Not Really A ReView: ENVE SES 3.4 Wheelset

Carbone.

It was said by someone in the posts following Gianni’s excellent review of his tubeless system that an honest, long term analysis by a ‘real’ rider was most welcome. Well, you’re not going to get that here. You will get honesty, for sure, but ‘long term’ doesn’t come into the equation when a week is the amount of time spent ‘testing’ a product. Especially when that week sees more time spent working a real job (one where I have to be in a certain place at a certain time) than I’ve spent in the last two years. But I can give you some impressions on a few good rides on the sweet carbon goodness that is the Enve SES 3.4 clincher wheelset.

There has certainly been a lot of buzz about for the Enve hoops for a while now, and recently they gained a foothold here in NZ with distribution by Wide Open up in Rotorua. Owner Matt ‘DogBoy’ Whitaker has been a friend for a few years now, and I’ve been on at him to get me a ride on some of the wheels since he took on the brand. He also added friend of The V Kris ‘Grom’ Withington to his team, fresh back from Europe after his stint as mechanic for the Garmin pro road squad. Not a bad guy to have on your staff. So we finally co-ordinated our emails enough for me to get a loan of some wheels last week.

Without getting too technical, let’s look at the numbers; the 3.4 designation means the front rim is 35mm deep and the rear is 45mm. SES means Smart Enve System. ‘Smart’ refers to Simon Smart, who is working with Enve and using his Formula 1 background to help develop the manufacturing of the rims. While we can marvel at all the intricacies of carbon layups and aerodynamics etc, and that can be cool, all I had to go on was how they rode. So that’s what I’ll tell you about.

The rims came laced up to Chris King R45 hubs, 20/24 spokes F/R. Kris had mounted some Conti GP4000S 25mm clinchers to them (he even taped around the valve stem where it exited the valve hole; that’s pro right there). I’ve never had much luck with Conti tyres over the years, and while some of my colleagues swear by them, I was still leery but ready to be proven wrong. I mounted my cassette, aired up the tyres and rolled out of the workshop for a quick spin. It was night, I’d had a beer and I was in jeans, so a roll up the ramp and twice around the carpark was all I had time for. By the time I rolled back into the workshop, the front tyre had punctured. And I hadn’t even left the building! Just bad luck, surely? I patched the tube and vowed to give them another last chance.

The first real ride was in windy conditions (not that unusual in Wellington) so the first thing I noticed was a bit more side deflection from the cross gusts when compared to my box section Ambrosios. The next thing I noticed was the venerable Chris King bzzzzz from the freehub. I’m used to some noise from my Chorus hub but the Kings have a distinctive tone and pattern; whereas the Campa has a uniform zzzzzzzzzzz sound, the King had more of a pulsing zzzz zzzz zzzz to their schtick. I got used to it pretty quickly though. The hubs spin really smoothly and with little resistance, as noted by my mate Kah when he said I was ‘rolling away from him’ through town before we had even started pedaling in seriousness.

The bigger 25mm rubber gave a pretty cushy ride over the shitty road surfaces, and I felt like I was riding on air somewhat. Maybe this was due also to the carbon rims; probably. When we arrived at the bottom of the first real climb of the day, I wasn’t expecting any miracles as a couple of weeks off the bike and some fit guys should’ve put me in my place. I sat on second wheel and expected to be swallowed up sooner rather than later. No-one attacked, I sat and spun, and got to the top with what seemed like little effort. Was it the wheels? Possibly. Maybe their light weight aided getting my lazy ass up the hill with a minimum of grunting. Maybe.

Down the other side and speed was easily held without much pedalling, and I seemed to be on the brakes trying to avoid running into the wheel in front of me. Was it the smooth-rolling hubs? The aero rims? Had to be. I wasn’t doing much. We turned off for the steady gain in elevation before the road turned steeper. Conversation came easily as we turned the cranks and approached the climb. I made sure I wasn’t over-stressing my unfit legs and lungs. I looked around and there were only three of us there. Could it have been I was climbing better than I believed because of the stiffness of the wheels due to their moulding process? Well, it wasn’t anything I was doing, surely (I wasn’t doing any more than Surviving on V, after all). Kris explains this process better than I ever could: “The spoke holes are part of the moulding process, whereby the rim comes out of the mould with the spoke holes already in the rim allowing uninteruupted carbon fibres around the spoke holes, which means no additional alloy or brass inserts. This process then in turn means where the spoke enters the rim is very strong, allowing the builder to build the wheel with very high spoke tension which then means a stronger, stiffer and more responsive wheel.” Yep, that was probably it.

