New carbon tubulars - Boyd or Psimet?
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 140
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
New carbon tubulars - Boyd or Psimet?
I'm getting a new set of carbon tubulars for racing next season. I'm leaning toward the Boyd 24/28 - 44mm deep models for 1320 dollars or set from Psimet with White Industries T11 hubs on a 38 mm rim for a little more for the nicer hub. I've never used either model so I have no idea what to expect. I think I like the 44 mm depth of the Boyd a little better. I'm a 180 lb. Cat 3 if it makes difference. I have a set of Dt 240's laced to a Hed Belgium with 32 DT comp spokes on each wheel. They are great wheels but looking for something a touch faster for racing. Let me know any thoughts you have. I ran 34 fango's all year and am leaning toward a 33 Fango front with 33 Griffo rear for next year for most races.
#3
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 140
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Do you think it is worth upgrading the hubs to DT 240's or White Industries as opposed to his in house hub? It adds about 250 dollars to the cost of the wheelset to upgrade the hubs.
#5
Overacting because I can
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: The Mean Streets of Bethesda, MD
Posts: 4,552
Bikes: Merlin Agilis, Trek 1500
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Psimet - I smashed my pair into the barriers and they were unmarked.
__________________
“Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm." (Churchill)
"I am a courageous cyclist." (SpongeDad)
“Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm." (Churchill)
"I am a courageous cyclist." (SpongeDad)
#6
I eat carbide.
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Elgin, IL
Posts: 21,627
Bikes: Lots. Van Dessel and Squid Dealer
Mentioned: 25 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1325 Post(s)
Liked 1,306 Times
in
560 Posts
HA!...just stumbled on this in the search. Don't want to come in here and do a commercial as that's usually frowned on, but as far as cross goes: there is no other builder out there who has cross squarely in their wheelhouse. I can say it is roughly 50%-60% of my business. There are a ton of references out there as well.
The house branded hubs are import level quality. Means they're great and useful for almost any use...just like everyone else's import brand hub. The upgraded hubs have a marked track record of being much more durable over the long haul. I like to say that the entry level hubs (house branded with just about everyone) wear out while hubs like White Industries tend to "wear in". It's all about how long you plan on having them. The nicer hubs will be moved to a new wheelset when your existing rims wear out while the house branded ones will in general be pitched with the bathwater so to speak.
The 38W cross specific rim is in fact our own mold and designed specifically for use in cyclocross applications. Without going overboard on what that means I'll boil it down to some basics: It has a gluing profile that is designed to be used only with cross tires. It allows you to glue the tire from edge to edge of the base tape instead of having basetape overhang each side with rims designed to be used on the road primarily. It also has a shallower curve to the gluing surface meaning its tons easier to get the tire to contact it from edge to edge as well when gluing. This all adds up to little to much easier gluing, more stable feel in the tires at low pressure, roughly 10%-30% more actual contact surface between the rim and the tire - working to hold on the tire. Means NO Belgium tape use is needed even for a novice gluer.
The other benefit is that they are stronger. I was waiting for more data on it but quite simply in 3 years we have seen a total of 3 rims total that have failed/cracked. In the first case they were my personal wheels that I put under any racer that would ride them in all conditions regardless of what brake pads they were using. The final user was Chad Hartley who wore the last bit of brake track out in a super muddy race in Wisconsin last year. A couple of threads of carbon started to peel from the surface of the rim. So....this year I made them into disc brake wheels. Been racing on them all season with now issues whatsoever.
Today we have seen #2 and #3 . Both have seen a ton of use and were both used at the same race this weekend with sharp barrier edge bunny hops. 1 guy drilled it so hard the rest of his bike is in shambles. I found a tiny crack in the rim and am replacing it to have him running by this weekend for our crash replacement cost $200 including re-gluing his tire as well....well he DID bring me a bag of bacon this weekend. The second guy just came by and dropped his off. He slammed the same barrier - took a chunk out of it, got off the ground and threw his bike as hard as he could into the second barrier in disgust. Picked his bike back up and finished the race...with a small crack in the rim. In both cases these guys are on their 4th season with the same rims. Both are amazed they lasted as long as they did.
To put this into perspective....the mechanic on a pro cross team I sponsor (not hard to figure out) sent me a text the other day telling me how amazed he was at how well the wheels hold up through UCI race abuse. Time to take a swipe at another product which is not normally what I do but it illustrates the whole built for road vs built for cross thing....his text:" ...the wheels are holding up fantastic by the way. Cannondale has 6 broken Zipps in their trailer. Ours look brand new."
