Wheels - lighter weight vs aero
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Since much of the thread has been on the academic side, let's consider an extreme example: on performance/function alone I think for non-TT riding, most folks would prefer a 1500g shallow box section wheelset over a 1900g disc (or very deep dish) wheelset. So interpolate this to a 1500g 34mm wheelset compared to a 1900g 50mm wheelset, and I think it tips in favor of the 1500g wheelset even more.
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Since much of the thread has been on the academic side, let's consider an extreme example: on performance/function alone I think for non-TT riding, most folks would prefer a 1500g shallow box section wheelset over a 1900g disc (or very deep dish) wheelset. So interpolate this to a 1500g 34mm wheelset compared to a 1900g 50mm wheelset, and I think it tips in favor of the 1500g wheelset even more.
Weight is what it is for me - too much. A pound or two on a bike makes very little impact.
Aero is my enemy. I am not fat, but have a large frontal profile/wide shoulders. I don't know if the aero savings from better wheels even makes that much difference % wise.
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A month or so ago I took my for foray into modern carbon era with these.
https://www.elite-wheels.com/product...ramic-bearing/
I got the extra light version, aluminum cassette, and 32mm RH extra light tires, while riding season isn't really here yet I do notice a difference in perceived effort with those wheels. I was expecting them to be a bit flexy and hard to control but the carbon spokes (I think) stiffen them up and while my wheels steered me once it's not happened again.
https://www.elite-wheels.com/product...ramic-bearing/
I got the extra light version, aluminum cassette, and 32mm RH extra light tires, while riding season isn't really here yet I do notice a difference in perceived effort with those wheels. I was expecting them to be a bit flexy and hard to control but the carbon spokes (I think) stiffen them up and while my wheels steered me once it's not happened again.
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From Sheldon Brown's site:
Wheel Stiffness Test
Among the various points discussed on that page:
"Some believe that a wheel built with tighter spokes is stiffer. It is not. Wheel stiffness does not vary significantly with spoke tension unless a spoke becomes totally slack. "
Wheel Stiffness Test
Among the various points discussed on that page:
"Some believe that a wheel built with tighter spokes is stiffer. It is not. Wheel stiffness does not vary significantly with spoke tension unless a spoke becomes totally slack. "
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Since much of the thread has been on the academic side, let's consider an extreme example: on performance/function alone I think for non-TT riding, most folks would prefer a 1500g shallow box section wheelset over a 1900g disc (or very deep dish) wheelset. So interpolate this to a 1500g 34mm wheelset compared to a 1900g 50mm wheelset, and I think it tips in favor of the 1500g wheelset even more.
I would don't ride box section aluminum rims because the aerodynamics suck and they tend not to hold trueness anywhere as good as a carbon rim.
The weight penalty going from 35mm to 50mm is nowhere near 400 grams, check your assumption
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Since much of the thread has been on the academic side, let's consider an extreme example: on performance/function alone I think for non-TT riding, most folks would prefer a 1500g shallow box section wheelset over a 1900g disc (or very deep dish) wheelset. So interpolate this to a 1500g 34mm wheelset compared to a 1900g 50mm wheelset, and I think it tips in favor of the 1500g wheelset even more.
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I don't know. I am a larger rider - 195# with decent peak/acceleration power output. The extra few watts it takes to spool up heavier wheels may not have the same impact on me as it does on a light/smaller rider with a different power profile. The overall % in weight savings from my total system weight of say 220# - vs a system weight of 150#'s.
Weight is what it is for me - too much. A pound or two on a bike makes very little impact.
Aero is my enemy. I am not fat, but have a large frontal profile/wide shoulders. I don't know if the aero savings from better wheels even makes that much difference % wise.
Weight is what it is for me - too much. A pound or two on a bike makes very little impact.
Aero is my enemy. I am not fat, but have a large frontal profile/wide shoulders. I don't know if the aero savings from better wheels even makes that much difference % wise.
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I agree that you will gain more from the aero, but I wouldn't buy any wheelset with 17 mm internal rims today. I would focus on tyre choice in the 28-30 mm wide range and get wheels with 20+ wide internal rims to match. Whether they are 35 or 50 mm deep is not that critical really.
Why avoid rims with 17mm internal width?
Does that 17mm width limit your ability to mount different tire sizes?
Does the wider rim provide certain advantages?
Light Bicycle posts this rim width guide:

