US wheel brand Boyd Cycling has launched what it says is “the wheelset most riders actually need” – a bold claim, but on paper the new Podium 36mm Carbon Disc SL does tick a lot of boxes.
The idea is simple: one lightweight, wide carbon wheelset that can handle everything from fast road riding and racing to long days in the saddle and the increasingly blurry world of all-road. Despite its 36mm rim depth and chunky 24mm internal width (optimised for 28–38mm tyres), Boyd says the complete wheelset weighs just 1,130g.

That’s properly light for a wheelset that isn’t pretending gravel and potholes don’t exist.
“The Podium 36 is the definition of modern versatility,” says Boyd Johnson, founder of Boyd Cycling. “It’s light enough for climbing, stiff enough for sprinting, stable on descents, and durable enough to ride every day.”
Lightweight rims
The Podium 36mm Carbon Disc SL uses a micro-hooked carbon rim measuring 29mm externally and 24mm internally, making it firmly aligned with current tyre trends. As the name suggests, a micro-hook (or mini-hook) provides a middle ground between hooked and hookless rims. You can run the wheels tubeless or with tubes, and Boyd says the shape has been optimised for tyres from 28mm up to 38mm.

To keep weight down without sacrificing strength, Boyd has used Toray T1000 carbon fibre in high-stress areas like the spoke holes and bead hook. The spoke holes get what the brand calls “multi-angle reinforcement”, which is designed to spread tension loads more evenly so the wheel can be built stiff and stable without piling on extra material.
During moulding, Boyd says air pressure of over 210psi is used to create a compact rim wall with consistent resin distribution, and a high fibre-to-resin ratio; it’s 72% fibre to 28% resin.
The headline durability claim is equally eye-catching: Boyd says the rim can withstand more than 110 joules of impact force – over 2.5 times the UCI’s impact test requirement – despite weighing just 310g per rim.
New hubs with fast engagement
At the centre of the Podium 36mm wheels are Boyd’s brand-new Grade 54 hubs, featuring a 54-tooth ratchet system for 6.6° of engagement. In other words, there’s little dead space when you stamp on the pedals.

You can easily swap between Shimano, SRAM and Campagnolo freehub bodies, and the hubs run on Enduro ABEC-5 bearings. Claimed hub weights are 85g for the front and 185g for the rear, with Pillar Wing 20 spokes (24 front and rear) completing the build.
Price and availability
The Boyd Cycling Podium 36mm Carbon Disc SL wheelset comes in at £1,860 (€2,150 / US$2,100). That puts it in the premium category, but not wildly out of step with many other lightweight, wide-rim carbon wheelsets of this kind.
Boyd Cycling was founded in 2009 and has new UK distribution, meaning we’re likely to see a lot more of the brand on this side of the Atlantic. The company is also expanding its manufacturing operations in the USA, adding carbon production alongside its existing alloy rim facility and rolling out its new Grade 54 (see above) and Grade 36 ratchet hub platforms.
Boyd says the Podium 36mm Carbon Disc SL delivers “a rare combination of speed, stability, comfort, and durability in a single wheelset” – and reckons it sets a new benchmark for performance in its class. Naturally, we’ll see if we can get a set in for review and find out whether we agree.

6 thoughts on ““This is the wheelset most riders actually need”: Boyd Cycling’s Podium 36mm Carbon Disc SL is designed to do it all”
Most riders actually need to
Most riders actually need to eat or pay the rent?
RayG wrote:
And sometimes both!
Boyd says the rim can
Boyd says the rim can withstand more than 110 joules of impact force – over 2.5 times the UCI’s impact test requirement
We can’t let this nonsense pass without comment!
So are we to understand that
So are we to understand that they’re making the rims themselves on their own machines? That could perhaps put them into premium territory but these look like any other Chinese carbon wheels tbh.
Unclear. Boyd state that as
Unclear. Boyd state that as of 2025, their South Carolina factory was producing carbon rims. However, given the wide range of carbon-rimmed wheels in Boyd’s range, one can only assume that most are still being manufactured by contracted factories in Asia. I can’t see any information on which specific rims are being produced where.
It would seem likely that, out of all their rims options, these new, high-end rims are the first thing out of that factory (with production starting last year in order to have a decent amount of stock available for launch)?
“Most riders”
“Most riders”
Most riders don’t spend £2k on their wheels