Are ALL carbon rims prone to failure, or just Trek's?
Yesterday our crew hit the Palm Canyon Epic, a noteworthy trail outside Palm Springs, California. After our extremely wet winter, the desert had plenty of stream crossings and a carpet of wildflowers. But that's a tale for another time.
One section of trail is several miles of double black diamond. It's hella chunky with sharp volcanic rock, narrow lines, and serious exposure. Failure here would be ill advised. But it was all good, and everyone had a great time.
We got back to town, loaded up the trucks, and grabbed a bunch of tacos and beer. Ride. Tacos. Beer. As we moseyed on back to the trucks, someone pointed to one of the bikes and exclaimed, "WTF happened here?!"
The bike belonged to our best rider. The dude is fast. He hits it hard. And he was on his second beer before the rest of us got to the pub. Examination of the front wheel revealed a small chunk of volcanic rock that had penetrated the rim and was stuck there. No air was lost, no cracks had propagated, and the wheel ran as if it was brand new.
What do you think? A bit of nail polish to smooth it out? Slap a sticker over it and pretend it never happened?
Yesterday our crew hit the Palm Canyon Epic, a noteworthy trail outside Palm Springs, California. After our extremely wet winter, the desert had plenty of stream crossings and a carpet of wildflowers. But that's a tale for another time.
One section of trail is several miles of double black diamond. It's hella chunky with sharp volcanic rock, narrow lines, and serious exposure. Failure here would be ill advised. But it was all good, and everyone had a great time.
We got back to town, loaded up the trucks, and grabbed a bunch of tacos and beer. Ride. Tacos. Beer. As we moseyed on back to the trucks, someone pointed to one of the bikes and exclaimed, "WTF happened here?!"
The bike belonged to our best rider. The dude is fast. He hits it hard. And he was on his second beer before the rest of us got to the pub. Examination of the front wheel revealed a small chunk of volcanic rock that had penetrated the rim and was stuck there. No air was lost, no cracks had propagated, and the wheel ran as if it was brand new.
What do you think? A bit of nail polish to smooth it out? Slap a sticker over it and pretend it never happened?