really shouldn't cost more than £150 on top of the £300 to get those or are people getting fleeced?
Show me a link to a pair of £150 centrelock straight pull DT 350 hubs...
In for the £150 350s link! 😀


Adds up to £140 actually from r2-bike.
Are you sure you want such deep rims? The Team Machine is a aero road bike, not a TT bike. I’d not want more than 40-50mm in front for day to day stuff. That would save a bunch of weight too.
Ride on flat terrain only so weight is not a big factor, weigh 90+ kg to not too worried about crosswinds. Reckon 50mm front and 88 mm rear would be fine and fast.
Nearer £180 for the hubs maybe, 50 decent quality spokes = min £50, £100 if you want CX ray for aero. Rims £160ea, building, import duty, VAT.
Nearer £180 for the hubs maybe, 50 decent quality spokes = min £50, £100 if you want CX ray for aero. Rims £160ea, building, import duty, VAT.
As you can see €165 = £140, but perhaps they're more expensive in China. The idea is to ask the ebay vendor to customize the wheelset.
The £300 wheels you can get already have aero spokes, so it shouldn't cost moret han £200 extra to get DT350 hubs (say £170 for the hubs -£20 for the novatecs +£50 for the customization = £190).
Minimal or no VAT on these it seems according to the sellers..
Are they in the UK then? Duty and VAT will apply if coming from China, unless the fraudulently mark it down of course.
I bought a pair from light bicycle last year 350s CX-ray spokes 24h straight pull on UD rims that cost £685 all in delivered. Having said that the USD-GBP might be better now slightly.
I still think £500 for anything good quality is optimistic.
Last ebay vendor I used for Chinese carbon was this outfit:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/usr/carbonspeedcycle
No problems at all and keen prices. That was for a tubular rim on novatecs, though, which is impossible to mess up. For a tubeless rim I might be a bit more particular as I'd need to be certain there were no issues with running a robust set up.
Are they in the UK then? Duty and VAT will apply if coming from China, unless the fraudulently mark it down of course.
Seems like many do the latter by default, marking them at $50.
I still think £500 for anything good quality is optimistic.
People are happy with the rims and there are youtube long term reviews of them showing no issues esp when used with disc brakes, but I've read several reports of Novatec and similar hubs breaking, either the pawls or the "serrated" rings in the hubs. Seems like they're functional hope clones with poor steel quality. Bitex has a better reputation.
Garry: yes CSC seems to be the biggest ebay vendor 🙂
I went through all this before settling on Hunt for my bike. At £300 something is going to be missing, and it won’t be profit for the manufacturer. Let us know what you find! I’d really like set of Summer wheels for my bike.
Farsports got some decent discounts at present for their Chinese New Year sale.
from all my previous chinese wheelsets they always end up more expensive than first thought. There are ways of avoiding taxes, but usually cost around $70 to ship a wheelset. I'd never buy a complete wheelset again as their wheelbuilding skills are usually quite poor, maybe light bicycle are better now but last pair i had weren't dished properly, if you you LB a rim is minimum you will pay is $150ea.
Don't get me wrong i'm about to get 2 more chinese carbon rims, but i expect to pay decent money, else they are bound to be sh@t and not worth building up. my first rims came from LB in 2013, i still have them, but because they were built up properly. Plus, would avoid bitex hubs as made of cheese, novatech better but still fairly cheddar, right to go for dt 350 but avoid straightpull
Why not straightpull?? The £300 figure is incl shipping btw.
I went through all this before settling on Hunt for my bike
So Hunts are £800, and for that you get rebranded Novatec hubs with slightly lighter rims (200 grams saving for the wheelset perhaps) and a guaranteed solid build. That's not worth more than £100 extra to me.
If you're comfortable with wheelbuilding you can go the DIY route
DT swiss hubs €165
Carbon rims €200 delivered
48 CX Ray Bladed spokes + brass nipples washers €100
465€ or 390£ total incl shipping (and maybe VAT).
