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TECH NEWS

Campagnolo launches new Bora, Shamal and Scirocco wheels

Italian brand extends range with two new disc brake wheelsets and an updated rim brake model

Not content with launching new disc brakes and a new Centaur groupset, Campagnolo has revealed updated wheels: the Bora One DB disc brake wheelset, the Shamal Ultra DB 2WF disc brake wheelset, and the more accessible Scirocco for use with rim brakes.

Let’s go through them in turn.

Campagnolo Bora One DB

With the introduction of its disc brakes, Campagnolo has clearly needed to extend its lineup to include disc compatible wheels, hence the Bora One DB. 

Campagnolo already has the Zonda Disc wheel with an aluminium rim, but it probably wouldn’t be the first choice of someone buying a top-end Super Record groupset. 

The Boras have been Campag’s top level rim brake wheels since 1994 – periodically updated – but the Italian brand says that the technology has been revised hugely for the disc brake model. 

BoraOne50DB-postUN4-2018 (1).jpg

For a start, Campag hasn’t simply laced an existing rim onto a disc brake hub – there’s no brake track on this rim. What you get is a a 24.2mm wide full-carbon rim, optimised for 25mm and 28mm tyres, available in depths of both 35mm (tubular and clincher) and 50mm (tubular only).

Campagnolo says that while the aerodynamics of the rim profile are nearly identical to those of the rim brake wheel, the internal structure has been modified greatly because the forces applied by disc brakes are very different. 

BoraOne50DB-antFRONT-2018 (1).jpg

A manufacturer can save weight because there’s no need to add the extra material required for a strong and durable braking surface, and a disc brake rim doesn’t need to cope with the high temperatures generated by brake pads rubbing on the carbon, so you can use different resins. Plus, disc brakes don’t apply equal force to each side of the wheel. 

“These asymmetric forces, in addition to the asymmetric layout of the disc hub to create space for the rotor, make not only a new carbon layup necessary but also call for modifications to the overall structure of the wheel,” says Campagnolo. “To render an asymmetric unit more symmetric in performance, the Bora One DB incorporates a modified version of the famous G3 spoke pattern on the front wheel as in addition to slight modifications on the rear wheel as well.”

CMP_G1_D2_0129 (1).jpg

G3 means that spokes are spaced in groups of three with two attached to one side of the hub and one to the other. On the front wheel, a total of 16 bladed spokes go to the rotor side of the hub, with eight going to the driveside of the bike.

The rear wheel, which has to cope with the forces of the drivetrain as well as those of the disc brakes, has 16 spokes fixed to the driveside and eight fixed to the disc rotor side.

Campag Bora One DB 2 - 1.jpg

Several of the rim brake Bora’s technologies have been incorporated into the rim of the Bora One DB. For example, Campagnolo doesn’t need to drill holes into the tyre bed because of its MoMag design, short for ‘Mounting Magnet’. The nipples are inserted inside the rim through the valve hole and moved into position with a magnet. The idea is that this improves the integrity of the rim structure, safety is increased and the reliability of the rim is guaranteed.

The Bora One DB uses a new aluminium hub shell with an extended flange. According to Campagnolo, the hub has been smoothed as much as possible to keep aerodynamic drag to a minimum. 

Campag Bora One DB - 6 (1).jpg

The hub features Campag’s USB ceramic bearings for rolling efficiency with a lockring for adjustment.

Bora One DB will come stock with HH12/100 spacing on the front and HH12/142 for the rear. You can get adaptor kits for different axles.

Here are Campagnolo’s claimed weights:
Bora One DB 35 tubular 1,297g (604g front, 693g rear)
Bora One DB 50 tubular 1,364g (639g front, 725g rear)
Bora One DB 35 clincher 1,509g (703g front, 806g rear)

Here are the prices: 
Bora One DB 35 tubular £1,615.92
Bora One DB 50 tubular £1,615.92
Bora One DB 35 clincher £1,812.98

Shamal Ultra DB 2WF

SHAMALultraDB-post3QUARTI-2018.jpg

The Shamal Ultra DB 2WF is designed as a high quality aluminium race wheel for bikes with disc brakes. 

Just like the rim brake version, the Shamal Ultra DB 2WF uses a 22mm wide rim with a 17mm internal diameter that’s designed to provide the support for 25mm and 28mm tyres.

SHAMALultraDB-RAGGI-2018.jpg

The 2WF in the name stands for ‘2-Way Fit’ which is Campagnolo’s way of saying that you can use either standard clinchers or tubeless tyres. You can switch between them without the need for any additional equipment apart from the tubeless valve that’s included with the wheelset. This is achievable because Campag uses its MoMag technology here (see above) which eliminates holes in the tyre bed. 

The front rim is 27mm deep while the rear is 30mm, and Campag has reduced the weight by toroidal milling, removing material between the spokes where it’s not needed while keeping it around the nipples for reinforcement. 

The Mega G3 spoke pattern of the rim brake Shamal Ultra rear wheel (where spokes are grouped in threes, two fixed to the driveside of the hub and the other to the non-driveside) has been carried over to the disc version. 

Campag has added the G3 spoke pattern to the front wheel too, although this time two spokes are fixed to the non-driveside of the hub and one to the driveside, as they are on the Bora One DB front wheel (see above). This is designed to handle the forces of the disc brake rotor.

You get 21 aluminium spokes front and rear, held in place by new black anodised self-locking nipples.

SHAMALDB-antMOZZO-2018.jpg

The new disc hubs have alloy flanges while the front one features a carbon fibre shell (Campag says that it can’t use a carbon shell at the rear because torque there is applied in two different directions – by the drivetrain and the disc brake – so an alloy structure is necessary). 

