All in a line; the wheels.

Its hard to say precisely where the line lays, but I’m certain I’m well on the wrong side of it. I never notice lines as I pass over them but I can usually tell after I have because it feels suddenly liberating to leave reason, sensibility, and convention behind. I find them very restrictive – claustrophobic, almost. They force me into the same old way of thinking, always within a set of parameters of what is accepted. Parameters are a good thing, to be sure – especially for everyone else – but since I wasn’t involved in defining The Universal Limits of Reason and Sensibility, I can’t be sure they’re calibrated correctly so I prefer to roam freely and am quite satisfied to be considered crazy for the time being.

Just like most of us, I started down La Vie Velominatus rolling along on the wheels my first bike arrived with. I trusted them to be indestructible and always carry me about safely. Then one day while racing my friend, I locked up the back wheel coming into a corner too hard and destroyed it, the illusion of The Indestructible Wheel riding up the road alongside the friend I had only moments earlier been locked in shoulder-to-shoulder battle with. It was also at this precise moment that I faced the reality that a wheel is not only destructible, but a basic element facilitating productive locomotion aboard a bicycle.

I spent the next month shingling the roof of my family’s cabin in Northern Minnesota earning the money to buy a replacement wheel. And, having recently shingled a roof, I was suddenly a Shingling Authority, discussing in depth the merits of choice in color, material, and shingle pattern of every roof I passed by. Similarly, upon having been subjected to the myriad choices of replacement wheel, after purchasing my replacement wheel, I was a new inductee into the The Order of the Wheel and noticed (and commented upon) every bicycle wheel that passed me by. Due more to the volume of by observations than their merit, I was soon thereafter indulged by my Cycling Senseimy father – to help him curate the wheels for his custom Eddy Merckx.

At the time, choices were more limited than they are today; quality of hub varied greatly, as did the rims, spokes, and tires. Everything was limited to an alloy of some kind, though you could have any spoke pattern you wanted, as long as it was 3-cross. At the time there was also a choice between tubular and clincher, which was a relatively new option. We labored over the choices and wound up having two wheelsets built – one clincher and aero; one box-section and tubular – a choice I stand by today.

That was my awakening, but nevertheless, I have throughout my life as a Velominatus had only one wheelset per bike. The lightest for Bike #1. Whenever Bike #n came into play, it received  its own wheelset; as with all the other parts on Bikes #2…n; a hand-me-down from Bike #n-1’s upgrade. (Using the Hand-Me-Down Upgrade Methodology, a single upgrade improves not just one bicycle, but several – with the added benefit of filling a longer period of time moving bits from one noble steed to the next.)

It was only recently, during preparation for the 2012 edition of Keepers Tour over the cobbles of Northern France and Vlaanderen, that I took my own place in the realm of the Specialty Wheelset – which also afforded me another of those moments when I was strangely aware of having crossed one of Those Lines. After all, a big, fat Dutchman can’t be expected to ride over the pavé of Paris-Roubaix – unleashing the awesome wattage of his artillery – on just any old wheelset; certainly not any of those wheels which I already owned. This called for a set of wheels purpose-built for the occasion. Rims, hubs, spokes, and tires were selected with great care and assembled (four times) in a wine-enhanced rite.

Riding these wheels is a pleasure highlighted by the fact that I don’t always ride them. They hang on the workshop wall in a wheel bag, waiting for the Right Occasion to ride them. Those occasions are often anticipated several days – if not weeks – in advance and deliberated over carefully. Then, when the choice is finally made to pop them in for the ride, I wrap myself in the delta between my regular wheels and these. This contrast, like the negative space in a great painting, is the area in which I dwell while riding them. The difference in tire type, width, spoke pattern, weight. The way the wheel feels when the pedal is engaged. The way the wheels and tires flex over a bump in the road or hug the pavement in a corner.

I’ve since embarked on a journey to get each road bike in the house – mine as well as the VMH’s – on the same drive train in order to be able to maximize the wheel-swapping effect. Each wheel is a new language, each tire a new dialect, and inner tube a new turn of phrase. To paraphrase the nursery rhyme: one for sorrow, two for joy, three for hills and four for stones.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @roger That's a new one on me, I thought H Plus Sons rims were made in the Far East thusly

    https://vimeo.com/20824379

    @Nate Justin Spinelli of Luxe Wheelworks ( http://luxewheelworks.com/ ) I could spend hours goings back through his blog / tumblr pages. 

    @tessar Yeah I learn that after a very unexpected ( or forecasted ) Rule 9 ride. Did a reverse loop of my usual 100k Sunday morning ride which involves a very twisty descent down a 20% hill ( normally a fucker to climb, hence tdies incision to do it in reverse ), I was stranding on the brakes with my arse over the back wheel and it was barely slowing me down, alu rims for wet rides in future.

    But when they hum there is nothing better for the soul, still secretly love my Nemesis / Royce wheel equally as its the first set I've ever built from scratch, and after 500k  of mixed beaten up surfaces, smashing into potholes they are still as true as the day I laced them. Time will tell is they are still true after 5000k?

  • @scaler911 No, sorry, I don't know what you mean! The only ones I can think of were from the first Burrows designed Giant TCRs, but they were late 90s so I imagine you mean something different. I was out of the trade between '88 and '92 so, while I tried to keep abreast of things cycling, perhaps I missed this trend to which you refer?

  • Cheers fellas. Simple answer for simple question.  I'll consider thta my Karl Pilkington moment for the week

  • @tessar

    @SimonH I've heard enough stories to never trust carbon on a rainy day, regardless of hyped "new technologies". For race-wheels, though... SES, Firecrests, HEDs and the latest Bontrager designs make a lot of sense when you think about it. I used to be into Formula 1 and used to pour over the details of every car - armchair aerodynamicist, so to speak - so lots of what's "cutting-edge" and revolutionary in cycling seems so normal to me. Trek's hype around the Speed Concept (and now Madone's) kamm-tail is downright laughable - that's '30s tech in the car-world.

    A guy that Marko and I know from waaaaaaaaaay back used to be a pioneer in the competitieve canoe world, which is all about fluid dynamics. Air, of course, is a fluid, but it's not nearly as viscous as water and design really, really, REALLY matters in boats because of that. I showed him a carbon bike once going "wow, isn't this amazing that they can do this?!" He openly laughed and said he'd get fired for making something twice as good. It was partly for the carbon layup and part for the shape of the tubes. I think it was the first Cervelo P3 Carbon, but I don't remember for sure.

    Myself, I'm quite smitten with HED's Flamme Rouge hubs - pretty light, very cool-looking and a buzz as divine as the Chris Kings. Either that, or the super-quiet whisper of a Dura-Ace.

    I've got a set of Hopes. Talk about a sexy buzz. I almost don't want to pedal.

  • @oli

    I'm sure you've been asked and answerd this question 1000x on the site, but given my laziness and newfound distaste for carbon wheels (at least at a price i'm willing to part with), what wheelset would u deem "the ultimate" for cx racing(not trainers). Assume a basher, punchy rider of 75-80kg lacking finesse. Assume a budget under 700$ (us). Just curious. Tubular to be sure.

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