The £300 wheels you can get already have aero spokes
Bear in mind that flat spokes aren't aerodynamic, there's an article somewhere that pretty much showed that most flat spokes were barely, if any improvement over standard 2.0/1.5/2.0 round spokes. It's only when you get to the point where they're actually forged into an aerodynamic shape (not just a flatteneed round spoke) that you get the benefit, And then you're looking at £2/spoke.
That’s not worth more than £100 extra to me.
Depends how long the wheel lasts. A knackered Chinese wheel has cost you £300 plus the cost of replacement, so let's say £600+.
Why not straightpull??
Just a hunch, but I suspect that straighpulls might be less aero as you end up with a flange ~1/2" wide with multiple faces pushing through the air, whereas a conventional hub flange is flat and straight and thin. How much difference it makes, no idea, but if I was spending decent money on wheels for marginal gains, I'd want all those margins!
So Hunts are £800, and for that you get rebranded Novatec hubs with slightly lighter rims (200 grams saving for the wheelset perhaps) and a guaranteed solid build. That’s not worth more than £100 extra to me.
So you don't want to pay more for a well built, significantly lighter wheelset? On you go 🙂
Some people seem to ask questions, but already know best.
If you can get a set of carbon rimmed wheels with dt swiss hubs delivered for 300 quid I'll eat my hat. You have no hope of that..none...unless fake hubs and junk rims.
You can however get prime 50mm wheels from crc for 430 quid and they are ace wheels.
Bear in mind that flat spokes aren’t aerodynamic, there’s an article somewhere that pretty much showed that most flat spokes were barely, if any improvement over standard 2.0/1.5/2.0 round spokes.
Yep, looks like 1 watt at 30 mph, worth it for £50? Not for me. Bladed is good for straight pull hubs though as it's easier to avoid spokes twisting during building or truing https://novemberbicycles.com/blogs/blog/from-the-vault-spoke-aerodynamics
Depends how long the wheel lasts. A knackered Chinese wheel has cost you £300 plus the cost of replacement, so let’s say £600+.
Not mine, but I've seen Novatec and no-name Chinese rear hubs failing. A new rear hub equivalent to the hunt one is £100 and then the work is £50? So the Chinese wheelset has a £150-200 penalty over the Hunt wheels IF the rear hub blows up which let's say there's a 10% chance of over 3 yrs making the cost penalty a lot less on avg.
Just a hunch, but I suspect that straighpulls might be less aero as you end up with a flange ~1/2″ wide with multiple faces pushing through the air, whereas a conventional hub flange is flat and straight and thin
Lol, getting deep into the marginal gains land, can't even find any discussion about this, so let's say 1 watt +/- at 40 kph :p
So you don’t want to pay more for a well built, significantly lighter wheelset? On you go 🙂
Yes, I'd pay £100 more. The £300 wheels are also generally built just fine and there's no climbing here so 250 grams weight diff is naff. 250 grams might however be worth £500 to you if you say do hillclimb racing for a living.
If you can get a set of carbon rimmed wheels with dt swiss hubs delivered for 300 quid I’ll eat my hat. You have no hope of that..none…unless fake hubs and junk rims.
£500 perhaps, I'll ask the ebay vendors
Some people seem to ask questions, but already know best.
xoxo
Bladed is good for straight pull hubs though as it’s easier to avoid spokes twisting during building or truing
It so isn't.
Bear in mind that flat spokes aren’t aerodynamic, there’s an article somewhere that pretty much showed that most flat spokes were barely, if any improvement over standard 2.0/1.5/2.0 round spokes. It’s only when you get to the point where they’re actually forged into an aerodynamic shape (not just a flatteneed round spoke) that you get the benefit, And then you’re looking at £2/spoke.
Plus if they're not all facing forward they're actually un-aero
The £300 wheels are also generally built just fine
If you know that, then why ask? Just buy them and tell us we're wrong in ~2000miles time.
Personally I'd not trust a £75 carbon rim. Which TBH is weird as I trust a £100 carbon fork on my fat bike which probably has a similar £/g cost (i.e. the amount of materials used) and a rim look like it should be a simpler product to make. I'd rather pay the extra ~£150 for light bicycle rims on novatec hubs than unknown rims on nice hubs. If a hub fails you tend to come to a stop with a wobbly wheel, if a rim fails.................