You can't put knobbies on a corvette and expect it to race off-road.
The house branded hubs are import level quality. Means they're great and useful for almost any use...just like everyone else's import brand hub. The upgraded hubs have a marked track record of being much more durable over the long haul. I like to say that the entry level hubs (house branded with just about everyone) wear out while hubs like White Industries tend to "wear in". It's all about how long you plan on having them. The nicer hubs will be moved to a new wheelset when your existing rims wear out while the house branded ones will in general be pitched with the bathwater so to speak.
The 38W cross specific rim is in fact our own mold and designed specifically for use in cyclocross applications. Without going overboard on what that means I'll boil it down to some basics: It has a gluing profile that is designed to be used only with cross tires. It allows you to glue the tire from edge to edge of the base tape instead of having basetape overhang each side with rims designed to be used on the road primarily. It also has a shallower curve to the gluing surface meaning its tons easier to get the tire to contact it from edge to edge as well when gluing. This all adds up to little to much easier gluing, more stable feel in the tires at low pressure, roughly 10%-30% more actual contact surface between the rim and the tire - working to hold on the tire. Means NO Belgium tape use is needed even for a novice gluer.
The other benefit is that they are stronger. I was waiting for more data on it but quite simply in 3 years we have seen a total of 3 rims total that have failed/cracked. In the first case they were my personal wheels that I put under any racer that would ride them in all conditions regardless of what brake pads they were using. The final user was Chad Hartley who wore the last bit of brake track out in a super muddy race in Wisconsin last year. A couple of threads of carbon started to peel from the surface of the rim. So....this year I made them into disc brake wheels. Been racing on them all season with now issues whatsoever.
Today we have seen #2 and #3 . Both have seen a ton of use and were both used at the same race this weekend with sharp barrier edge bunny hops. 1 guy drilled it so hard the rest of his bike is in shambles. I found a tiny crack in the rim and am replacing it to have him running by this weekend for our crash replacement cost $200 including re-gluing his tire as well....well he DID bring me a bag of bacon this weekend. The second guy just came by and dropped his off. He slammed the same barrier - took a chunk out of it, got off the ground and threw his bike as hard as he could into the second barrier in disgust. Picked his bike back up and finished the race...with a small crack in the rim. In both cases these guys are on their 4th season with the same rims. Both are amazed they lasted as long as they did.
To put this into perspective....the mechanic on a pro cross team I sponsor (not hard to figure out) sent me a text the other day telling me how amazed he was at how well the wheels hold up through UCI race abuse. Time to take a swipe at another product which is not normally what I do but it illustrates the whole built for road vs built for cross thing....his text:" ...the wheels are holding up fantastic by the way. Cannondale has 6 broken Zipps in their trailer. Ours look brand new."
You can't put knobbies on a corvette and expect it to race off-road.
__________________
PSIMET Wheels, PSIMET Racing, PSIMET Neutral Race Support, and 11 Jackson Coffee
Podcast - YouTube Channel
Video about PSIMET Wheels
Podcast - YouTube Channel
Video about PSIMET Wheels
#7
It's how I Roll
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Milwaukee, WI
Posts: 5
Bikes: I have a lot of them
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
Personally I have no experience with riding the Psimet wheels, but they look great and I have only heard positive things about them. As for the hub option. If you can afford, it go for the DT 240's. I have 4 different wheels with them. They have been the best hubs I have ever owned hands down. Low maintenance, very smooth, and light weight.
#8
Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 23
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 0 Times
in
0 Posts
I have on experience with Boyd but I have 3 sets of wheels form psimet. some road tublars laced to Bitex hubs, aluminum kinlin's laced with white industries and some major toms laced his his branded hub for cross.
I love all 3 sets and even crashed my white industries wheels and broke my colar bone and they stayed true.
I love all 3 sets and even crashed my white industries wheels and broke my colar bone and they stayed true.
#9
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Fredericton, NB, Canada
Posts: 1,430
Bikes: 2010 S1, 2011 F75X
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 1 Time
in
1 Post
You can't really go wrong with either. Both have a solid support network.
I've been using Boyd 38mm with the house brand hubs for 4 seasons.....so far bulletproof. Never had a problem.
I've been using Boyd 38mm with the house brand hubs for 4 seasons.....so far bulletproof. Never had a problem.