Source: lightbicycle.com
The center "sweet spot" tire size range for a 17-19 mm rim is 28-33 mm.
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I agree that you will gain more from the aero, but I wouldn't buy any wheelset with 17 mm internal rims today. I would focus on tyre choice in the 28-30 mm wide range and get wheels with 20+ wide internal rims to match. Whether they are 35 or 50 mm deep is not that critical really.
I've actually been teetering on spending the money on a bike fit instead. I think my biggest problem is position and lack of being aero. I am wasting a bunch of power on pushing air - fixing this could be a macro gain, vs spending $$$ on marginal gains.
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I agree that you will gain more from the aero, but I wouldn't buy any wheelset with 17 mm internal rims today. I would focus on tyre choice in the 28-30 mm wide range and get wheels with 20+ wide internal rims to match. Whether they are 35 or 50 mm deep is not that critical really.
Years ago, I borrowed a friend's set of Mavic Cosmic Carbone wheels - an early deep-section carbon/aluminum structure. They were heavy, and a bit sluggish to accelerate . However, once spinning fast, the flywheel effect was dramatic, and it felt like they were pulling you along.
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Follow up questions:
Why avoid rims with 17mm internal width?
Does that 17mm width limit your ability to mount different tire sizes?
Does the wider rim provide certain advantages?
Light Bicycle posts this rim width guide:
The center "sweet spot" tire size range for a 17-19 mm rim is 28-33 mm.
Why avoid rims with 17mm internal width?
Does that 17mm width limit your ability to mount different tire sizes?
Does the wider rim provide certain advantages?
Light Bicycle posts this rim width guide:
The center "sweet spot" tire size range for a 17-19 mm rim is 28-33 mm.
I also have a pair of DT Swiss wheels with 22 mm internal width, fitted with 30 mm tyres and they are a much better match. There's no way I would buy narrow rims at this point unless I was still running narrow tyres.
I'm not suggesting it's a huge deal, but it doesn't make sense to buy a new set of narrow rims if you intend to be riding 28mm+ tyres.
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Until the wind starts blowing sideways - lol. The wheels on my #1 road bike are 35mm(ish) front and 45mm(ish) rear. They do pretty well in crosswinds. My 50mm wheels, however, not so much. The front end gets yanked around pretty severely. In non-crosswind conditions, however, the difference doesn't seem like much, if anything.
Years ago, I borrowed a friend's set of Mavic Cosmic Carbone wheels - an early deep-section carbon/aluminum structure. They were heavy, and a bit sluggish to accelerate . However, once spinning fast, the flywheel effect was dramatic, and it felt like they were pulling you along.
Years ago, I borrowed a friend's set of Mavic Cosmic Carbone wheels - an early deep-section carbon/aluminum structure. They were heavy, and a bit sluggish to accelerate . However, once spinning fast, the flywheel effect was dramatic, and it felt like they were pulling you along.
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Newer rim profiles might fare better (just guessing). My 50mm wheels are older Shimano C50s.
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I read somewhere (too uninterested to look it up) that one of the biggest aero losses with wheels/tires were the vortices generated by the air hitting a wide tire and then sucking into the lower-pressure area of the narrow rim, and that while ogive rim section might be optimal, even a box-section rim was good if the tire and rim were the same width, and no amount of "aero" depth wade up for fat tires on skinny rims .... in short, match mounted tire width the rim width for a smooth transition if you wanted to gain any aero benefit from rim shape.
That is possibly part of the wider rim cross-sections (inner and outer widths) we have been seeing in the past several years---mushroom tires on skinny wheels suck, literally.
That is possibly part of the wider rim cross-sections (inner and outer widths) we have been seeing in the past several years---mushroom tires on skinny wheels suck, literally.
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I read somewhere (too uninterested to look it up) that one of the biggest aero losses with wheels/tires were the vortices generated by the air hitting a wide tire and then sucking into the lower-pressure area of the narrow rim, and that while ogive rim section might be optimal, even a box-section rim was good if the tire and rim were the same width, and no amount of "aero" depth wade up for fat tires on skinny rims .... in short, match mounted tire width the rim width for a smooth transition if you wanted to gain any aero benefit from rim shape.
That is possibly part of the wider rim cross-sections (inner and outer widths) we have been seeing in the past several years---mushroom tires on skinny wheels suck, literally.
That is possibly part of the wider rim cross-sections (inner and outer widths) we have been seeing in the past several years---mushroom tires on skinny wheels suck, literally.
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I don't know. I am a larger rider - 195# with decent peak/acceleration power output. The extra few watts it takes to spool up heavier wheels may not have the same impact on me as it does on a light/smaller rider with a different power profile. The overall % in weight savings from my total system weight of say 220# - vs a system weight of 150#'s.
Weight is what it is for me - too much. A pound or two on a bike makes very little impact.
Aero is my enemy. I am not fat, but have a large frontal profile/wide shoulders. I don't know if the aero savings from better wheels even makes that much difference % wise.
Weight is what it is for me - too much. A pound or two on a bike makes very little impact.
Aero is my enemy. I am not fat, but have a large frontal profile/wide shoulders. I don't know if the aero savings from better wheels even makes that much difference % wise.
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Found this article rather interesting: https://www.cyclist.co.uk/in-depth/w...tweight-wheels
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Found this article rather interesting: https://www.cyclist.co.uk/in-depth/w...tweight-wheels
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OP is a larger rider looking for aero advice and nobody mentions the aero gut? The forum is slipping. 

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Budget in mind - 500+\-, found examples of both.
Aluminum for both choices -
Hunt 34mm deep at 1500 grams
vs
Bontrager 50mm deep aluminum/carbon mix at 1900 grams, floor model and 60% off.
Replacing heavy stock Emonda ALR 5 wheels. The lighter set with tubeless tires will take 1.5 pounds off the bike. But I am 195, so it’s a very small # of the total system weight.
Most of my riding is on flat terrain, will do some mountain riding.
Leaning towards the aero wheels… not sure what would be better overall.
Aluminum for both choices -
Hunt 34mm deep at 1500 grams
vs
Bontrager 50mm deep aluminum/carbon mix at 1900 grams, floor model and 60% off.
Replacing heavy stock Emonda ALR 5 wheels. The lighter set with tubeless tires will take 1.5 pounds off the bike. But I am 195, so it’s a very small # of the total system weight.
Most of my riding is on flat terrain, will do some mountain riding.
Leaning towards the aero wheels… not sure what would be better overall.
Now i have 35mm for 1600g (disks) and they are awsome.
i think your best choice will be the Hunt since they are light and 35mm is fair enought for all round type of riding and the SIDEWIND will not make you fly.
Also you can think abouth use both combination, the front wheel with a light setup and a lower profile and the back more aero and a bit heavier... but you must buy different wheel or start assembly by yourself.
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OP is a larger rider looking for aero advice and nobody mentions the aero gut? The forum is slipping. 
https://youtu.be/Z4Te-wrCQsM

https://youtu.be/Z4Te-wrCQsM
It works on big ships. A beachball under my jersey = 1.5 kph at 350w, per GCN.
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