I've got novatecs on my CX bike (so lots of high torque stop/start riding) and they're fine, and some "Sokin" branded chinese (powerway?) hubs on my road bike (so lots of miles), not had a problem with either.
I've cracked a hope hub (but then, so has anyone who's been riding hope stuff long enough).
Carbon rims don't just fail these days esp when used with disc brakes, or am I wrong? From what I've read if anything fails it's the rear hub. Good point about hub failure.
Novatec makes a range of hubs, know which ones you have? How's engagement and noise? If they sound good (loud like hope, gets people out of the way) and have decent engagement then maybe they're the way to go. Could also possibly ask to pay extra for the best-in-line ones.
I've asked CSC and kingbike on ebay if they can customize their wheels with DT350 hubs for £450.
Carbon rims don’t just fail these days esp when used with disc brakes, or am I wrong?
Carbon anything don't just fail these days.
Cynic-Al off this forum on the other hand bought some ebay carbon bars and managed to crush them in is hands! I would be very wary of extrapolating from known brands to some of the stuff available on ebay.
Novatec also makes a range of hubs, know which ones you have? How’s the engagement and noise?
791/792, fast enough that I've never noticed and subtly clicky.
They make a bewildering range of hubs, but when you look closer there's only a few for any particular usage so there's only one lightweight rear hub in 135/142mm. The rest have steel axles, or steel freehubs, or cup and cone bearings, or some other spec.
I would be very wary of extrapolating from known brands to some of the stuff available on ebay.
Agreed, but CSC Carbon Speed Cycle is the biggest ebay carbon wheelset vendor AFAIK, so fairly reputable. On their website they even have nearly what I'm asking for for £440 incl shipping I just found, at a decent 1690 grams too! Just ask them if they can give me a 50 mm front 88 mm rear and convert to through axle (would need a new front hub I believe)

Bear in mind that flat spokes aren’t aerodynamic....
Plus if they’re not all facing forward they’re actually un-aero
On my commute, which is circular (I go the interesting way in the morning and the short way in the evening) I've setup the bladed spokes to allow for the average orientation of the wheel.
It's only a few degrees of twist, but it saves at least 0.5W.
On days where I go the "wrong" way, I flip my front wheel before heading home/to work, another of the many advantages of rim brakes.
but it saves at least 0.5W
What do you do with all the spare time? You must have seconds and seconds stacked up over the course of a year. You could have a set of wheels for every day of the week tweaked to be course specific.
Agreed, but CSC Carbon Speed Cycle is the biggest ebay carbon wheelset vendor AFAIK, so fairly reputable.
Not sure that proves anything, other than an ability list lots of stuff.
On their website
The first thing on their website is a presumably fake argon18 tt frame.
The second thing i found was a set of 60/80 wheels like you were asking for. The size options include 27.5 in sizes 16 to 21 and 29 in 16 to 21 (i.e. its a table from a frame).
They seem about as reputable as as........
Its your bargepole, if your sure they'll be reliable, buy them. You can be the guy who got in before they became popular and the prices went up. Just not sure why you asked anyone's oppinion if you already knew.
Bleh, there was already one guy in this thread who said CSC was good, search around the internet and you'll find more of the same.
Their Ebay presence proves a lot, as you can go in and read reviews of the vendor plus they have a track record. No it's not just listing a lot of stuff - they sell the most wheels on ebay. I guess they're not able to fool as many westerners into buying overpriced wheels without a trendy logo and high-end speaker cable grade marketing lingo:
"THE ULTIMATE WIND-CHEATING ROAD DISC WHEELSET. INCREDIBLY AERO & SUPER WIDE."
"Extra-wide 20mm internal rim bed opens out your tyre profile providing exceptional vibration reduction".."V:Absorbe resin reduces vibration and massively improves impact resistance.".."respond instantly to your accelerations".
This was about the HUNT £799 wheelset which is nothing but rebranded novatec hubs with £50 worth of upgraded bearings and otherwise standard carbon rims and spokes. They don't make any wheels themselves. Well played.
