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TECH NEWS

Hunt adds new tech and expands wheels range

New road, gravel, time trial and dynamo options on the way

The team from Hunt Bike Wheels came and visited road.cc HQ the other day to show us what they've been up to lately... and it's a lot. Here are some of the highlights that have either just been included in the range for the first time or will be added soon.

TT Disc

The TT Disc is a new direction for Hunt (we're talking about a disc wheel as opposed to a wheel for disc brakes). This is a tubeless version of a tubular prototype that was ridden to podium finishes by the Tanfield brothers at this year's British time trial championships (Harry Tanfield finished second in the seniors, Charlie Tanfield won the U23 title).

Hunt disc wheel -2.jpg

Hunt hasn't taken the TT Disc to the wind tunnel yet although Harry Tanfield has done some velodrome testing with the Huub Wattbike team and reckons it puts in a strong aero performance. Hunt will soon take it to the GST (Gesellschaft für Strömungsmeßtechnik) wind-tunnel in Immenstaad am Bodensee, Germany, to find out for sure.

Hunt disc wheel -6.jpg

Assuming wind tunnel testing goes well, the TT Disc — which weighs 1,187g — will be available to pre-order before Christmas for delivery in March or April 2019. No RRP has yet been set, but you can expect it to be around the £1,000 mark. 

Hunt disc wheel -5.jpg

A disc brake version will be available at a later date.

Carbon-spoked prototype

Hunt carbon spokes -1.jpg

This is a product that's still very much under development, featuring some interesting new tech from one of Hunt's partners.

Hunt carbon spokes -5.jpg

The straight-pull spokes used here are made from unidirectional carbon and each one weighs just 3.2g all in. For comparison, a Sapim CX-Ray or a Pillar PSR X-TRA 1420 spoke weighs around 4.3g without a nipple. That's a small saving but it's multiplied by the number of spokes in any particular wheel. 

Hunt carbon spokes -3.jpg

An alloy head is added to the carbon spoke when it is formed, a flared profile towards the end of the spoke holding this head in place (so it doesn't need to be bonded).

A nipple is added to the other end of the spoke, again when it is formed so no glue is required to hold it.

So how do you tighten everything up? You access an internal nipple via the rim bed, adjusting it with a hex — so your tyre and inner tube must be removed.

Hunt says that the spokes have a load limit of 300 kilogram-force (kgf) whereas the usual maximum build force of a carbon rim is 125kgf.

Hunt carbon spokes -6.jpg

Rather than comprising various sheets of pre-preg carbon fibre, the rim is filament wound, meaning that during production a continuous length of carbon fibre is wound around a mandrel. Several other companies already make filament wound rims, claiming that it adds a higher consistency to the manufacturing process, improved performance and increased durability.

This rim is 38mm deep with an 18mm internal width and a 26mm external width. The front wheel has 16 spokes, the rear 21. Hunt claims weights of 573g (f) and 717g (r), a total of 1,290g (inc rim tape).

Although the spoke technology will not be exclusive to Hunt, the brand hopes to be the first to bring it to market and that could be in early 2019, although no date has been set. Pricing has yet to be finalised.

Adventure Carbon Dynamo Disc 650

Hunt Carbon 650 Dynamo -1.jpg

Hunt already offers 700C dynamo wheelsets in alloy and carbon and a 650b in alloy, and now it'll be adding a Carbon Dynamo Disc to the lineup. At £1,059, it'll be the same price as the 700C version and will probably be available from January 2019.

Hunt Carbon 650 Dynamo -4.jpg

We already have a set in, so stay tuned to road.cc for a review.

Hunt Carbon 650 Dynamo -5.jpg

Find out more about the Hunt 30 Carbon Dynamo Disc here. 

4 Season Disc, version 2

Mason-Hunt-4-Season-Disc-Wheelset-Hero_c68b2861-842c-46bb-803a-5f13906aa1cf_1024x1024 (1)

An updated version of Hunt's 4 Season Disc wheelset is available now with a wider rim than previously; you now get a 19mm internal width and a 24mm external width (compared to 17mm and 23mm before), the idea being to provide increased stability for wider tyres. 

Despite the increased size, the weight has come down slightly to a claimed 1,517g per wheelset thanks to the use of a new High Fatigue Resistance (HFR+) alloy for the rims. 

Black Night-Safe reflective decals are designed to make you much more visible when riding in darkness or low-light conditions. 

As before, this wheelset is co-branded with Mason — it's called the Mason X Hunt 4 Season Disc Wheelset. It retails at £319.

35 Carbon Gravel+ Disc

Hunt is also offering an off-road/gravel version of its existing 30 Carbon Gravel Disc although, as the name suggests, it has a 35mm deep rim. That rim has a 23mm internal width and a 30mm external width

The freehub body features a ceramic surface treatment to stop sprockets digging into the splines in use. The technology comes from a Cambridge-based company called Keronite and Hunt calls it H Ceramic. 

Hunt has always used an anti-bite stainless insert on its hubs (see picture of the Adventure Carbon Dynamo Disc 650 hub, above) to prevent damage but after many months of trials it says that the H Ceramic treatment does away with the need, although it is a more expensive alternative.

Hunt intends to roll the H Ceramic tech to other models over time. 

Hunt claims a wheelset weight of 1,553g here, although no price has yet been set.

Get more info on Hunt at www.huntbikewheels.com

 

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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2 comments

Avatar
nopants | 5 years ago
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...except from the sound of it there is a nipple either end of the spoke and an internal nipple too. Or maybe I'm reading that wrong.

I'm outta here before it gets smutty.

Avatar
Smultie | 5 years ago
0 likes

Very significant saving of 16(spokes) * 1.1(grams/spoke) = 17.6 grams!!!

Oh wait, 16 nipples as well.

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