The bottom line is, these wheels are pretty sweet. They feel stiff and light, they roll and roll, they look the business and they cost a lot. Do I need them? Shit no, but I don’t need 11 speeds or fancy shoes either, as one of my savvy friends pointed out. I felt like I could climb better with them, they felt solid when cornering hard, they accelerated snappily, braked well and they elicited a lot of comments. Placebo effect? Doubtful. But I must admit I didn’t want to send them back. Matt, Kris, when your demo days are over and they are ‘used’, I’ll be happy to give them a good home…

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/brettok@velominati.com/enve/”/]

*Kris can build your wheels in-house with the King hubs in any colour and they come with a 5 year warranty and crash replacement. Thanks to Wide Open for an impending credit card blow-out.

 

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • @Marko

    @mxlmax

    @Giles

    I'd never considered theft as being morally acceptable, until now. I don't know what those wheels cost, but given the current VMH expenditure approval process, I reckon that's the only way I could get a set.

    Matthew 6:33

    Some dude named Matt has a set for 6.33? That's sweet.

    Ha!

  • Nice review!  The ENVE SES wheels really are where it's at.  I have about 600mi on the 6.7 tubulars and love them.  Your friend did well to tape the valve stems for you - they have a habit of rattling around the valve hole in the rim.  In fact, I misinterpreted this noise in my front wheel for being a shoddy glue-job (my first time gluing tubulars).  I ripped off the front tire, cleaned the rim back to new, and re-glued it with OCD zeal only to have the same noise return!  A little electrical tape around the valve stem and The Principle of Silence had returned.  Also, the zzz-zzz-zzz pulsing of the rear hub isn't so much due to the CK hubs, but the depth of the rim.  My 6.7s (with DT 240s hubs) do the same thing, and it is very pronounced.  It bothered me the first couple rides, after which I narrowed it down to an effect of the elongated valve stem.  I don't even notice it anymore.  I too am a big fan of the gumwall look and will use this as an excuse to post my bike once more!

  • @Velosophe really nice rig and setup. All black tyres (despite the dirty schleck love that many around here have for gumwalls) would set it off even more?

  • @Marcus Thanks!  I am thinking about trying Conti Comps next time around.  The Vittoria SCs are really nice but I have already incurred a pretty bad cut on the rear and the wear is showing.  They were super easy to mount though, and I hear the opposite about Continentals. We'll see!

  • @Velosophe I've become fixated with degree of rear hub engagement recently, especially for cyclocross. The DT240 has an optional kit that takes you to 10° of engagement. Have you tried it?

    Not as good as CK with 5°, but better than stock.

  • Good reviewand I would whole heartedly agree with most of what you say. I have the 6.7's (Tubular version) and they really are nice, also laced to CK R45 Hubs.

    The only bit I don't agree with, although I'm not a wheelbuilder and someone with more expereince can chip in here but tighter spokes do not make a stiffer wheel.

    The reason the spokes are tensioned higher than other wheels is due to the reduced spoke count, i.e. larger gaps between spokes on the rim. That and that the rims can take a higher tension.

    In comparision to an equally lesser tensioned / same number spoked wheel provided that the spokes are tight enough (and this is the important bit) to not become loose, both wheels will ride the same. Tighter spokes do not make stiffer wheels.

    It took me a long while to get my head round it but this post goes some way to explain it.

    You can only make a stiffer wheel by increasing the spoke count, i.e. reducing the distance between the spoke holes will increase the wheel stiffness. All things being equal.

  • Brett, nice write up, those look stunning on the Merckx. Not sure if its the light in the last photo but the tan walls compliment the yellow on the frame nicely.

    I've been hankering after a set of carbon wheels but  I'd have to sell something to finance them and I fear that the only way to avoid a losing argument with Mrs Chris about how the money could be best spent on something more useful would be to sell Mrs Chris.

  • Men ride tubs. Punters ride carbon clinchers. Your opinion has become moot. On everything.

  • @scaler911

    @G'rilla

    Warranty and crash replacement is huge. I'm building my dream cyclocross bike right now but don't think I could ride a race full gas on carbon for fear of shattering it. Las month a friend exited the first lap with a carbon taco.

    But 5 year crash replacement? Are there qualifications on that?

    Ya, You don't want this to happen: (from a teammates rig last weekend)

    Jesus.  What the fuck did he ride into to do that?

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