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Topics - Jamesharden

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29er / OXIVE Carbon Wheels build
« on: June 04, 2018, 08:06:59 PM »
Oxive, a new-to-the-scene carbon rim manufacturer, contacted me and asked me to do a review of their wheels/rims. They appear to be a new Chinese carbon rim manufacturer with several different wheel-sizes and rim widths.

https://www.oxivecarbon.com/

I'm happy with my AM wheelset and my fat wheelsets, but I was thinking of building up a new XC wheelset this summer for racing. My current wheelset is built on Nexties that were DH and enduro raced for a few seasons starting in 2014, then re-built for a rigid bike, later a hardtail, then re-built a 3rd time for my Pivot 429SL. To be sure, I've beat these to hell and back and if they spontaneously exploded tomorrow, I wouldn't be disappointed. They aren't heavy with a DT240/XTR combo, but weight has come down a bit with some of the newer carbon rims. For this reason, I selected the 290g 29er XC racing rims. According to the site, these have a T700 and T800 layup. I asked for the rims, rather than complete wheels, since I prefer to build my own wheels.

https://www.oxivecarbon.com/products...-free-shipping

That is the correct link, however, if you look at the page, you'll see the correct rim is shown. I pointed this out, but I'm not sure they understood.

At first, I wasn't quite sure if I was getting one or two rims. I felt that they were more than generous in supplying a rim and I've been traveling a lot and unable to respond to a lot of email or messages, but turned out it was two rims.

The package arrived, everything seemed normal about delivery and delivery time. The lead-time seemed perfectly normal.

These are asymmetric rims. The finish and quality look great. Graphics are not stickers. Spoke holes look like they are painted/coated the same as the outside of the rim. Valve-hole looks to be drilled and not coated. No weird issues noted (no pieces of loose carbon, no delaminations, etc.).

So I got to building them. I used the DT Swiss and leonard spoke calculators. The DT Swiss one mainly to get the hub specs, and the leonard to double-check the offset calculation. The ERD appeared to work out fine. I forgot to snap a picture of the spokes from inside the rim, but again, ERD appeared to work out just fine. I used slightly longer nipples than normal for this build, due to using 28 spokes and the light-weight nature, so went with 14mm spokes. Sapim Laser 2.0/1.5/2.0 spokes. Front hub DT Swiss 240, rear hub DT Swiss 180.

No issues building these up. They went together well. Was able to get them massively-OCD-true, just like any other carbon rim.

After getting them laced and trued, I put place-holder tires on with tubes to set my rim-strip. The tyvek tape weighs all of 4g, haha! To date, I had just been using it for my fat-wheels, but it turns out that I can just use the full-width over the rim and then use an xacto knife to cut along the edges of the rim, which I think many people already know about. It's easy and relatively quick.

I won't get to ride them until around next weekend or even later, due to work trips, and I'll need to get some lighter and heavier XC tires for this and for the other wheelset. This saves a pretty significant amount of rotating weight and non-rotating weight compared to my normal wheelset, so I'm looking forward to using it this XC race season. Most of the races are on fairly soft surfaces and around 1-2hrs or so. We do have some harder/rougher/longer races though, so I'll probably switch these out for some of the races where I'm more concerned about durability than short-term weight saving.





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