Bladed spokes will save at most, 50g per wheelset, and unless used in straightpull config are no stronger than d-lights as the spokes tend to fail at the nipple or the j-bend. Stopping them twisting during build is easy with the DT tool.
In the end, a D-light is 90p, a CX-ray is £2. so it's £55 to save 50g. OR it's £50 for them to look cool?
M
Thanks Daffy, didn't know they saved weight at all. Not a big factor for me but might be worth it for some.
What do you do with all the spare time?
Spends it all reversing the front wheel.:-)
What do you do with all the spare time?
Spends it all reversing the front wheel.:-)
I've also just recently started grinding down the spoke nipples to reduce their drag.
It's obviously quite tricky to do this before lacing up the wheel, but once it's true there's no reason not to. Just a very quick blast with a dremel on each nipple.
Again, this appears to save between 0.1W and 0.2W. Well worth it for the marginal gains on my commute.
https://www.chainreactioncycles.com/prime-rr-50-se-carbon-clincher-disc-wheelset
£140 more than the Chinese direct ones.
Warranty
Crash replacement deal
Spares available
£65's worth of tyres includes (which actually makes them cheaper as the duty should be about £85 if you get caught in customs)
Some degree of confidence that they've been tested for safety and the factory has some sort of QC procedure or even ISO9001 certification (TBH I'd hope that CRC and any reputable company would make that and 14001 and 18001 a bare minimum for doing business with them but I don't know).

Thanks for the suggestion! But are you colorblind? Ok, so the stickers can be removed 😉
Looks like OK wheels, but again poor value - heavy at 1750g for 50 mm rimdepth with crappy hubs.
CSC also includes 1 year warranty but no crash replacement (maybe you could get a discount).
Chainreaction reviews about the Prime wheels: "Decent wheels TERRIBLE warranty - Buyers beware".."The conversion kit is never in stock.".."Fronthub runs harshly. Rear hub sometimes makes a loud metal noise. Build is as simple as it can be. Overall both hubs have a disappointing cheap feel." and one comments on poor build quality. All in all, you don't really get much extra (reselling the tires only nets you £35).
I'd get a DT350 wheelset for the same price (depending on VAT) from CSC any day. The spokes are likely equivalent, but I'd get much better and lighter hubs and you could get e.g. 60 mm front 88 mm rear wheels.
So Hunts are £800, and for that you get rebranded Novatec hubs with slightly lighter rims (200 grams saving for the wheelset perhaps) and a guaranteed solid build. That’s not worth more than £100 extra to me.
I went down the Alloy light disc aero set route. £380.
Happy owner of two pairs of CSC wheels. Rim brake only though. No issues with hubs, rims fine so far although I’m not sure I’d throw them down an Alp descent. Rear 90mm is a little flexy when powering out of saddle but that’s the only complaint so far. For me it’s Hard to justify pairs that are 2,3 or more times the price.
Looks like OK wheels, but again poor value – heavy at 1750g for 50 mm rimdepth with crappy hubs
Poor value?? What on earth are you talking about. That's about a 3rd the price of a pair of zipp at same weight.
I had a pair of the primes, hubs absolutely fine. And yes the stickers come off if you read the blurb
Gotcha, although for £50 less you could have gotten a deeper section 32 mm wheel with DT350 hubs (162 grams more) which I'd get over hunts any day.
Are people falling for their marketing speak or is it the trendy minimal logos? Do people really think that some guys ordering rebranded parts from taiwan with minor modifications make better wheels than DT?

I'm genuinely looking forward to the "which carbon aero drop bars" and "which carbon stem" threads, because having not searched for either before on Amazon, there are many that undercut PX on the bars front by ~50% and I'm curious if anyone here has fitted any to still be around to tell the tale. 😀
I’m genuinely looking forward to the “which carbon aero drop bars” and “which carbon stem” threads, because having not searched for either before on Amazon, there are many that undercut PX on the bars front by ~50% and I’m curious if anyone here has fitted any to still be around to tell the tale. 😀
Followed closely by "Which dentist" and "which facial reconstruction surgeon" and "which new username".
Poor value?? What on earth are you talking about. That’s about a 3rd the price of a pair of zipp at same weight.
I had a pair of the primes, hubs absolutely fine. And yes the stickers come off if you read the blurb
Heavier wheelset with shite hubs compared to lighter wheelset with DT350 hubs at the same price, yes, that makes it poor value.
Nobody is comparing anything to Zipps, that's like saying a purse 1/3 the price of a diamond embroidered £5000 gucci one is "good value" for its comparable ability to carry Chihuahuas.
I’m genuinely looking forward to the “which carbon aero drop bars” and “which carbon stem” threads, because having not searched for either before on Amazon, there are many that undercut PX on the bars front by ~50% and I’m curious if anyone here has fitted any to still be around to tell the tale. 😀
Sorry to disappoint you, but it ends with the wheels. Already ordered a non-aero Thomson stem today. I wouldn't use carbon handlebars or stems due to safety concerns. Carbon wheelsets from reputable vendors used with disc brakes such as CSC, Hunt (blergh), RR etc seem much safer generally speaking.
Would you seriously trust a deep section carbon rim that's been made for as little as £50? That's assuming a sale price of £300 including shipping, so assuming £40 is shipping and 30% of the remainder is profit, that means the whole wheelset was £190. Assuming only £20 for hubs and £30 for spokes with assembly at £20 - that's £100 for 2 rims...I'd struggle to buy the materials for that much even if I used offcuts.
We've inspected cheap carbon components at the National Composites Centre in Bristol and the results were terrifying. We had a cheap frame made from T700 pre-preg and the top tube on one side was 300microns thick (that's one ply of CFRP) and 4.5mm on the other side.
My Rims on the other hand (Nextie) have all been examined and bar for one which seemed to have a piece loose inside from drilling, have been perfect and uniform. I'd be VERY careful where you buy from. It's all very well offering a warranty, but it's the penalty for failure that'll truly cost you.
Daffy, A man who speaketh the truth. a lot of people around who know the cost of everything but the value of nothing. I'll leave it now as the OP's mind seems to be made up.
Daffy, indeed, but materials costs in china at scale are less than what you'll have access to and labor is $3.6/hour.
I am taking care by (probably) buying from the largest ebay vendor (CSC) after reading through their reviews for evidence of catastrophic failures. There are also plenty anecdotal reports about their wheels and so far they've been positive, they aren't the cheapest wheels you can get either so you're paying a little extra for the brand/trust, but far less than you do with e.g. HUNT without any of the pseudoscientific marketing jizz.
Would never buy from a random ebay vendor with a few hundred reviews and no website, regardless of reviews.
Look at the rim weights of...decent Chinese manufacturers such as Nextie or LB. a 50mm rim will be around 460-490g, and 80mm rim closer to 700g. That's with T700 using between 8-12 plys (2-3mm thickness) then look at their premium rims using T800 and T700 - it allows them to reduce the thickness in some regions by 0.5mm at the most, due to the extra strength of the material. It costs about $40-90 more and saves about 40g per rim, the only way to decrease weight after that is to use highly expensive materials such as T1000/M55J/Dryfibre composites, etc. These composites reduce the resin content and increase the fibre weight, but are more difficult to work with and more expensive to buy.
If, as many of the adverts say, they are only using T700 pre-preg, the only way to reduce rim weight is to remove plys, that's a BIG risk as not only are you removing material, but you're also potentially reducing ply orientations which give them strength.
That's just materials. Then you've got quality control to think about (highlighted above) resin pocket formation from poor mandrels/bad application of the pre-preg.
I'd be VERY careful. There's only one way to get low weight AND low cost in CFRP and that's by compromising safety.
Thanks a lot for the input, makes sense to me, now the wheels I'm looking at aren't super light nor am I primarily looking for lightness and instead deep rims. The ones from CSC are 1690g+/-30g/pair for 25mm Width 60mm Clincher with T700 carbon fiber DT350s hubs, ring any alarm bells to you?
DT350s are about 420g a set, spokes will be about 250-300g a set (depends on type, number and length) nipples will be either 20g or 50g (aluminium vs brass) so your weight without rims is 670-770g. So your rims are between 450g and 500g for 60mm. That’s quite light for 60mm rim made of T700, but what’s the width? Is it narrow?
