Roval CLX II / CL II: 18 spokes a problem?
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The spirit of this board is to compile and organize wheels and tires related discussions.
If a new wheel tech is released, (say for example, TPU tubes, a brand new tire, or a new rim standard), feel free to start the discussion in the popular "Road". Your topic will eventually be moved here!
I find it a bit irritating that Roval CLX II/ CL II wheels only have 18 spokes in the front (while the majority of brands sees to use 24 spokes (non-carbon that is). Has anyone had any issues with them because of that? I just ordered a set of CL2s or a very good price and unfortunately it only occured to me now that they might not be optimal since I have a "system weight" of 95 kg and do a lot of descending. Found a great offer on Reserve 52/63s...
Actually, the Roval CLX II/CL II wheels have 21 spokes in front (and 24 spokes in rear). 20 spokes front/24 spokes rear is actually quite common, but Roval CL(X) II wheels use triplet (2:1) lacing, the the spokes need to be a multiple of 3, so they have 21 spokes in the front. I have a system weight of only 77 Kg, but I haven't had a problem with the 21 spoke front wheel.
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Anyways, will give them a try. If it's good enough for the pros, it should certainly do the trick for me (hoping that what they "lack" in weight they make up for braking harder and from a higher speed, so that, ultimately, the wheels need to withstand similar force). But that is just me guessing as I do not know how speed and mass interact exactly.
Not really related but just found both my sets of first gen CLX Rapides and Alpinists to have seized spoke nipples. They're currently getting rebuilt with brass nipples now.
I only bought them last year FFS but suppose they'd been sitting around for a while being gen 1
I only bought them last year FFS but suppose they'd been sitting around for a while being gen 1
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Yes, it is a problem especially if you weigh more than 88-90 kg plus bike. Standing up and pushing ahead it causes disc warp. I always thought it was the discs but quickly realised it was the low spoke wheel as any other wheel with 24 spokes never had the issues.
The wheel is 'soft' when sprinting or pushing and bike leans to either side
The wheel is 'soft' when sprinting or pushing and bike leans to either side
Disc rub is due to fork flex and has nothing to do with spoke count. The disc is attached to the hub, and the spoke deflection affects the rim in relation to the hub.Eandreaasen wrote:Yes, it is a problem especially if you weigh more than 88-90 kg plus bike. Standing up and pushing ahead it causes disc warp. I always thought it was the discs but quickly realised it was the low spoke wheel as any other wheel with 24 spokes never had the issues.
The wheel is 'soft' when sprinting or pushing and bike leans to either side
C'mon Spec hubs are not that bad.
More OT, the only significant disk warping challenge I ever faced was with full Campy brakes and Bora WTOs. My front disk turned a hue of blue after about 12m use and warped quite frequently after hard stops.This was mostly when riding in Surrey, not the Apls.
Not sure if it was related to the bike it was on (Vitus ZX1), or if there was a fault with the disk. Under the same use on my SL8 with SRAM Red and Galfer disks on CRW wheels have been perfectly fine, not needing truing even once. They are not blue either.
More OT, the only significant disk warping challenge I ever faced was with full Campy brakes and Bora WTOs. My front disk turned a hue of blue after about 12m use and warped quite frequently after hard stops.This was mostly when riding in Surrey, not the Apls.
Not sure if it was related to the bike it was on (Vitus ZX1), or if there was a fault with the disk. Under the same use on my SL8 with SRAM Red and Galfer disks on CRW wheels have been perfectly fine, not needing truing even once. They are not blue either.
I was jokingNickldn wrote:C'mon Spec hubs are not that bad.
More OT, the only significant disk warping challenge I ever faced was with full Campy brakes and Bora WTOs. My front disk turned a hue of blue after about 12m use and warped quite frequently after hard stops.This was mostly when riding in Surrey, not the Apls.
Not sure if it was related to the bike it was on (Vitus ZX1), or if there was a fault with the disk. Under the same use on my SL8 with SRAM Red and Galfer disks on CRW wheels have been perfectly fine, not needing truing even once. They are not blue either.
The hubs are good and there is no way spoke count or lateral stiffness would flex the hub/axle to cause rub. If anything a stiffer wheel would put more load on the hub.
I weight 65kg, have my calipers perfectly aligned and can manage to rub the front rotor on a sw sl8 in out of the saddle intense efforts
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I weigh 86kg and there's no rub when I sprint >1700w (SL7 with CLX 1s)bmrk wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2024 8:53 pmI was jokingNickldn wrote:C'mon Spec hubs are not that bad.
More OT, the only significant disk warping challenge I ever faced was with full Campy brakes and Bora WTOs. My front disk turned a hue of blue after about 12m use and warped quite frequently after hard stops.This was mostly when riding in Surrey, not the Apls.
Not sure if it was related to the bike it was on (Vitus ZX1), or if there was a fault with the disk. Under the same use on my SL8 with SRAM Red and Galfer disks on CRW wheels have been perfectly fine, not needing truing even once. They are not blue either.
The hubs are good and there is no way spoke count or lateral stiffness would flex the hub/axle to cause rub. If anything a stiffer wheel would put more load on the hub.
I weight 65kg, have my calipers perfectly aligned and can manage to rub the front rotor on a sw sl8 in out of the saddle intense efforts