Just in: Tufo carbon mountain bike wheels
Just through the doors and awaiting a full off-road test at this year’s Moab 24-hour race, 13-14 October, are these carbon rimmed, tubular-tyred wheels from Tufo, the XC LPs.
The 24 hole deep section carbon rims are laced via Sapim bladed spokes to DT Swiss centerlock disc hubs. The XC2 1.95in tyres have a low profile tread pattern that's designed for fast rolling on hard terrain. The pair weighs 1350grams (including tyres but without quick release skewers). On their own the XC2 tubular tyres weigh 450g.
The tubulars were incredibly easy to stick to the rims with the supplied tape. We'd even go as far as saying they're easier to mount than tubeless tyres especially with no messing around with gap-sealing latex fluid. The only thing to ensure is mounting the tyre straight on the rim.
Tufo supply tyre sealant should you puncture but interestingly they recommend only filling the tubular after puncturing. You also get a valve tool for removing the presta core. Justin Loretz, chief weight-weenie at our sister publication What Mountain Bike, will be giving them a thorough testing at 24 Hours of Moab, we'll give you the heads up on how they performed at a later date.
If you’re not familiar with tubulars, the tyre is a sealed tube, sewn shut, that’s glued to the rim; the design is still very common on the road. The advantages are lower weight, because of the lack of a tyre bead and hooked rim sidewalls, and less chance of a pinch puncture. The disadvantage is that you have to carry a complete spare tyre for racing rather than just a tube. Wolber made mountain bike tubulars back in the ’80s, but they soon faded from view.
Back then, the weight advantage of an aluminium-rimmed wheel wasn’t enough to make tubulars attractive. This time round, the weight-saving of the carbon rims means these wheels weigh the same with tyres as a very light pair of regular wheels without, hence their reappearance.
The rim is only compatible with tubular tyres so you're pretty much stuck, literally, with Tufo’s tyres (we expect the Dugast Rhino XLs that Thomas Frischknecht uses would also fit). These are all very much aimed at cross-country racers.
And the price is going to make them the domain of dedicated weight weenies only: US$1,990.00.
User Comments
There are 5 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 5 of 5 comments
-
smr5
Posted Mon 11 Feb, 7:44 pm GMT Flag as inappropriate
What size is the rim? Is it the typical MTB size 589 or is it a 650c?
-
jloftus
Posted Mon 24 Sep, 5:33 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
The tyres are definitely 450g but that other weight is the manufactures claimed weight for the wheelset without tyres. The wheels are currently on a bike being shipped to Moab but we will give them a proper weight in and review as soon as we can.
-
AlexRan
Posted Sat 22 Sep, 3:08 am BST Flag as inappropriate
If I'm guessing correctly the 1350g will be the weight of the wheels alone (as the reynolds versions are the same claimed weight). Tyres are 450g each. This compares very well with crossmax SLR at 1580g for the 6-bolt version and about 650g for a decent tubeless tyre (ie one that won't flat after going over the first section of rock). Overall weight saving will be in the order of 600g, which is extraordinary.
As for 'mainstream pricing', don't hold your breath. These are race-day only wheels realistically. Prices of carbon tubulars in the road segment will give you an idea of what segment of the market these belong to.
-
gavinski
Posted Fri 21 Sep, 3:39 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
does the 45grams not refer to the pair of tyres I.e. 225g each? seems incredibly light, but are they not just reinfored and gripped inner tubes? certainly there are road tyres only just over 100g
still a massive amount of money though!
how long to this stuff filter down to mainstream prices?
-
jon2
Posted Thu 20 Sep, 5:32 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
1350g with tyres.... I don't think so, allowing 900g for a pair of tyres leaves 450g for the pair of wheels. The hubs alone weigh about that so they must be some king of miracle rims & spokes. Sure it's not 2350g with tyres? That would leave a reasonable 1450g for the wheels, light but nothing to write home about for $1990.
- 1













Bookmark with: