
Vuelta Corsa-Carbon Clinchers Pro Review - By Twain Mein
- Full carbon clincher rim
- 6mm “lowered” brake surface area to prevent heat build-up
- 20 spoke front, 24 spoke rear with triple-butted aero and stainless steel spokes, sealed cartridge bearings and “lubeable” cassette body.
- 50mm rim for aerodynamics
- Claimed: weight — Front: 703 grams, Rear: 958 grams, total 1661 grams
- Actual — Front: 740 grams, Rear: 990 grams. +69 grams.
- $1500 MSRP for the pair
- Includes cork brake pads and brake pad holders
I’m not that familiar with the Vuelta brand, but their website explains that they’ve been around since 1992. Their site further claims “it is no wonder that Vuelta continues its reign as the current UCI world hour record holder, and owner of the coveted title of World’s Fastest Wheels.” I didn’t really have much opinion on the company, but I was excited to test full carbon clinchers, as it seems that carbon clinchers is where great strides are being made in innovation.

thien










June 15th, 2009 at 5:52 pm
some caution for the full carbon clincher wheels owner out there: do not mix your carbon brake pads with alloy wheels! your carbon pads will pick up metal bits and embedded into the pads and when will damage your carbon rims when you switch back to carbon again. Do not mix your carbon brake pads with alloy rims! when you switch out carbon wheels, bring the pads with you.
June 15th, 2009 at 11:33 pm
Thanks for the headsup, Kwan. I’ve heard that before from other people–and should have made a point of it.
Great feedback.
June 16th, 2009 at 4:46 am
Too bad that “Kwan” is incorrect. Swiss Stops yellows go both ways and don’t pick up alu bits in them. If you spend $1000+ on carbon wheels, spend the $50-75 on the pads.
I ride yellows as do @ a dozen of my team-mates and ride group. Zero issues.
June 16th, 2009 at 3:35 pm
Thanks for the update MM, sounds like SS yellows is an exception.
June 16th, 2009 at 5:25 pm
In case anyone is wondering, the rims are made by Gigantex
June 16th, 2009 at 9:51 pm
They also look like Joytech hubs, so this looks like another generic Gigantex/Joytech wheelset to me, not that there’s anything wrong with that.
Also, there’s a misprint on the weight: the rear ain’t 1730g; and there may also be a mix-up between the actual and claimed weight, because I’d be surprised if the claimed weight is 2060g, and actual is 1730g. Just sayin’
June 17th, 2009 at 9:41 pm
Thanks for catching the typos!!!
Here’s what it should have said.
# Claimed: weight — Front: 703 grams, Rear: 958 grams, total 1661grams
# Actual — Front: 740 grams, Rear: 990 grams, total 1730; +69 grams
June 18th, 2009 at 8:54 am
I’m surprized at the comment that the bearing felt sticky. A have a set of the new Vuelta Corsa Super lites. the bearing are super smooth and the seem to spin indifinitely.
I too picked up speed on the downhill, coasting from 19 to 22.
June 23rd, 2009 at 5:25 am
How are these with mounting tires on and off? I have a set of Token wheels which are the exact same wheel and it’s pretty much impossible to get a tire on and off the rim….flat out on a ride and your going to spend 1/2+ hour trying to change a tube. Are these any better?
June 24th, 2009 at 12:26 pm
Mounting tires isn’t super easy, especially Vittorias. Best if you have 2 (plastic) tire irons required.
June 26th, 2009 at 11:56 am
Not sure that the lower braking point will increase power - the longer lever arm of the break pad will decrease the force at the pad for the same force through the cable and the shorter lever arm from the hub will reduce the force at the road. That’s a loss in both cases.
July 30th, 2009 at 12:37 am
Has any of you tried the Campagnolo Boras? To me, they are super sexy and ultra expensive. I sure like to hear your comments. Thank you.