List of ads matching your search

ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL
ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL

Zipp’s expanded disc brake wheelset lineup now includes a 404 Firecrest Disc Brake Tubeless Clincher Wheelset. Now that you have a disc brake bike, your friends and opponents are going to regret it when you install these wheels. While this wheel is tough enough for gravel grinding and cyclocross, it is best utilized as a road racing wheel, hoops you want to use in crits, in flat to rolling road races, and in rolling time trials. Triathletes who fear getting buffeted by the wind, can run the 404 front with a deeper rear, or two 404’s and get lots of speed while not worrying at all about side winds. While the Firecrest name has been retained from the rim-brake carbon clincher of the same depth, and the design principles remain the same, the rim has been largely redesigned around the needs of wider and tubeless tires as well as braking needs. The third-generation ABLC dimples on the rims, the pattern of which is specific to the 404 depth, have been extended all the way to the tire. This is because there’s no more brake track. Material has also been moved around because the brake track isn’t necessary. The depth remains 58mm, but the max rim width has been nipped in to 26.4mm down from 26.53mm. The internal rim width is 19mm, up from 16.25mm. This 19mm width means that you should use tires no narrower than 23mm, and that the width has been optimized for 25mm wide tires. If you want to take these off road, because you’ve put them on your adventure bike, have no fear. Zipp has confidence in their wheels for off-road applications. When the embarked on creating their first carbon clincher, they benchmarked aluminum rims, knowing they had to make something stronger before they’d feel comfortable releasing the wheel to market. They exceeded aluminum rim strength and then some. Zipp employs their 77/177D hub set, which was purpose-built for disc braking. There are 24 aero Sapim CX-Ray spokes, both front and rear. A cross pattern is necessary in front to counter the forces of braking. The flanges are slightly taller to work around the six-hole rotor mounts and the 17mm axle. While you can see that the spokes have a two-cross pattern, it actually possesses the lateral stiffness of a three-cross thanks to the size of the flanges and the orientation of the spokes. The benefits of the design are more aero and shorter spokes. The rotor mounting method is six-bolt. The front wheel weighs in at 800g, the rear 915g. Maximum recommended tire pressure is 125psi, which should be overkill for any tire you’d want to install on this wheel. Maximum recommended rider weight is 250lbs. For rear wheels, Zipp offers both a Campagnolo-compatible, and Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body. The latter comes with a spacer for 9/10/11-speed cassettes. In both cases, the 177D hub body allows you to install a SRAM XDR Driver body for super-wide range gearing. The wheel comes with quick releases and endcaps to convert the hub for thru-axle or quick-release use. The included endcaps can convert the front wheel from 100x12mm to 100x15mm to quick release. The rear has endcaps for 142x12mm and quick release. They also include a spacer to convert the cassette body from eleven-speed to ten-speed. Also included are: rim strip and a tubeless valve, both installed at the factory, and a valve core removal tool. The Zipp 404 Firecrest Carbon Clincher Tubeless Disc Brake wheelset is the road racing wheel that gives you time trial speed without disc wheel weight or crosswind issues....

