|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized
Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
"Splat" spamthis wrote in message ... I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat I'm not a big fan of Open Pro for big riders. I've had much better luck with Velocity Fusion, or to go light but tough and dependable, try Velocity AeroHead (OC in the rear). Oh, by the way, I build wheels and am happy to set you up with a great set of "Clydesdale" wheels that will keep you rolling, fast, for the long haul. . . Give me an e-mail shout if you want to discuss the options. . . John BFWG Hand-built wheels for Bicycles and Wheelchairs |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
Splat Wrote: I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 2 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 2 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering i I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or .... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat Got $278.85? New Custom Ultegra Velocity Deep V 32H Wheels delivered insured to your door. They will keep you riding and you wil forget about anything Mavic. http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...item=717397978 -- daveornee |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
On Fri, 05 Aug 2005 22:36:13 -0400, Splat wrote:
I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. Go up to 28s if they fit. The Alex rims are perfectly fine. Here's the deal, everybody moans about Alex rims--but Alex rims are almost always machine built onto cheap hubs. Last dedicated city bike I had had tens of thousands of miles on cheap Alex rims. Yes I had to true the rims a couple times over that period because of major urban abuse, but not more than a mm off over a couple years. Reason they were so decent? I bought the bike at a great shop in Chicago that stress relieved, tightened, and trued the machine built wheels that came on the bike. Might want to try that first. Pay fifty or so to have the stock wheels tuned by a pro, and they should last a long time. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Open Pros are great, you can get machine built wheels on line. with them, but they're still gonna need to be finished by a pro. I forget if those Alex's are low spoke count--that COULD make a difference--but I've seen them specced on a $3000 Roubaix bike--so they ain't "cheap" or overly fragile. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
Splat wrote:
I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat I don't know why you're having trouble locating them, Open Pro wheels are among the most common pre-built (Nashbar/Performance/Supergo, Colorado Cyclist, etc.). I haven't had problems with the set I bought several years ago, and I'm 6'10"/235. Factory-built wheels usually need to be stress-relieved and tensioned, as they are often built a bit too loose. That only requires a spoke wrench and a little time (maybe an hour for a pair). Jobst Brandt's book "The Bicycle Wheel" describes this and much more -- around $25 at Amazon and many bike shops. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
Splat wrote: I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat Most mailorder, like Excel or Colorado Cyclist make wheels with OpenPro rims. as do 'local' shops like mine, who will send them to ya BUT are the wheels true? If they are, just get a bigger tire. A 25c or even 28c is a great idea. Mopre relaible, better [rotection for your rims, more comfy ride. But yer LBS can't get an OpenPro rim? yeegads, the shape of bike shops today. No rims, no wheelbuilders, sad... |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
http://www.performancebike.com/shop/...TOKEN=76732712 $199.00 Search Google for a $20 off $150 coupon. I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
maxo wrote:
On Fri, 05 Aug 2005 22:36:13 -0400, Splat wrote: I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. Go up to 28s if they fit. The Alex rims are perfectly fine. Here's the deal, everybody moans about Alex rims--but Alex rims are almost always machine built onto cheap hubs. Last dedicated city bike I had had tens of thousands of miles on cheap Alex rims. Yes I had to true the rims a couple times over that period because of major urban abuse, but not more than a mm off over a couple years. Reason they were so decent? I bought the bike at a great shop in Chicago that stress relieved, tightened, and trued the machine built wheels that came on the bike. Might want to try that first. Pay fifty or so to have the stock wheels tuned by a pro, and they should last a long time. Fifty bucks is exhorbitant. More like $25 for a pair. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Open Pros are great, you can get machine built wheels on line. with them, but they're still gonna need to be finished by a pro. You don't need a pro. All you need is a $20 book and a little reading comprehension, and a spoke wrench, and maybe some leather work gloves. I forget if those Alex's are low spoke count--that COULD make a difference--but I've seen them specced on a $3000 Roubaix bike--so they ain't "cheap" or overly fragile. Robin Hubert |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
Qui si parla Campagnolo wrote:
Splat wrote: I'm a 215lbs ex-MTB rider getting into road riding. I have a Specialized Allez Elite with the stock Alex ALX-295 23 rims with the stock 23 tires. I can't find any spec info on these rims (what tube sizes can be used?), but I read that they suck. At my weight I think I should go up to 25 or 28 and with a better rim. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Oh, and anyone know any wheel builders in the New Jersey area? Thanks. --- Splat Most mailorder, like Excel or Colorado Cyclist make wheels with OpenPro rims. as do 'local' shops like mine, who will send them to ya BUT are the wheels true? If they are, just get a bigger tire. A 25c or even 28c is a great idea. Mopre relaible, better [rotection for your rims, more comfy ride. But yer LBS can't get an OpenPro rim? yeegads, the shape of bike shops today. No rims, no wheelbuilders, sad... Oh, yes, Peter, "there is no bike shop like mine, no bike shop like mine (refrain)". And Campagnolo does no wrong (even if they admit it). Robin Hubert |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Mavic Open Pro or hand built?
On Sat, 06 Aug 2005 15:08:40 +0000, Robin Hubert wrote:
Fifty bucks is exhorbitant. More like $25 for a pair. I was thinking wheelbuilding pricing. Oops. I am thinking Mavic Open Pro. Now, being that I cannot find any Open Pro pre-built wheelsets (online or LBS) I'm wondering if I should just get the Open Pro rims and have a local spoke them or ..... what? Open Pros are great, you can get machine built wheels on line. with them, but they're still gonna need to be finished by a pro. You don't need a pro. All you need is a $20 book and a little reading comprehension, and a spoke wrench, and maybe some leather work gloves. And a truing stand... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Mavic Tubular Helium & Mavic Open Pro wheels, Tires on Ebay | [email protected] | Marketplace | 0 | December 8th 04 03:58 AM |
F.S. MORE MAVIC RIMS *NEW* $20.00 | Biged \(remove nospam to reply\) | Marketplace | 0 | September 8th 04 02:29 PM |
F.S. MORE MAVIC RIMS *NEW* $20.00 | Biged \(remove nospam to reply\) | Marketplace | 0 | September 1st 04 07:25 PM |
F.S. MORE MAVIC RIMS *NEW* $20.00 | Biged \(remove nospam to reply\) | Marketplace | 0 | September 1st 04 04:12 PM |
Mavic CXP-33s or Mavic Open Pros? | Dave Stallard | General | 26 | November 11th 03 10:57 PM |