Enve Launch DH Rims And Wheels

Enve"s new DH rim/wheels have a 21mm inner width (Enve Composites)
View Thumbnail Gallery
This week Enve Composites launched their first downhill-specific carbon rim.
Prototypes leading to the launch of the production rim have been in use by the Santa Cruz Syndicate’s World Cup downhill team for the better part of two years — the team first tested a carbon downhill rim in 2009.The production version is a product of this extended development, which Enve reports the final prototypes — a single set of rims — incredibly carried Steve Peat through the entire 2011 World Cup season worth of race runs.
Enve says that the Syndicate team rode the DH specific carbon rims to more than 50 podium placings over the test period. Enve say they’re proud to have claimed the first World Cup win with a carbon clincher rim; Greg Minnaar took the honor at the 2010 season opener in Maribor, Slovenia.
Since the wheels first made their way onto the Syndicate’s rigs they’ve undergone major revisions, both in terms of profile and material. During the 2010 season, the Syndicate’s first on the carbon rims, they replaced 53 wheels, which was down from a reported 180 wheels per season when the team was on alloy.
In 2011, the team had to replace just 11 wheels, and in all instances, over both seasons, Enve says there wasn’t a single catastrophic failure. “It was only eight up until the world champs,” Jason Schiers, Enve’s founder told BikeRadar. “We were hoping to keep it under double digits for the year, which would have been huge. Steve Peat raced [he used a separate set of practice wheels] the same set of wheels all year long, which was unheard of.”
Of last season’s 11 broken wheels not one lost air pressure or warranted their rider to slow before the finish line. “They were cracking hook beads,” said Schiers of the failures. “We made some more tweaks over the off-season, again, and the ones we’re releasing are even stronger than the ones they raced on last year. We’re excited to see if we can get through a year without a broken rim on the DH circuit, which would be huge.”
Steve Peat rode the same race wheels over the course of the entire World Cup series in 2011
Such durability comes at an incredible cost, however, as each rim costs US$999. “I realize that the price is exorbitant,” said Schiers. “But we’re using the most expensive resin system on the planet; it’s stuff that’s meant to stop bullets and ballistics, and the processing of the rim is just incredibly hard — it goes well outside what other resin systems are like.”
Enve"s new DH wheelset; US$2,750 as pictured
The Enve DH rim is 31 mm deep and features a 21mm inner bead-to-bead width (30mm external) making it the ideal platform for riders running wide downhill tires. The new Enve DH clinchers also include new structural modifications said to improve ride performance and strength without any notable weight penalties.
The new Enve DH rims are only available in 26 inch, 32-hole configuration and weigh a claimed 475g per rim, compared to alloy rims, which range from 580-660g. “It was a real challenge to get a rim that looked good,” said Schiers. “The ones they ran last year were built with the right resin system, but they’re ugly as hell. If there were ever a close up picture, I think people would be surprised at how poor of quality the surface appeared — structurally they were fine — and to get that resin to play nice it took us almost [the whole] two years — and that was working on them everyday to try and come up with something better.”
Currently, Enve’s DH rims are for tube-type tires only, but Schiers says that they’re working on a rim strip for tubeless conversion, though, offered no timeline as to when it will be available
Wheelsets are priced at US$2,750 with Chris King or DT Swiss hubs and DT Swiss Competition spokes. “I tend to push the stuff that I think is game changing, but not really financially responsible,” said Schiers.
Related articles Santa Cruz Syndicate confirm move to Shimano/Fox Smart ENVE 3.4 road wheelset – exclusive review Just in: ENVE Twenty9 XC mountain bike wheels Steve Peat Syndicate opens its doors for 2012 ENVE Composites Mountain Riser bar review Enve Composites from PressCamp 2011 ENVE Composites" 29in carbon rims earn UST certification Video: Downhill action from Steve Peat Syndicate"s Michael Vickers Mitch Ropelato joins Steve Peat Syndicate North America Steve Peat Syndicate hits North America Edge Composites now ENVE Composites Pro bike: Greg Minnaar"s Santa Cruz Syndicate V-10.4 Carbon Santa Cruz Syndicate to ride Edge carbon wheels Related links Santa Cruz Bicycles Enve Composites BikeRadar is not responsible for the content of external websitesSchiers says that the rims can withstand much more of an impact than a standard alloy rim