Bicycle Frame Wheel RoadBike MountainBike 
Zipp 

549 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

14.08.2021
New

ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL

Zipp’s expanded disc brake wheelset lineup now includes a 404 Firecrest Disc Brake Tubeless Clincher Wheelset. Now that you have a disc brake bike, your friends and opponents are going to regret it when you install these wheels. While this wheel is tough enough for gravel grinding and cyclocross, it is best utilized as a road racing wheel, hoops you want to use in crits, in flat to rolling road races, and in rolling time trials. Triathletes who fear getting buffeted by the wind, can run the 404 front with a deeper rear, or two 404’s and get lots of speed while not worrying at all about side winds. While the Firecrest name has been retained from the rim-brake carbon clincher of the same depth, and the design principles remain the same, the rim has been largely redesigned around the needs of wider and tubeless tires as well as braking needs. The third-generation ABLC dimples on the rims, the pattern of which is specific to the 404 depth, have been extended all the way to the tire. This is because there’s no more brake track. Material has also been moved around because the brake track isn’t necessary. The depth remains 58mm, but the max rim width has been nipped in to 26.4mm down from 26.53mm. The internal rim width is 19mm, up from 16.25mm. This 19mm width means that you should use tires no narrower than 23mm, and that the width has been optimized for 25mm wide tires. If you want to take these off road, because you’ve put them on your adventure bike, have no fear. Zipp has confidence in their wheels for off-road applications. When the embarked on creating their first carbon clincher, they benchmarked aluminum rims, knowing they had to make something stronger before they’d feel comfortable releasing the wheel to market. They exceeded aluminum rim strength and then some. Zipp employs their 77/177D hub set, which was purpose-built for disc braking. There are 24 aero Sapim CX-Ray spokes, both front and rear. A cross pattern is necessary in front to counter the forces of braking. The flanges are slightly taller to work around the six-hole rotor mounts and the 17mm axle. While you can see that the spokes have a two-cross pattern, it actually possesses the lateral stiffness of a three-cross thanks to the size of the flanges and the orientation of the spokes. The benefits of the design are more aero and shorter spokes. The rotor mounting method is six-bolt. The front wheel weighs in at 800g, the rear 915g. Maximum recommended tire pressure is 125psi, which should be overkill for any tire you’d want to install on this wheel. Maximum recommended rider weight is 250lbs. For rear wheels, Zipp offers both a Campagnolo-compatible, and Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body. The latter comes with a spacer for 9/10/11-speed cassettes. In both cases, the 177D hub body allows you to install a SRAM XDR Driver body for super-wide range gearing. The wheel comes with quick releases and endcaps to convert the hub for thru-axle or quick-release use. The included endcaps can convert the front wheel from 100x12mm to 100x15mm to quick release. The rear has endcaps for 142x12mm and quick release. They also include a spacer to convert the cassette body from eleven-speed to ten-speed. Also included are: rim strip and a tubeless valve, both installed at the factory, and a valve core removal tool. The Zipp 404 Firecrest Carbon Clincher Tubeless Disc Brake wheelset is the road racing wheel that gives you time trial speed without disc wheel weight or crosswind issues....

Bicycle Frame Wheel RoadBike MountainBike 
Zipp 

467 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

14.08.2021
New

2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET
2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET

ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET SPECIFICATIONS Bottom Bracket Type PF86 Required Frame Material TCC 01 Premium Carbon, Angle Compliance Technology Fork Roadmachine 01 Premium Carbon, Integrated Cockpit Headset Integrated Seatpost Roadmachine 01 "D" Premium Carbon, 15mm offset Front Derailleur Type Braze-On Required Stem BMC ICS 01 - Integrated Cockpit Design ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET INFORMATION With the new Roadmachine 01, BMC is redefining what an endurance bike can be. It’s faster than a typical endurance bike, faster than BMC’s own Granfondo, something you see in stiffness and aerodynamics. At the same time, it offers greater comfort than a racing bike. The bike is only offered with disc brakes, making it easy to fit 30mm tires for off-roading. And the geometry reflects the desires of the engineers. It’s racy but stable, and the front end is adaptable, even with the integrated stem. They think of this as the one-bike collection. The stem is not only a looker, but shows how thoroughly BMC rethought the front end. The brake hoses run through the stem and into the frame without seeing daylight. The front brake hose comes out of the fork leg just above the flat mount. The rear hose goes into the downtube and out on the left chainstay. Hydraulic brakes only. If you’re running Shimano Di2, the wire runs internally and the battery in the seatpost. If you’re running mechanical shifting or hydraulic, the cabling goes around the head tube. Different covers are provided. And the stem sits atop what BMC is referring to as a cone. The standard has 2cm of stack and gives you a stack equivalent to their GF bikes. There’s a second low-stack cone, purchase separately, that has zero cm of rise. An extra 10mm spacer comes with the bike and stem, but any 1 1/8” round spacer will work. Stem lengths are 90mm for the 47 & 51, 100mm for the 54, 110mm for the 56, 120mm for the 58 and 61. The stem clamps to a standard round 31.8mm diameter handlebar. And BMC is working on integrated mounts for computers and cameras. As with any endurance bike, comfort and stiffness need to be baked in. Both layup and shaping play important roles. That’s why there’s the beefy 1 1/2” lower end of the tapered steerer and beefy fork crown atop slim fork legs. Likewise, at the back, the angle compliance seat stays attach low on the seat tube. The shaping here results in vertical compliance that is greater than the Teammachine but less than the Gran Fondo. The D-shaped seatpost, designed specifically for the Roadmachine, is carbon, and engineered for compliance as well. 15mm setback, btw. In terms of both bottom bracket stiffness and head tube stiffness, the Roadmachine sits between both bikes as well, stiffer than the GF and not as stiff as the Teammachine. You can see the work with the elongated head tube, the notch for the fork, and the massive bottom bracket juncture as well as chainstays that start off beefy and slim down, similar to the design of the fork blades. The BB standard is PF86, and atop it sits an integrated chain guide, designed to eliminate dropped chain. The geometry furthers the cause of a super-fast endurance bike. The chainstays are shorter than you’ll find on the GF. With the wheel better tucked underneath you, accelerations are easier. There’s 63mm of trail, a bit longer than a racing bike, but helps with stability. The bottom bracket drop is a generous 71mm, meaning you’ve got a low center of gravity, which makes both slow grinding climbs, and speedy descents easier. And with disc brakes, they’ve opened up tire selection. Up to 30mm in diameter will fit. As mentioned earlier, the frame is designed for hydraulic brakes only. You can run 160 or 140mm in front thanks to BMC’s proprietary mount. With the rear, you can mount a 140mm via direct mount and 160mm with flatmount adapter. The hubs roll on 12mm thru-axles, both front (100mm) and rear (142mm). The thru-axle design improves stiffness, drops weight, and makes wheel changes easier. The Roadmachine 01 is high-speed fun for those who want a fleet of one....

Bicycle2021 Frame Wheel 

1368 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

15.07.2021
New

2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET
2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET

ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET SPECIFICATIONS Bottom Bracket Type PF86 Required Frame Material TCC 01 Premium Carbon, Angle Compliance Technology Fork Roadmachine 01 Premium Carbon, Integrated Cockpit Headset Integrated Seatpost Roadmachine 01 "D" Premium Carbon, 15mm offset Front Derailleur Type Braze-On Required Stem BMC ICS 01 - Integrated Cockpit Design ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET INFORMATION With the new Roadmachine 01, BMC is redefining what an endurance bike can be. It’s faster than a typical endurance bike, faster than BMC’s own Granfondo, something you see in stiffness and aerodynamics. At the same time, it offers greater comfort than a racing bike. The bike is only offered with disc brakes, making it easy to fit 30mm tires for off-roading. And the geometry reflects the desires of the engineers. It’s racy but stable, and the front end is adaptable, even with the integrated stem. They think of this as the one-bike collection. The stem is not only a looker, but shows how thoroughly BMC rethought the front end. The brake hoses run through the stem and into the frame without seeing daylight. The front brake hose comes out of the fork leg just above the flat mount. The rear hose goes into the downtube and out on the left chainstay. Hydraulic brakes only. If you’re running Shimano Di2, the wire runs internally and the battery in the seatpost. If you’re running mechanical shifting or hydraulic, the cabling goes around the head tube. Different covers are provided. And the stem sits atop what BMC is referring to as a cone. The standard has 2cm of stack and gives you a stack equivalent to their GF bikes. There’s a second low-stack cone, purchase separately, that has zero cm of rise. An extra 10mm spacer comes with the bike and stem, but any 1 1/8” round spacer will work. Stem lengths are 90mm for the 47 & 51, 100mm for the 54, 110mm for the 56, 120mm for the 58 and 61. The stem clamps to a standard round 31.8mm diameter handlebar. And BMC is working on integrated mounts for computers and cameras. As with any endurance bike, comfort and stiffness need to be baked in. Both layup and shaping play important roles. That’s why there’s the beefy 1 1/2” lower end of the tapered steerer and beefy fork crown atop slim fork legs. Likewise, at the back, the angle compliance seat stays attach low on the seat tube. The shaping here results in vertical compliance that is greater than the Teammachine but less than the Gran Fondo. The D-shaped seatpost, designed specifically for the Roadmachine, is carbon, and engineered for compliance as well. 15mm setback, btw. In terms of both bottom bracket stiffness and head tube stiffness, the Roadmachine sits between both bikes as well, stiffer than the GF and not as stiff as the Teammachine. You can see the work with the elongated head tube, the notch for the fork, and the massive bottom bracket juncture as well as chainstays that start off beefy and slim down, similar to the design of the fork blades. The BB standard is PF86, and atop it sits an integrated chain guide, designed to eliminate dropped chain. The geometry furthers the cause of a super-fast endurance bike. The chainstays are shorter than you’ll find on the GF. With the wheel better tucked underneath you, accelerations are easier. There’s 63mm of trail, a bit longer than a racing bike, but helps with stability. The bottom bracket drop is a generous 71mm, meaning you’ve got a low center of gravity, which makes both slow grinding climbs, and speedy descents easier. And with disc brakes, they’ve opened up tire selection. Up to 30mm in diameter will fit. As mentioned earlier, the frame is designed for hydraulic brakes only. You can run 160 or 140mm in front thanks to BMC’s proprietary mount. With the rear, you can mount a 140mm via direct mount and 160mm with flatmount adapter. The hubs roll on 12mm thru-axles, both front (100mm) and rear (142mm). The thru-axle design improves stiffness, drops weight, and makes wheel changes easier. The Roadmachine 01 is high-speed fun for those who want a fleet of one....

Bicycle RoadBike MuntainBike Frame 

1366 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

12.07.2021
New

2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET
2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET

ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET SPECIFICATIONS Bottom Bracket Type PF86 Required Frame Material TCC 01 Premium Carbon, Angle Compliance Technology Fork Roadmachine 01 Premium Carbon, Integrated Cockpit Headset Integrated Seatpost Roadmachine 01 "D" Premium Carbon, 15mm offset Front Derailleur Type Braze-On Required Stem BMC ICS 01 - Integrated Cockpit Design ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET INFORMATION With the new Roadmachine 01, BMC is redefining what an endurance bike can be. It’s faster than a typical endurance bike, faster than BMC’s own Granfondo, something you see in stiffness and aerodynamics. At the same time, it offers greater comfort than a racing bike. The bike is only offered with disc brakes, making it easy to fit 30mm tires for off-roading. And the geometry reflects the desires of the engineers. It’s racy but stable, and the front end is adaptable, even with the integrated stem. They think of this as the one-bike collection. The stem is not only a looker, but shows how thoroughly BMC rethought the front end. The brake hoses run through the stem and into the frame without seeing daylight. The front brake hose comes out of the fork leg just above the flat mount. The rear hose goes into the downtube and out on the left chainstay. Hydraulic brakes only. If you’re running Shimano Di2, the wire runs internally and the battery in the seatpost. If you’re running mechanical shifting or hydraulic, the cabling goes around the head tube. Different covers are provided. And the stem sits atop what BMC is referring to as a cone. The standard has 2cm of stack and gives you a stack equivalent to their GF bikes. There’s a second low-stack cone, purchase separately, that has zero cm of rise. An extra 10mm spacer comes with the bike and stem, but any 1 1/8” round spacer will work. Stem lengths are 90mm for the 47 & 51, 100mm for the 54, 110mm for the 56, 120mm for the 58 and 61. The stem clamps to a standard round 31.8mm diameter handlebar. And BMC is working on integrated mounts for computers and cameras. As with any endurance bike, comfort and stiffness need to be baked in. Both layup and shaping play important roles. That’s why there’s the beefy 1 1/2” lower end of the tapered steerer and beefy fork crown atop slim fork legs. Likewise, at the back, the angle compliance seat stays attach low on the seat tube. The shaping here results in vertical compliance that is greater than the Teammachine but less than the Gran Fondo. The D-shaped seatpost, designed specifically for the Roadmachine, is carbon, and engineered for compliance as well. 15mm setback, btw. In terms of both bottom bracket stiffness and head tube stiffness, the Roadmachine sits between both bikes as well, stiffer than the GF and not as stiff as the Teammachine. You can see the work with the elongated head tube, the notch for the fork, and the massive bottom bracket juncture as well as chainstays that start off beefy and slim down, similar to the design of the fork blades. The BB standard is PF86, and atop it sits an integrated chain guide, designed to eliminate dropped chain. The geometry furthers the cause of a super-fast endurance bike. The chainstays are shorter than you’ll find on the GF. With the wheel better tucked underneath you, accelerations are easier. There’s 63mm of trail, a bit longer than a racing bike, but helps with stability. The bottom bracket drop is a generous 71mm, meaning you’ve got a low center of gravity, which makes both slow grinding climbs, and speedy descents easier. And with disc brakes, they’ve opened up tire selection. Up to 30mm in diameter will fit. As mentioned earlier, the frame is designed for hydraulic brakes only. You can run 160 or 140mm in front thanks to BMC’s proprietary mount. With the rear, you can mount a 140mm via direct mount and 160mm with flatmount adapter. The hubs roll on 12mm thru-axles, both front (100mm) and rear (142mm). The thru-axle design improves stiffness, drops weight, and makes wheel changes easier. The Roadmachine 01 is high-speed fun for those who want a fleet of one....

Bicycle Frame Wheels 

1335 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

16.06.2021
New

ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL
ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL

Zipp’s expanded disc brake wheelset lineup now includes a 404 Firecrest Disc Brake Tubeless Clincher Wheelset. Now that you have a disc brake bike, your friends and opponents are going to regret it when you install these wheels. While this wheel is tough enough for gravel grinding and cyclocross, it is best utilized as a road racing wheel, hoops you want to use in crits, in flat to rolling road races, and in rolling time trials. Triathletes who fear getting buffeted by the wind, can run the 404 front with a deeper rear, or two 404’s and get lots of speed while not worrying at all about side winds. While the Firecrest name has been retained from the rim-brake carbon clincher of the same depth, and the design principles remain the same, the rim has been largely redesigned around the needs of wider and tubeless tires as well as braking needs. The third-generation ABLC dimples on the rims, the pattern of which is specific to the 404 depth, have been extended all the way to the tire. This is because there’s no more brake track. Material has also been moved around because the brake track isn’t necessary. The depth remains 58mm, but the max rim width has been nipped in to 26.4mm down from 26.53mm. The internal rim width is 19mm, up from 16.25mm. This 19mm width means that you should use tires no narrower than 23mm, and that the width has been optimized for 25mm wide tires. If you want to take these off road, because you’ve put them on your adventure bike, have no fear. Zipp has confidence in their wheels for off-road applications. When the embarked on creating their first carbon clincher, they benchmarked aluminum rims, knowing they had to make something stronger before they’d feel comfortable releasing the wheel to market. They exceeded aluminum rim strength and then some. Zipp employs their 77/177D hub set, which was purpose-built for disc braking. There are 24 aero Sapim CX-Ray spokes, both front and rear. A cross pattern is necessary in front to counter the forces of braking. The flanges are slightly taller to work around the six-hole rotor mounts and the 17mm axle. While you can see that the spokes have a two-cross pattern, it actually possesses the lateral stiffness of a three-cross thanks to the size of the flanges and the orientation of the spokes. The benefits of the design are more aero and shorter spokes. The rotor mounting method is six-bolt. The front wheel weighs in at 800g, the rear 915g. Maximum recommended tire pressure is 125psi, which should be overkill for any tire you’d want to install on this wheel. Maximum recommended rider weight is 250lbs. For rear wheels, Zipp offers both a Campagnolo-compatible, and Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body. The latter comes with a spacer for 9/10/11-speed cassettes. In both cases, the 177D hub body allows you to install a SRAM XDR Driver body for super-wide range gearing. The wheel comes with quick releases and endcaps to convert the hub for thru-axle or quick-release use. The included endcaps can convert the front wheel from 100x12mm to 100x15mm to quick release. The rear has endcaps for 142x12mm and quick release. They also include a spacer to convert the cassette body from eleven-speed to ten-speed. Also included are: rim strip and a tubeless valve, both installed at the factory, and a valve core removal tool. The Zipp 404 Firecrest Carbon Clincher Tubeless Disc Brake wheelset is the road racing wheel that gives you time trial speed without disc wheel weight or crosswind issues....