The wheel rolls on Campag’s USB ceramic ball bearings which you can adjust via a lockring. 

The Shamal Ultra DB 2WF wheels will come stock with HH12/100 spacing on the front and HH12/142 for the rear, with adapters available for quick release and HH12/135 rear axle.

Although they’re not directly linked to any particular groupset, Campagnolo sees these wheels as roughly Record level.

Campagnolo claims a weight of 1,540g. The Shamal Ultra DB 2WF wheelset is priced £1,105.83.

 

Scirocco 

Scirocco isn’t a new name in the range but Campag has just reinvented these wheels and, naturally enough, says that they offer a high performance at an accessible price. 

SCIROCCOc17-ant3QUARTI-2018.jpg

The aluminium rims have a 35mm deep profile, designed to reduce drag without creating instability in crosswinds, and a 17mm internal diameter.

“This wider rim, perfect for both 25mm and 28mm clinchers, allows the tyre to take a straighter, less bulbous shape and in turn leave a more uniform surface for airflow with less discontinuous area between tyre and rim to create turbulence,” says Campagnolo.

SCIROCCOc17-RAGGI-2018.jpg

The rim joint is welded rather than glued, Campag saying that this improves the structural integrity over some rivals and gives a precise braking surface. Spoke support tabs inside the rim are designed to distribute tension and further increase durability. The rims aren’t tubeless compatible although there are no holes in the inner section.

The hubs are aluminium, the rear one coming with an oversized flange on the driveside that’s intended to increase torsional stiffness, and they spin on steel bearings that you can adjust via an external lockring.

SCIROCCOc17-postMOZZO-2018.jpg

The front wheel is radially laced with 16 variable profile spokes in stainless steel. The rear wheel uses Campagnolo’s Mega G3 spoke pattern (where the spokes are grouped in threes) with 14 spokes fixed to the driveside of the hub and 7 to the non-driveside, the idea being to handle the asymmetric forces of the drivetrain. 

Campag Scirocco in use (1).jpg

Campagnolo claims weights of 746g (front) and 908g (rear) – a total of 1,654g. The wheelset is priced at £295.08.

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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12 comments

Avatar
pwake | 6 years ago
1 like

Who makes the clothing and where can I get it?

Avatar
Mat Brett replied to pwake | 6 years ago
2 likes

pwake wrote:

Who makes the clothing and where can I get it?

 

It's made by http://www.mstina.it/

I think it's Campagnolo's custom kit; not sure whether it's commercially available.

Avatar
pwake replied to Mat Brett | 6 years ago
0 likes

Mat Brett wrote:

pwake wrote:

Who makes the clothing and where can I get it?

 

It's made by http://www.mstina.it/

I think it's Campagnolo's custom kit; not sure whether it's commercially available.

Yeah, it's custom. Oh well. Hope you got to keep it.

Avatar
matthewn5 replied to Mat Brett | 6 years ago
0 likes

Mat Brett wrote:

pwake wrote:

Who makes the clothing and where can I get it?

 

It's made by http://www.mstina.it/

I think it's Campagnolo's custom kit; not sure whether it's commercially available.

They'd sell it by the shedload if it were available...

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
1 like

I have Bora One 50mm tubs, I love them, only the rear has the G3 spoke pattern (21) and the front is 18 radial. Weight limit is quoted as 100kg (maybe a bit more, i forget) considering the extra spokes on these (24f&r) and the extra meat on the hub they must have shed an awful lot around where the braking track would have being as the rear is only 20g heavier and the front 72g heavier.

Avatar
userfriendly replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
1 like

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

I have Bora One 50mm tubs, I love them

Same. They make me seriously consider getting the DB 35 for my Mason Definition.

Avatar
lio | 6 years ago
2 likes

I guess looks are personal.  I like the G3 pattern though.

I've had some old Scirrocos (G3 front and back) as training wheels for years, still never needed trueing.  Cheap, bomb proof and disposable.

Avatar
scousegreg replied to lio | 6 years ago
1 like
lio wrote:

I guess looks are personal.  I like the G3 pattern though.

I've had some old Scirrocos (G3 front and back) as training wheels for years, still never needed trueing.  Cheap, bomb proof and disposable.

I agree I'm a big lad 20st and mine G3 laced Khamsins have run perfectly and never needed truing which is amazing with the punishment I give them.

Avatar
DonutAdaptations | 6 years ago
0 likes

Used to like them. Now I think they look broke.. 

Avatar
vonhelmet | 6 years ago
0 likes

Am I the only one that thinks the whole G3 spoke business looks stupid?

Avatar
Nick T replied to vonhelmet | 6 years ago
1 like

vonhelmet wrote:

Am I the only one that thinks the whole G3 spoke business looks stupid?

maybe so, but it seems to work. Not as stupid looking as Rolf wheels at least

Avatar
700c replied to Nick T | 6 years ago
1 like

Nick T wrote:

vonhelmet wrote:

Am I the only one that thinks the whole G3 spoke business looks stupid?

maybe so, but it seems to work. Not as stupid looking as Rolf wheels at least

Oh they work alright - very stiff wheels, never needed truing for me at 90 kg

Only drawback is that rims aren't replaceable due to the propritary design - which is now no longer an issue with disc brake version. 

Though I've generally been negative about disc brakes, it's undeniable that rims not wearing out is a huge advantage. Perhaps with Campag's late arrival into the market I might be swayed. (Still not swapping out all my gear though!). The weights of these look very competitive and if they've kept durability and stiffness then I'm impressed. 

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