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American Powerz!


_skj0lsvik_

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Did hope make you a dildo so you can pleasure yourself over they're quality?

I bet if they made say, cars, you would also bum them.

Get's really annoying after a while

Why did you say that he is trying to help. So what he talks alot about hope, thats because he helped with the design so he knows alot about them.

I agree with ash this time get a pro2 front. I use one and its really nice and smooth hub.

Matt Rushton

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  • 7 months later...

Soo, I've just wanted to tell you guys that I've been running the Micro 68 hub in front for a good 2months now.

It still runs silk-smooth, never had a problem with it at all. I highly reccomend this hub for anyone who tries to shave off some weight, this hub only wheighs 52g :)

Here's a pic of the hub with my TI QR:

4ac9123a0f468d7b302d2ffa06a8d39c_3c1.jpg

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Inur: The skewer is a 5mm :) I took it from work, didnt cost me anything. Dont know where you can buy it though, sorry. Mine came with a really expencive carbon XC bike.

Waddy: The QR wheighs 20g, thats 40g less than a normal shimano one :D

I like light bikes, allways have and allways will. I'm not doing it because its socalled trend lol

Just finished my new wheel today, this hub on a mavic xm317 rim. 720g incl everything except tire and tube :)

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You can get some at aspireveloech but they're for a 4mm allen key. I haven't had much experience with titanium bolts, but all i remember is the even 5mm heads round off very quickly. 4mm would be instant death.

Light bikes ***! But surely it'd be even lighter if you just threaded the axle and used aluminum bolts? That's what I've done with a front Hope hub and it's great.

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Try to stay away from aluminium nipples, as they tend to seize up and round off alot. Best of sticking to the brass or steel ones to tell the truth

Aluminium nippels are fine if you let a good wheelbuilder build the wheels. ive had alu nippels for a very long time without any problems.

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Check out industry 9 hubs...120 engagement points in the rear hub, front hub is probably quite lightweight, and they use special aluminum spokes that don't use a nipple...saving a ton of weight.

http://www.industrynine.net/official/singlespeed.html

They are some swish hubs. Not convinced by the spokes threading into the hub - you'd be gutted if one pulled out, but I guess its been tried and tested. Go on, someone buy a pair.

The road wheel sets look silly light.

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If you're after a light weight non-disc wheel, then personally I'd always go with either the T-master waddy posted, or the Mono lightweight, both will run forever and weight shit all.

For disc I'd go with the planet X dog hub on CRC, lighter than a pro II and like 17/18 quid, or the pro II its self, although if you ask me the XC was a better quality hub, but it was heaver.

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I guess a guy from canada tested a Industry 9 hub and compared it to a Chris king rear hub, both were laced to the same rim, and were both tried on the same bike. Appearently the guy could gap consistantly 7-9 inches further with the indy 9 hub than the chris king.

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Light bikes are nice, but most top of the range trials components are light enough. It's probably more benifical putting in the effort and spending time looking at your technique.

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