DT350s are about 420g a set, spokes will be about 250-300g a set (depends on type, number and length) nipples will be either 20g or 50g (aluminium vs brass) so your weight without rims is 670-770g. So your rims are between 450g and 500g for 60mm. That’s quite light for 60mm rim made of T700, but what’s the width? Is it narrow?
Spokes Mac Aero 424 4.5g x 44 = 198g
Alu nipples 14g
DT350 road front rear (non disc in ad) 374g
Rim weight 552 for 60 mm, external width 25 mm.
25 mm external
My 62mm rims (Reynolds Strike), are 590grams. Total weight of 1650 grams.
Be interested to see how your new wheels perform. My Reynolds wheels just annoy the life out of me so looking to replace them. Braking isn’t good enough to race on and they are absolutely ridiculously difficult to change tubes/tyres.
But you’re looking for a disc wheelset, no?
So the hub weight I stated is accurate, the spoke count will have to go above 44 and the spokes will have to be longer as you’ll have to go 2x on the front and on the NDS rear to accommodate the disc. Alu nipples is up to you, but I wouldn’t. The galvanic potential between steel spokes and a carbon rim with an Alu nipple in between isn’t a good combo. Assume at least 24f and 28 rear (I do 28f and rear) that’s 52 spokes so 8 more at 4.7g per spoke + the length and you’re pretty close to the 250g. You maybe could get away with less spokes given how deep the rim is.
No, I was basing myself off this wheelset: https://www.carbonspeedcycle.com/csc-60mm-tubular-clincher-carbon-bicycle-racing-road-wheels-dt350-sapim-cx-ray-23mm-25mm-u-shape.html
The final wheel weight would go up a bit requesting center lock disc hubs. If you specced brass nipples weight goes up more, the point is that the rims are about 550grams.
I'm curious about the comparison to the HUNT entry level aero wheelset, https://www.huntbikewheels.com/collections/aero-wheelsets/products/hunt-50carbon-aero-disc-road-wheelset-1438g-50deep-27wide-24spoke-1099#techspecs T700 carbon and under 500 gram rims?
Heavier wheelset with shite hubs compared to lighter wheelset with DT350 hubs at the same price, yes, that makes it poor value.
Genuine question but why do you think the prime hubs are 'shite'. Have you ever owned a pair? Or are you speculating? As I have 2 pairs and both sets have been flawless.
As for value..depends how much you value your teeth I guess. I'm sure they might be ok but I wouldn't be buying them.
Most hubs are "shite" compared to DT350 hubs - based myself on the reviews about the RR wheels on chainreaction ”Fronthub runs harshly. Rear hub sometimes makes a loud metal noise. Build is as simple as it can be. Overall both hubs have a disappointing cheap feel.” and similar cheap hubs that have been known to break under power. Shite is a relative term though, they might be decent.
s for value..depends how much you value your teeth I guess. I’m sure they might be ok but I wouldn’t be buying them.
WTF are you on about.
Hats off to the op for actually buying something (did anyone win the sweepstake?) and continuing with his quest which seems one of the most pointless I have ever seen.
Straight spokes = PITA to work with but yes may save 15 seconds or so per decade of commuting.
Those bars I bought and broke - they had a join right where the bars clamp that was duff, and I mean I could have glued them better. This I presume makes them cheaper to make, but it really was laughable. Given rims are one piece, you'd hope they are safer.
My guess is rims are dearer to manufacture (and surely time is the factor more than weight of materials) because it's a torus shape with lips and the manufacturing volume is lower and technology younger than forks?
GOOD GOD...MENTION OF ALU NIPPLES
So the CSC wheelset is $600 + shipping, a substantial jump from the ebay ones. Also, it’s a very narrow profile, even in the 25mm. Id say those are probably okay, though i do have reservations about MAC spokes and the CX rays would cost you another $80.
Remember, the hunt disc rims are very specifically designed. They seem to have a different layup with extra reinforcement around the spoke holes which enables/requires very high spoke tension Possibly compensating for the low spoke count. But, max pressure on the Hunts for tyres over 30mm is VERY low.
