Carbon Fibre wheels....are they worth it?
Carbon Fibre wheels....are they worth it?
Anyone have any first-hand or even second-hand knowledge of upgrading the standard wheels (of a late model sports bike) to carbon fibre Dymags?
I've done some research on the subject and it's all a bit confusing. Some people say that they are the best thing since sliced bread and help the bike's turn-in rate while others say that the decreases in un-sprung weight makes for an unstable road-bike?
Yours in confusion,
NovaCoder
I've done some research on the subject and it's all a bit confusing. Some people say that they are the best thing since sliced bread and help the bike's turn-in rate while others say that the decreases in un-sprung weight makes for an unstable road-bike?
Yours in confusion,
NovaCoder
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For the race track - maybe, for the street, especially crappy Australian roads - NO.
Carbon fibre is BRITTLE. It has high tensile strength, looks cool, weighs very little, but would fracture quite quickly if subjected to uneven road surfaces, pot holes etc.
I am not sure you'd get ADR on cf wheels at any rate for just that reason...
But for the track, then it would reduce the inertia of the wheels, which might give some speed/acceleration advantage, but yes, you'd lose some of the stability that comes with having two big fly wheels under the bike.
Carbon fibre is BRITTLE. It has high tensile strength, looks cool, weighs very little, but would fracture quite quickly if subjected to uneven road surfaces, pot holes etc.
I am not sure you'd get ADR on cf wheels at any rate for just that reason...
But for the track, then it would reduce the inertia of the wheels, which might give some speed/acceleration advantage, but yes, you'd lose some of the stability that comes with having two big fly wheels under the bike.
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CF on the street is a waste of money. Sport bike turn in is already way overkill for street riding and unsprung weight, pfft.
Wank factor 8/10.
I can just imagine the boys at the tyre changing shop taking *due care* with a CF wheel too
Just use the wheels it came with and have a holiday with the money.
Wank factor 8/10.

I can just imagine the boys at the tyre changing shop taking *due care* with a CF wheel too

Just use the wheels it came with and have a holiday with the money.
Just one more law and everyone will be safe.


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That's what I would have thought. And if they're not legal there is probably a good reason.ZZRCHIKKY wrote:carbon fiber rims are illegal !
If anyone cares why I think I know something about cf, resins, etc...it is because I used to work for Fibre Composite Design and Development, a research/commercial wing of USQ.
For a time I made material samples and tested them on their MTS TestStar dynamic load hydraulic test rig...I got paid to make beautiful samples of resins and layups, then destroy them

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- photomike666
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The cheaper alternative is Die Cast Magnesium (Dimags), reduces unsprung weight for better direction change, much stronger than CF and legal as far as I know.
A pair should set you back $1500-2000, but only worth it is your highly skilled and concerned with shaving 10ths of your lap time.
A pair should set you back $1500-2000, but only worth it is your highly skilled and concerned with shaving 10ths of your lap time.
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07 ZX10R since new, tracky TBA, KX450F, 87 CR250 restoration, GT MTB - I've got serious thrill issues, dude
07 ZX10R since new, tracky TBA, KX450F, 87 CR250 restoration, GT MTB - I've got serious thrill issues, dude
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mate would it make me 3 sec quicker per trip to the local cafe??photomike666 wrote:The cheaper alternative is Die Cast Magnesium (Dimags), reduces unsprung weight for better direction change, much stronger than CF and legal as far as I know.
A pair should set you back $1500-2000, but only worth it is your highly skilled and concerned with shaving 10ths of your lap time.
Neka
2006 Zeddy 1000
1996 VS series 2 S pak Ute

2006 Zeddy 1000
1996 VS series 2 S pak Ute

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if you stopped looking in the mirror so much, you would be 33 sec. per trip quicker......Neka79 wrote:...mate would it make me 3 sec quicker per trip to the local cafe??

Marchesini rims are the go for light wheels, but they are a WOFTAM for a road bike. Unless of course you have a *Show* bike and not a *Go* bike, in which case the c/f wheels would look pretty good. Big bikkies !!


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