Bicycle Wheels Zipp 

534 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

14.06.2021
New

ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 404 FIRECREST DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL

Zipp’s expanded disc brake wheelset lineup now includes a 404 Firecrest Disc Brake Tubeless Clincher Wheelset. Now that you have a disc brake bike, your friends and opponents are going to regret it when you install these wheels. While this wheel is tough enough for gravel grinding and cyclocross, it is best utilized as a road racing wheel, hoops you want to use in crits, in flat to rolling road races, and in rolling time trials. Triathletes who fear getting buffeted by the wind, can run the 404 front with a deeper rear, or two 404’s and get lots of speed while not worrying at all about side winds. While the Firecrest name has been retained from the rim-brake carbon clincher of the same depth, and the design principles remain the same, the rim has been largely redesigned around the needs of wider and tubeless tires as well as braking needs. The third-generation ABLC dimples on the rims, the pattern of which is specific to the 404 depth, have been extended all the way to the tire. This is because there’s no more brake track. Material has also been moved around because the brake track isn’t necessary. The depth remains 58mm, but the max rim width has been nipped in to 26.4mm down from 26.53mm. The internal rim width is 19mm, up from 16.25mm. This 19mm width means that you should use tires no narrower than 23mm, and that the width has been optimized for 25mm wide tires. If you want to take these off road, because you’ve put them on your adventure bike, have no fear. Zipp has confidence in their wheels for off-road applications. When the embarked on creating their first carbon clincher, they benchmarked aluminum rims, knowing they had to make something stronger before they’d feel comfortable releasing the wheel to market. They exceeded aluminum rim strength and then some. Zipp employs their 77/177D hub set, which was purpose-built for disc braking. There are 24 aero Sapim CX-Ray spokes, both front and rear. A cross pattern is necessary in front to counter the forces of braking. The flanges are slightly taller to work around the six-hole rotor mounts and the 17mm axle. While you can see that the spokes have a two-cross pattern, it actually possesses the lateral stiffness of a three-cross thanks to the size of the flanges and the orientation of the spokes. The benefits of the design are more aero and shorter spokes. The rotor mounting method is six-bolt. The front wheel weighs in at 800g, the rear 915g. Maximum recommended tire pressure is 125psi, which should be overkill for any tire you’d want to install on this wheel. Maximum recommended rider weight is 250lbs. For rear wheels, Zipp offers both a Campagnolo-compatible, and Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body. The latter comes with a spacer for 9/10/11-speed cassettes. In both cases, the 177D hub body allows you to install a SRAM XDR Driver body for super-wide range gearing. The wheel comes with quick releases and endcaps to convert the hub for thru-axle or quick-release use. The included endcaps can convert the front wheel from 100x12mm to 100x15mm to quick release. The rear has endcaps for 142x12mm and quick release. They also include a spacer to convert the cassette body from eleven-speed to ten-speed. Also included are: rim strip and a tubeless valve, both installed at the factory, and a valve core removal tool. The Zipp 404 Firecrest Carbon Clincher Tubeless Disc Brake wheelset is the road racing wheel that gives you time trial speed without disc wheel weight or crosswind issues....