I guess what I'm saying is that Hunt seem to have got their weight down by having a rim designed/selected for a specific implementation.
Not sure how bars are moulded but wheels are remarkably simple, the carbon is put into one half of a female mould, and wrapped arround a torroidal balloon before the top half of the mould is put on, the bladder pressurized and the whole lot is baked in an oven to cure the resin.
On the one hand its a simple process thats hard to eff up.
On the other hand that does mean any old Tom Dick or Harry could aquire some old moulds and the rest of the kit and make some wheels, just throwing some prepreg sheets in the mould with no idea what they're doing. You could measure the thickness and check the number of layers with ultrasound, but you would have no idea what their orientation was, or how they were arranged.
LB, nextie, and the like are all substantially cheaper than Easton, zipp, reynolds, enve etc, and Id be happy to ride those as there's an obvious cost saving in not being tunnel tested or marketed. They're just copies of others shapes and laid up by people who presumably have a degree of expertise in carbon wheels.
The question is, what more corners can you cut to get from LB and nextie to half the price?
Hats off to the op for actually buying something (did anyone win the sweepstake?) and continuing with his quest which seems one of the most pointless I have ever seen.
Nearly pointless from a strictly utilitarian pov (e.g. saving 30 watts with aero wheels), but that's true for 90% of posts here. For me it's about fun.
BTW, CSC lets you pay them $60-80 to avoid VAT and customs fees in some magical way.. lol
but that’s true for 90% of posts here
Fair point, but there is a sliding scale of pointlessness
. For me it’s about fun.
Fun in dementing us, I take it? 🤣
BTW, CSC lets you pay them $60-80 to avoid VAT and customs fees in some magical way.. lol
DDU Vs DDP shipping. It'll be for DDP means they ship it and pay everything upfront so it clears customs so it arrives at the destination like a normal item of mail. DDU means once the buyer is responsible for it clearing customs etc, the seller is only responsible for the actual shipping.
DDP is generally cheaper and quicker overall as there isn't a handling fee.
BTW, CSC lets you pay them $60-80 to avoid VAT and customs fees in some magical way.. lol
So do Lightbicycle. It’s just prepaid customs. I used it last time as it was a guaranteed cost v’s whatever the charge/VAT/handling costs might be at this end.
Shite is a relative term though, they might be decent
So 'shite' in your book is anything not quite as good as a hub you have arbitrarily decided was the 'non shite' standard then?
In which case I hate to point out that given you have bought the cheapest, unbranded carbon rims available, would you agree that by your own definition, you have bought 'shite' rims..?
Fyi..I have 2 sets of prime wheels, and 2 sets with dt350. And there is no difference whatsoever. Take it from a man who as actually used both, rather than just read about them.
TBF the bearings in my Prime front hub are pretty tiny - at least compared to Hope or Shimano - and didn't come as packed with grease as I'd like - but I remedied that before I rode them.
God knows how a front hub rides "harshly" though.
DDU Vs DDP shipping
Ah of course, I thought they meant DPD which is a shipping company and didn't get it.
So ‘shite’ in your book is anything not quite as good as a hub you have arbitrarily decided was the ‘non shite’ standard then?
In which case I hate to point out that given you have bought the cheapest, unbranded carbon rims available, would you agree that by your own definition, you have bought ‘shite’ rims..?
Fyi..I have 2 sets of prime wheels, and 2 sets with dt350. And there is no difference whatsoever. Take it from a man who as actually used both, rather than just read about them.
Wrong, it's not arbitrary, DT hubs generally don't blow up, Novatec etc do and there are plenty of cases. Similar designs, worse material quality it seems. Maybe yours are better quality as I was generalizing, but reviews on CR indicates they aren't great. That you have both doesn't prove much beyond that the hubs can work just fine - if you grease them up properly like Finbar had to :p
Carbon rims are different, like people have commented, as long as they're not made too light or used with rim brakes they're generally fine. Carbon Speed Cycle has an excellent reputation, you can see this from their 3000+ vendor reviews on ebay plus other user experiences on the webz. Cheap doesn't need to equate to shite here.
