Far Eastern (China) Carbon Clincher sellers! Recommend plz

Far Eastern (China) Carbon Clincher sellers! Recommend plz

Author
Discussion

ALawson

7,815 posts

251 months

Friday 24th April 2015
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How are people getting on with these better value wheels? I was in my LBS today and at the sheer mention of say a pair is S50 wheels from Zuus it was constant, they will fall apart etc etc.

Will a pair of Aero 38 or 50 from wheel smith be better for another £400-500? I am conscious that if I get this s-works frame the wheels do need to be up to a certain standard level.

Ta

Matt_N

8,900 posts

202 months

Saturday 25th April 2015
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ALawson said:
Will a pair of Aero 38 or 50 from wheel smith be better for another £400-500? I am conscious that if I get this s-works frame the wheels do need to be up to a certain standard level.

Ta
What you actually mean is that you don't want to turn up at your next club ride on your new S-Works looking under wheeled right? hehe

Potent of decent wheels out there that aren't deep carbon.

Rsdop

458 posts

117 months

Saturday 25th April 2015
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For £268 delivered decided to give the Superstar 32mm carbon clinchers a go. Not much info available online, but what there is says good quality components but not always assembled brilliantly. I've only done 150 miles or so but they've been great so far, can definitely feel a difference over the RS10s that came with the bike. They weigh in at 1400g, not much else available that weight for the money so I'm very happy for now but time will tell if they are any good!

ALawson

7,815 posts

251 months

Saturday 25th April 2015
quotequote all
Matt_N said:
What you actually mean is that you don't want to turn up at your next club ride on your new S-Works looking under wheeled right? hehe

Potent of decent wheels out there that aren't deep carbon.
That is exactly what I mean, saw the frame today and it's looks the nuts, he will take if off eBay for a further reduction! Almost a no brainer.

SoliD

1,124 posts

217 months

Wednesday 27th May 2015
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So looks like I need some new wheels anyway, and debating whether to just get some carbon with a basalt braking surface from 2013cycling2013 and use them all year round. Do they provide the same sort of braking power or nearer to an alloy surface than the usual carbon (I've recently put an alloy rimmed tri spoke on my TT bike and the braking difference is night and day, I just assumed it was the bike)

Or would I be better off getting some training wheels and then keep a set of pure carbons for the summer. Would basalt rimmed clinchers be suitable for longer descents, so if taken abroad less likely to blow up (although I'm quite a confident descender and have got about 10k miles out of my current set of Aksiums!)

SoliD

1,124 posts

217 months

Wednesday 10th June 2015
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Bit of a bump, for the question above, Basalt braking worth it?

IroningMan

10,154 posts

246 months

Thursday 11th June 2015
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Mine will be coming off for the winter - I imagine the rear will wear out very quickly on our filthy roads - and although they're better than the older PX50 tubs I have they're still not as confidence-inspiring as alu rims.

I've ridden far worse, though - and if big descents and bad weather are going to feature in a lot of your riding then maybe a disc setup would be the way forward?

SoliD

1,124 posts

217 months

Monday 8th August 2016
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Just bumping this and wondering who people are using nowadays for these?

JEA1K

2,504 posts

223 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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Zuus Sports, UK seller so no hassle regarding 3 week delivery, import tax and returns. Same rims, same spokes and Novatec hubs.

Raven Flyer

1,641 posts

224 months

Tuesday 9th August 2016
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My Far Sports are still perfect, after approx 5,000 miles.

Ordered direct, took approx 3 weeks to arrive and must be one of the best £500s I've ever spent (I think they were just under £500). 50mm profile, 1430g, 23mm wide, ceramic bearings.

Excellent.