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Cane Creek Track Wheels
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900 US dollars for a wheelset!! :eek:
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well how do you feel about the $1500 85mm endurance wheels? personally I think its super dumb that its a flip flop. no one riding those wheels needs to have another cog loaded. Seems silly to me.
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Originally Posted by Aldone
(Post 5719296)
900 US dollars for a wheelset!! :eek:
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$900 for aluminum clinchers? Who do they think buys this stuff?
And to further demonstrate just how much they don't get it, the hubs are fixed/free. |
Interesting.
I ride with Cane Creek Volos: http://www.canecreek.com/volos-track...er-wheels.html They weigh less and cost less. |
Originally Posted by Ken Cox
(Post 5720099)
Interesting.
I ride with Cane Creek Volos: http://www.canecreek.com/volos-track...er-wheels.html They weigh less and cost less. |
Originally Posted by Ken Cox
(Post 5720099)
Interesting.
I ride with Cane Creek Volos: http://www.canecreek.com/volos-track...er-wheels.html They weigh less and cost less. |
Originally Posted by CF4L
(Post 5719547)
well how do you feel about the $1500 85mm endurance wheels? personally I think its super dumb that its a flip flop. no one riding those wheels needs to have another cog loaded. Seems silly to me.
I really like the Endurance wheels and would love to have a set but it's way beyond my budget. |
Originally Posted by Ken Cox
(Post 5720099)
Interesting.
I ride with Cane Creek Volos: http://www.canecreek.com/volos-track...er-wheels.html They weigh less and cost less. |
Originally Posted by Yoshi
(Post 5720661)
Have you ever been to the track? People change their gearing all the time. Having two cogs on the wheel is not a bad thing. Switching between a pursuit and a points race would just mean flipping the wheel around.
I really like the Endurance wheels and would love to have a set but it's way beyond my budget. |
For nearly half the money, you could very easily built a set of track wheels that are just as aero and lighter.
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also the regular aluminum ones look better and are only $575 http://www.canecreek.com/track-v-wheels.html
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I have been told that lots of riders don't use lock rings to make things easier/quicker, so I assumed they were changing stuff more than just flipping wheels. |
Originally Posted by BLIMP
(Post 5721937)
Wouldn't this get you thrown out at most tracks?
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Some tracks, yes. But it's fairly common. I believe that's how/why the Rotafix method was developed.
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Originally Posted by CF4L
(Post 5720803)
infact, no I have not. However I was under the impression that the change would be done in the pits between races. I have been told that lots of riders don't use lock rings to make things easier/quicker, so I assumed they were changing stuff more than just flipping wheels. and aren't most high end off the shelf wheels single sided? I alsways assumed they were...
I really don't know why most high end COTS wheels are single-sided. |
Originally Posted by BLIMP
(Post 5721937)
Wouldn't this get you thrown out at most tracks?
To elaborate, a track racer should never be back-pedaling hard enough to make a lockring necessary. If you are back-pedaling that hard you're doing something VERY wrong. |
Right on. I was thinking about the whole lack of hard backpedaling thing, but my general concerns for safety took over. It just seems like one of those things that has obvious benefits in terms of safety that aren't so inconvenient as to have it be too much of a pain to work around.
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OT, but I think it's safer NOT to run a lockring, so if something does happen, the cog simply spins off the wheel, and the rider can coast to the pit. With a lockring, the bike is more likely to throw the rider.
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Originally Posted by bonechilling
(Post 5722611)
OT, but I think it's safer NOT to run a lockring, so if something does happen, the cog simply spins off the wheel, and the rider can coast to the pit.
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