They knew they were sending these rims to Paul Aston, a bike tester... Wonder why they chose to send him that specific wheelset, only to tell them later that they were not the correct wheels for his riding.“What is in play here is that the testers for this E-MTB specific spec M735 have exceeded the abilities of the product, but this is not the experience that our customers are having. My next step for Paul would have been to upgrade him to an M9 Series wheel, which is what our World Cup DH teams race on ”
Its 2,143g with hubs - that's not super light weight is it?Just looking at the weight of the wheelset, I could have told you they wouldn't have lasted long on paper... pretty hilarious to see them blow up so fast though. That surprised me
It’s 350 grams heavier than the Roval Traverse set I just got from Specialized, ENVE is hilarious......Its 2,143g with hubs - that's not super light weight is it?
See the 1900 on the cheap DT swiss wheels that come with a lot of emtbs?Its 2,143g with hubs - that's not super light weight is it?
Gary, i think the low pressure started with plus size bikes and bike shops.
I know none of the ebike stores i been into where around in the 2000’s.Unless you know of a bike shop who was selling plus and fat bike bike tyres around 1997-99 you're wrong.
I personally witnessed Comp 32s and Gazaloddis raced at Ft William around 8-12psi. Not very successfully I might add.
Your mate Josh will remember those days well... well.. .it might depend on bong/head hits over the years
i can't cope with most of the shit a lot of bike shop staff say and tend to avoid all but the few that are owned by mates.
I’m not light at 200-203lbs, but 95% of the time i walk back looking for what broke the wheel or cut the tire and i can’t find anything that even remotely should brake a wheel.You aimed your thoughts directly towards me Tim.
Truth is most of the technology that is used in todays trail bikes came from DH bikes. (which in turn borrowed a lot of ideas from moto)
Sorry if you find me harsh.
I'm actually pretty friendly.
You're almost definitely destroying so many rear rims because your riding technique needs work.
20lb extra weight alone isn't the reason. (my body weight can vary as much as that from year to year). and I don't destroy rims. I did when younger and racing DH. but even then not very often, and almost always from taking stupid lines or getting it massively wrong. Plus a lot of parts just weren't as durable in the first place.
Until you change technique and learn to go lighter on the rear and choose better lines and ride smoother your only option is to run stronger tyres, rims and use higher pressures.
See the 1900 on the cheap DT swiss wheels that come with a lot of emtbs?
it's a reference to their weight in grams. they're not 1900g but they are sub 2000g
same with their 1700s
Both are pretty durable.
1500g is about as light as you'd want to go with alu rims
and TBH a smooth lightweight rider (sub 10st) who runs sensible pressures could still get away with an alu wheelset that light on an emtb.
I have 1650g alu wheels on my 4X bike and they are plenty stiff enough and hold up fine to how i ride. If it ever uploads I'll post a video of me riding them down some pretty rough Enduro tracks
[edit] It uploaded but unfortunately I used GoProQuick thinking it'd be... er.. quick... it wasn't and the edit (chosen by the app) and quality are super bad (and not in a jonah Hill way)
I think this part of ENVE’s response is particularly derogatory to Emtb riders:
“What is in play here is that the testers for this E-MTB specific spec M735 have exceeded the abilities of the product, but this is not the experience that our customers are having. My next step for Paul would have been to upgrade him to an M9 Series wheel, which is what our World Cup DH teams race on ”
Implying that EMTB riders don’t ride hard and that they view their customer base for this model as not pushing their bikes!
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