Sur La Plaque: Café Roubaix Haleakala Climbing Wheels

I’m not going to lie to you, friction is an asshole. In the bottom bracket, in the bending of every single link in your chain as it rolls over the cogs and threads its way through the rear derailleur, and in the pulleys themselves, the devils. I cleaned out my rain bike last weekend after a few rides where I was forced to neglect my usual daily maintenance routine and they puked up chunks of grit before they started moving lightly again. Every turn of the pedals, each of those points of friction adds up and take away from your Maximum V Potential at any given moment.

While this next point is true for Cycling in general, it is true for climbing in particular: the trick to riding well is to keep turning the pedals at your current rhythm. Failing that, you just wind up being less awesome than you were a moment earlier. Speed is like time; you can never get it back (it might also be money, but the math is hard to sort out.) You worked hard to get going as fast as you were, and slowing down just means you lose all that effort. What’s worse, if you want to get going that fast again, you have to do all that same work all over again, and even then, you’re just back to where you were, except a little lighter on the V Potential.

Friction may well be an asshole, but its not as big an asshole as gravity. The acceleration of gravity is 9.8 meters per second squared, which means that climbing at a sustained speed is basically like accelerating constantly; in order to climb at that rate, you’re accelerating enough to neutralize the pull from gravity which is trying its best to drag you back down the hill. Not to mention that you’re working against all that friction in your drivetrain.

To summarize, friction and gravity are assholes.

With these two points in mind, earlier this year I had Café Roubaix build me some lightweight climbing wheels. I didn’t really know what climbing wheels are good for, but I wanted to try some and I was thinking that any weight advantage I could find would be a good thing with respect to the winter months and the associated packing on of the wrong kind of weight in the engine room. 970 grams, you say? That sounds good – I’ll have them, thanks.

The first surprise was the box they arrived in, which I was certain must have been empty. Mounting them with tires and a cassette, I got used to how they felt in my hands. Funny how weight works; you grow accustomed to it. When I went to place them in the bike I first removed my rear Zipp 404 from the frame, which in comparison felt like an anchor.

They looked the business installed, but photos do a better job describing that. On to the riding. The first pedal stoke felt good; responsive and light. But nothing crazy, once I got going a bit. There was some more snap, for sure, but it wasn’t like I’d just had a blood transfusion on the second rest day of the Tour or anything like that. But on the hills the world turns on its head as the acceleration of gravity rejoins the conversation. The steeper the gradient, the more the wheels shine; simply put, they just keep spinning. Should you encounter a change in pitch for the worse, apply a touch of V and they spin up like a washing machine.

They almost converted me into a grimpeur. Almost. And, they help answer how the Pros move Sur La Plaque up giant mountains, absorbing changes in pitch like they’re nothing and accelerating away on the steepest sections. I am given to understand that talent and training play a part, but their climbing wheels don’t hurt either. The right tools make all the difference.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/CR Haleakala/”/]

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

    @Nate the gumwall corsa sc is insanely soft. I fear looking at it with a smirk would surely cut it open. i have them stretching but its unlikely ill glue them up. I took a look at fmb p-r pros and they are $165 a pop. Needless to say i skipped right over them and ordered a set of veloflex carbons and roubaixs for nearly the same price.

    Ture enough, but no tire rides like a FMB Roubaix. I have the Veloflex carbons on my Haleakalas (pictured) and they are supple and great, but they are like wooden slats compared to the Roubaixs. You get what you pay for. And apparently what you're paying for is Francios flying back and forth to South America to suck the rubber out of the trees one mouthful at a time.

    @frank how much of a bulge is there? I cant for the life of me seem to glue a set on and not have some sort of irregularity at the valve. I've come to accept it as it is and try to lessen it as much as possible, but given the extra material there, and that the valve hole area is not recessed, there is always going to be a little lump present. Waiting for oli or tubularetommy to stfu and learn how to properly mount a tub

    Just a bit. I have it on all tires I glue and others seem to as well. If you're riding a lower pressure (CX) it is irrelevant and I've not been bothered by it on my Roubaixs on the Ambrosios I built. BUT, on the Haleakalas, I feel it. They're so fucking light, you can feel everything.

    That said, a tublar - especially a hand-made one - will always be less regular than a clincher. They have a life of their own and that's part of the beauty. @mauibike drills out the first hole in the rim a tad to make room for the valve and that's genius but I'm afraid I'd fuck it up. I'm trying the toe-strap next and then we'll take it from there.

    I'm sure smarter people with more tubular experience have better things to add.

  • Them is sexy I must say. Can one have too many wheels? Been eyeing Golden Tickets, but these are mighty tempting.

  • @scaler911

    Them is sexy I must say. Can one have too many wheels? Been eyeing Golden Tickets, but these are mighty tempting.

    Are you a hardman or a weight weenie?  The answer might help you decide.

  • My Haleakalas just left Grand Forks, ND about 2 hours ago, according to FedEx.  Ooooooo, I.Can.Not.Wait!!!  Thanks Dan_R!!!

  • @frank That toestrap idea is a nice tip.  I'll have to try that.

    @graham d.m. Climbing wheels -- all relative but I'd say they begin in the 1300 gr range.

    @roger With all the shit on the roads in your neck of the woods I would't dream of running Corsas, SC or otherwise.

    Next set of tubulars I glue up will probably be Veloflex Arenbergs.

  • @Nate

    @Jeff in PetroMetro They have hills in Houston?

    Majestic parking garages.

    I'm using them for the Gran Fondo NY in May.  AND, I'm feeling a tad weight weenie-ish.  So I'm being a bit self-indulgent.

  • Im not a climber, but I love climbing, if that makes sense.  The photos of the rims look very nice and, well, carbony!!      Whats a set of those clincher style weigh and hit the wallet for landed in Aus @Dan_R ?

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