Bicycle Wheels Zipp 

455 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

14.06.2021
New

ZIPP 303 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 303 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL

Zipp saw in the disc wheel revolution a chance to improve their offerings, and they ran with it. Their 303 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher is not merely a rim brake wheel laced to a disc brake hub, but a complete revision of the wheelset, improving both aerodynamics and function. The 303 is generally seen as a mid-depth rim. It fits in the sweet spot of light weight and aero. It’s for this reason that it might be the most versatile Zipp rim depth. It is deep enough to be fast when racing down a smooth road, but it’s light enough to climb well, and balance means it is also good for cyclocross, and gravel grinding. The depth is such that even small riders won’t be concerned about crosswinds pushing them around. Zipp’s work was first, and most importantly, done on the rim. Thanks to the braking occurring at the hub, they continued their SawTooth dimple pattern all the way to the edge of the rim. As you should know by now, SawTooth is a design of indents molded into the outside rim walls that is comprised of twelve nodes. These are designed to start working for you at speeds of 20mph and then work better when faster. They essentially change the behavior of the wind around the rim to negate side wind pressure on the rim in crosswinds, thus making the wheel more stable at high speeds. They also tweaked the rim shape, keeping the 45mm depth, but increasing the max width of the rim to 28.9mm. The result is that the tire width that is most aerodynamic is 28mm. You can go wider for rough- and off-road adventures, but probably won’t want to go narrower than 25mm. The interior of the rim has been changed as well. the internal width is 21mm, and the side walls have ridges that help hold the tire in place when pressure is low. This is to improve the interface with tubeless tire beads. No burps when running wide tires at low pressures. Factory-applied tubeless rim tape finishes the rim package. You can run tubed tires as well; you’ll just need to remove the valve stem from the rim. Thanks to the need to make the rim sidewalls strong enough to handle the pressure of clincher tires, these carbon rims are super-strong. Stronger than aluminum rims, so worry not about their durability. They are race light, but training wheel tough. Sapim CX-Ray J-Bend spokes are used both front and rear to lace the rim to the hub. These spokes are light, aero, and stiff. 24 spokes, two-cross, both front and rear. These NSW wheels utilize Zipp’s Cognition hubs. The front features scalloped flanges for the spoke beds. J-bend spokes resist the twisting forces disc-braking can put on spokes. This results in less pressure on the spokes, increasing lateral stiffness and durability. The rear has a pawl design with an Axial Clutch, which reduces pawl drag by 50% when coasting, and with a 36-tooth engagement, you’re driving the wheel the moment you start pedaling. The disc-mounting method is Centerlock only. Lock ring not included. The hubs come with Zipp’s Tangente quick release skewers as well as hand-removable end caps to fit 100x12mm and 100x15mm thru-axles in front and 142x12mm rear thru-axles. The wheels weigh in at 1530g per set, 720g in front, 810g in back. The wheels, sold separately as front and rear, also come with a wheel bag, a Zipp tubeless valve factory-installed, valve core removal tool, Zipp Cognition Oil, and a freehub body spacer to take the 11-speed hub down to 10-speed if you need. The single wheel bags can be secured together if you have a pair. You can choose between a SRAM/Shimano and Campagnolo 11-speed cassette body, and a SRAM XD-R driver can be swapped in. With the option to customize the Zipp logo in seven different colors, these wheels can be personalized to match perfectly with your bike. The Zipp 303 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher is the all-rounder you want on your disc brake road, gravel, and cyclocross cross bike....

Bicycle Wheels Zipp 

554 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

14.06.2021
New

  • 1