Road Cycling

Guys any recommendations for a wheel set for a rider that's 100kg - 105kg?

A family member got a new road bike (Giant of some sort) but being so heavy he keeps knocking his wheels out of true. Hes asked for some advice on getting a new wheel set that are strong enough for his weight. Budget is around the £150-200 mark for wheel set.
That's not *that* heavy <ahem> (some of us have additional fitness metrics other than sheer slowtwitch quadracep power output! ).

I was in this market some years ago and got recommended Mavic Open Pros on 105 hubs. Theyre still in use and haven't needed any attention.
 
Does anyone do the hill climb season this time of year? I’ve missed the boat this year but quite fancy having a good next time around. 3 minutes of pain and then some cake sounds like a good deal :)
 
I did the Urban HC in London a couple of weeks ago. It was pretty brutal and I paced it badly! Came 57/333.

The winner is a beast and won Monsal last weekend too.
 
Guys any recommendations for a wheel set for a rider that's 100kg - 105kg?

A family member got a new road bike (Giant of some sort) but being so heavy he keeps knocking his wheels out of true. Hes asked for some advice on getting a new wheel set that are strong enough for his weight. Budget is around the £150-200 mark for wheel set.

I’m still over 100kg and the stock wheels on both my giant bikes have been fine with no troubles. When I was well over 110kg they were still fine
You sure he needs to change them? Might be more the poor roads doing the damage
 
Was somewhat sold on getting a Tacx Neo this weekend but saw the Flux is only £450 and I can grab it tomorrow, Flux sounds like a better shout?

Looking at getting one to get my legs back into shape alongside riding out and about, won't be a full winter replacement.
Lickey Hills are just down the road so can use them for proper climbing like I used to.
Flux is good for that money. Paid £630 for mine on a CRC 10% off deal (before BC discount) from CRC back in Feb. At the time I should've pumped the £100-150 and gone with the Direto (as they're a much better unit) but with the price gap now the Flux is a good buy. I was lucky with mine, Jobe was unlucky with his. Basically the newer you get the less chance of it needing a warranty replacement (there where bad pulleys & QC on 10-15% of early units, faults now should be below 2-3%). So if you buy from a small shop holding old stock be careful, if it's online then you should be safe. With the Flux S just around the corner you'll have to decide quickly as they older Flux's at that price will sell fairly well. Tacx basically changed the design slightly (to accommodate long cage & better accuracy) and re-releasing it. The newer Flux (non-S) has quite a bit newer internals and is back at around the original RRP.

But trainer talk is best in the dedicated thread! :D

Using Stan's sealant with the rim tape that came with my Hunts. The sealant lasts 2 to 7 months depending on conditions, apparently.
Think I recall reading that, you can tell when the sealant gets 'lumpy' that it needs replacing? How do you judge that when you're not seeing/handling the stuff...?

Decided to order my first set of 28mm Conti 4 Seasons instead for similar price.
Doh, I'm selling a pair. You'll enjoy them if they're even a patch on my gps2ii 28mm. They're been great this summer! I'm about to switch them out for tubeless but going the Specialized Roubaix Pro again, this time 30/32 (was running 25/28 last 2 winters) as they're '2bliss ready' (Spec's tubeless tech) and the narrower ones are not.

I've got some cheap sealant that I'm due to try this weekend along with gorilla tape Shall let you know how I get on for potentially the cheapest tubeless set up yet.
Ghetto tubeless!

A mate and I made our own sealant with cornflour, liquid latex and another ingredient that escapsles me right now. It works really well but it's a lot of fuss
I'd rather bake a cake and buy sealant...

Guys any recommendations for a wheel set for a rider that's 100kg - 105kg?

A family member got a new road bike (Giant of some sort) but being so heavy he keeps knocking his wheels out of true. Hes asked for some advice on getting a new wheel set that are strong enough for his weight. Budget is around the £150-200 mark for wheel set.
That's not a huge weight, but how much luggage & load? If 10kg luggage & load you're venturing towards 120kg which tends to be the 'limit' most place on their off the shelf wheelsets.

Before I digress, Giant wheels. I've not had 'good' experience with a set of PR-2 which came on my Defy 1 2015. They didn't pop any spokes but needed re-truing 5-6 times over the <2 years of commuting I used them. I was around 75-80kg at the time carrying less than 10kg luggage. I got so sick of it I spent ~£100 on a set of Campagnolo Khamsin. About the cheapest & well regarded off the shelf wheelsets at the time. They did 2-3 years commuting without an issue and are now on the other half's bike and done a year with her, no issues. Rock solid wheelset. Would happily recommend anything Campagnolo (and therefore Fulcrum as they're just rebranded Campag).

Mavic Kyrs are ok, cheap enough but being Mavic I've heard the bearings are a pain to get size wise (no idea if more expensive than usual carteridges?) and something that needs changing frequently as Mavic's are not known for good waterproofing. Seem to recall my LBS also complaining about the spokes, not sure if that's because they where straight pull or an awkward size, or something else.