Let's have a look at these 'shite' hubs shall we..........
It looks like I've got the same (I though they were powerway, might be bitex) hubs as Prime use in my summer road wheels. Zero problems (and I've not greased them either). And between them powerway, bitex and novatec probably account for almost all OEM and re-branded hubs you can get.
They're substantially lighter than DT as well, about 150g lighter for the pair.
And the DT comes with the standard DT freehub, which has 18 teeth, you can upgrade it, but that's another load of £££. You'r opinion may differ, but I couldn't stand it, way too noisy, it's not a nice noise, and the gaps between engagement's feel huge.
you can see this from their 3000+ vendor reviews on ebay
That they arrived in the post, doesn't prove much.
I mean, you've already told us that the hubs were shite. So the hubs are by your logic as good as the rims?
Carbon rims are different, like people have commented, as long as they’re not made too light or used with rim brakes they’re generally fine. Carbon Speed Cycle has an excellent reputation, you can see this from their 3000+ vendor reviews on ebay plus other user experiences on the webz. Cheap doesn’t need to equate to shite here.
Interesting to see where all these great reviews are? A quick Google only brings up a few reviews, more negative than positive.
But hey, you know best right..
That they arrived in the post, doesn’t prove much.
People mostly review when they receive items yes, but they also leave negative ones if their wheel blows up (unsurprisingly). If their wheels was shit it would reflect in the reviews.
They’re substantially lighter than DT as well, about 150g lighter for the pair
And that makes them better? Lol, that makes them weaker.
1 year long term review
Review/advice dealing with vat
Negative review, delaminated (although the guy kept using them after two crashes and it was during emergency rimbrake breaking, so not applicable to my use case) https://weightweenies.starbike.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=113&t=133976
Rim cracked from riding into rocks, "While the hubs seem fine, the build excellent and the ride outstanding, there is zero impact resistance. As such they are just not fit for purpose." again, i'm using them for road not rock riding, so should be fine for me as long as I don't slam into curbs or pot holes - no pot holes here but something to keep in mind - I wouldn't get carbon rims for rough terrain or roads.
https://www.rotorburn.com/forums/index.php?threads/carbon-speed-cycle-wheels-review.311370/
Here's farsports £500 offer at 1340 grams w novatech hubs which seems dangerously light, nearly no specs at all, much worse than CSC in that regard. DT350 is only $52 extra. Duty prepaid is $50 extra.

Not dangerously light. They’re fairly expensive for nova tech hubs and Chinese spokes.
It seems like more money has gone into the rims (lighter) and less into the hubs, but also lighter.
Saying that. I would admit to being a little nervous about a 1300g 60mm disc wheel.
I specced up some CK hubs, 50mm premium rims, and CX rays and they were 1550g with brass nipples. in 28/28 config, and CK hubs aren’t light. So with novatec (-140g) less spokes (-40g) and allot nipples (-30g) it’s probably about right. Assuming they are premium rims :-).
I’m not trying to dissuade you, just saying that £300 carbon deep disc rims may be... too cheap?
My concern is their resistance to impact damage, from curbs or pot holes. I'm 91 kgs and sometimes ride with another 10 kgs on my back. Seems like carbon wheels generally aren't the right tool if you risk impact (potholes are rare here, but..).
DT has nice 32 mm deep section alu rims, maybe one at the front and a disc cover on the back?
Seems like carbon wheels generally aren’t the right tool if you risk impact (potholes are rare here, but..).
Has anyone said that, other than in reference to the potentiall exploodyness of £50 carbon rims?
Hit a pothole on an alloy rim hard enough and it'll collapse too. Its the more spontaneous failure I think most people would be worried about!
Spend the money on reputable carbon rims and mid range hubs.
Youve been at pains to tell us that saving weight is pointless, so swapping the OEM shimano wheels for fractionally deeper dt ones wont help. Im not convinced aero wheels will really help but it was what you wanted.
P.s. I used to weigh more than you. Notatec/bitex/powerway make pretty much every rebranded hub going. If you think 3000 positive feedback from unboxing is good, theres probably millions of those hubs on everything from oem to four figure wheelsets with different logos