100kg+ means 32 spokes. DT Swiss r460 is a good current bet, along with kinlins
Or you'll be fine with a well made 28 spoke custom or generally off the shelf.
 
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Or you'd be find with a well made 28 spoke custom or off the shelf.

Probably, but if you're 100kg yourself, the 20-odd grams of spokes for each wheel is well worth it.

i'm 80-some KG and my pannier bag is 6-7kg on the commute. My 32 spokes stay straight til the rims wear out and that's with me bunnyhopping them off kerbs and jumping speedbumps because i'm a child.
 
I rode the Shimano RS81's I had for everything, even commuting, with my ~80kg + 5-8kg commuting bag with no issues on some pretty horrific roads. 18 spokes on the front. Around 8 months no issues.

YMMV of course and our limited amounts of scope/comparisons just biases things stupidly. ;) :P
 
Think I recall reading that, you can tell when the sealant gets 'lumpy' that it needs replacing? How do you judge that when you're not seeing/handling the stuff...?

I don't think there's an easy way too know... I just replaced the sealant after 3 months, although at the time looking at it I probably could have got another 3 months...

On the brightside it was easy to clean the tyre and wheel bed.
 
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Bad luck day all round for me.

Wet weather so I decided to ride my winter bike this morning. Got it all out and locked up behind me realising my pump wasn't on the frame, thought won't need it as I'm going to work and back. Get to work and hear that lovely hissing noise and spot a thorn in my tyre. Pull it out and down it goes.

Came back later with a borrowed pump. Got one tube in there all pumped up then accidently knock the valve so go to pump it back up and I completely sheared the valve off. Great. Oh well got another tube. Change this and all goes up nicely.

Head back to check it later post lunch and it's gone down and now won't go back. No more spare tubes :mad::confused::mad::(

So beginning to look around the bike shed and then someone came in I see every now and then and ask him if he's got a spare tube! Luckily he did and it went up first time! And got home safely..but what a palaver.

Think it's the first time I've ridden that bike in months, going to take it all apart and completely rebuild it needs some adjustments and got some new bars to go on,as I've been running some that are 2cm too narrow for the past year. (stupid deda sizing)
 
This is the Pinnacle? Time for tubeless?

Funny your bars are too narrow. I have the issue that most bars are too wide! I think there are literally 3 models sold in the world that are 36cm centre-to-centre and I own 2 of them.
 
Yeah pinnacle and no point was just bad luck. Would have still needed a pump and I could have snapped the valve still.

36 bloody hell., I thought only the kids used them in cx. .
 
Yeah pinnacle and no point was just bad luck. Would have still needed a pump and I could have snapped the valve still.

36 bloody hell., I thought only the kids used them in cx. .

You see Adam Blythe was kicking off on Twitter couple months back about some Roompot rider with flared bars that are insanely narrow? I reckon they are about 30CM, it's outrageous.

https://cdn-cyclingtips.pressidium.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/antwerp-port-epic-2018-73.jpg
For a pic of said fella.

Taken from this article which is worth a full read to everyone as got awesome photos and write up -
https://cyclingtips.com/2018/09/pho...-road-goodness-at-the-2018-antwerp-port-epic/
 
I did see that, how anyone could ride like that for any sort of distance astounds me! Will read that later, photos look amazing.
 
Not sure about pulling the trigger on this......

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That seems like a lot of bike for the money.

They recently changed the deal too. It was £6k. And now you get a free wind tunnel session too! Handy as the Boardman centre is 3 miles from work!

Might pop in there after work today to see what's what.
 
I don't think there's an easy way too know... I just replaced the sealant after 3 months, although at the time looking at it I probably could have got another 3 months...

On the brightside it was easy to clean the tyre and wheel bed.
Good to hear, I'd probably do the same the first few times and then completely neglect it for 6 months+ and include it into my quarterly checks (which invariably sometimes get to 6 monthly lol).

Funny your bars are too narrow. I have the issue that most bars are too wide! I think there are literally 3 models sold in the world that are 36cm centre-to-centre and I own 2 of them.
Looked at Junior bars? 36cm is damn narrow but kids/junior bars would go much narrower - https://kidsracing.co.uk/collections/handlebars-compact-drop-narrow-width-childrens-bikes

You see Adam Blythe was kicking off on Twitter couple months back about some Roompot rider with flared bars that are insanely narrow? I reckon they are about 30CM, it's outrageous.

https://cdn-cyclingtips.pressidium.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/antwerp-port-epic-2018-73.jpg
For a pic of said fella.

Taken from this article which is worth a full read to everyone as got awesome photos and write up -
https://cyclingtips.com/2018/09/pho...-road-goodness-at-the-2018-antwerp-port-epic/
Epic photos! That's my lunchtime viewing tomorrow sorted, thanks! :D

Remember seeing a load of them, like the entire Roompot team but a guy stuck out as wasn't he in a breakaway and got loads of TV time in one of the classics?

Several of the DD team have flared bars, but not ultra narrow CX ones like his.

That seems like a lot of bike for the money.
It's still a boardman for £5k. If I was spending 5k on a bike it wouldn't be a boardman. ;)
 
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