Sea air messed my wheels up

I am going to guess that BST is the only maker of Carbon Fiber wheels for the Rocket.
They are at least $5000 a pair, maybe more now.
Just google BST wheels.

$3,400 or so if you buy from the right place.

I find myself at odds with the concept of a small chip causing a catastrophic failure. When done RIGHT, composites are more resilient and more robust than metal, will deform further without permanent shape change, and will give a lot of warning signs before failure. A small chip will do nothing to compromise the overall strength in a properly designed part. The things I've seen composites tolerate and remain functional despite permanent damage simply seem like science fiction.

On the other hand anecdotal evidence clearly shows that BSTs can, and have, failed with minimal/no warning.

This academic theory vs real world mismatch can only be attributed to incorrect construction/design or inaccuracy of the story leading up to a failure.

The bias against CF wheels was largely driven by motorsports where, for various reasons, many sanctioning bodies have prohibited them. Usually the arguments go something like "They're too fragile, you can't tell damage from a small impact, and it can fail later suddenly". Ya ... don't ... say? The SAME can be said for alu or mag wheels where there can be a crack that's not visible in a minor impact leading to a catastrophic failure later on.

There are two reasons I haven't yet gone to CF wheels, price and tires. While the price hurdle I can get around, I have an offer to buy a pair at cost, the tires situation is just unacceptable.

BST's bone headed decision to make them 18" instead of 17" places them right on the top of the proverbial mountain of idiots from my point of view. Anything made outside 17" at this point is simply a bad choice, I know people won't agree, I really don't care. Already the single best rear tire to fit on the BST has been canceled (Dunlop Q3), so now you're limited to very questionable choices of tire at 18", where, on the other hand, if they'd have made a 17" set you could run a Michelin Power RS rear and a Michelin Road 5 front, which both sport apex level technology, proper load ratings for the R3 in 150/70 and 240/45, and extreme speed tolerance as well as great rain grip and long life for the level of performance delivered. They're also heaps cheaper than the disasters that are Metzlers or Pirellis.

/end rant
 
$3,400 or so if you buy from the right place.

I find myself at odds with the concept of a small chip causing a catastrophic failure. When done RIGHT, composites are more resilient and more robust than metal, will deform further without permanent shape change, and will give a lot of warning signs before failure. A small chip will do nothing to compromise the overall strength in a properly designed part. The things I've seen composites tolerate and remain functional despite permanent damage simply seem like science fiction.

On the other hand anecdotal evidence clearly shows that BSTs can, and have, failed with minimal/no warning.

This academic theory vs real world mismatch can only be attributed to incorrect construction/design or inaccuracy of the story leading up to a failure.

The bias against CF wheels was largely driven by motorsports where, for various reasons, many sanctioning bodies have prohibited them. Usually the arguments go something like "They're too fragile, you can't tell damage from a small impact, and it can fail later suddenly". Ya ... don't ... say? The SAME can be said for alu or mag wheels where there can be a crack that's not visible in a minor impact leading to a catastrophic failure later on.

There are two reasons I haven't yet gone to CF wheels, price and tires. While the price hurdle I can get around, I have an offer to buy a pair at cost, the tires situation is just unacceptable.

BST's bone headed decision to make them 18" instead of 17" places them right on the top of the proverbial mountain of idiots from my point of view. Anything made outside 17" at this point is simply a bad choice, I know people won't agree, I really don't care. Already the single best rear tire to fit on the BST has been canceled (Dunlop Q3), so now you're limited to very questionable choices of tire at 18", where, on the other hand, if they'd have made a 17" set you could run a Michelin Power RS rear and a Michelin Road 5 front, which both sport apex level technology, proper load ratings for the R3 in 150/70 and 240/45, and extreme speed tolerance as well as great rain grip and long life for the level of performance delivered. They're also heaps cheaper than the disasters that are Metzlers or Pirellis.

/end rant
All of us on these forums appreciate your rants because they always include knowledge and though. Keep em coming!
 
I guess I have to say I'm gratified that the previous owner of my 3T had the wheels powder coated after some blemishes formed on them. It's not prohibitively expensive and corrosion is a thing of the past.

It's interesting how one's experiences in Hawaii with respect to corrosion differ. I kept my 1988 Electra Glide and my 1967 TR6C in a car port in front of our house on Pearl Harbor Channel and experienced little corrosion. Pearl Harbor is on the leeward side of the island with the windward side having the rust problems.

DSCF0020.JPG
 
I guess I have to say I'm gratified that the previous owner of my 3T had the wheels powder coated after some blemishes formed on them. It's not prohibitively expensive and corrosion is a thing of the past.

It's interesting how one's experiences in Hawaii with respect to corrosion differ. I kept my 1988 Electra Glide and my 1967 TR6C in a car port in front of our house on Pearl Harbor Channel and experienced little corrosion. Pearl Harbor is on the leeward side of the island with the windward side having the rust problems.

DSCF0020.JPG

I lived in housing right next to the PH main gate, the environment absolutely devoured the steel bolts and rims :( .

That's what started me down the "titanium all the things" road.
 
I lived in housing right next to the PH main gate, the environment absolutely devoured the steel bolts and rims :( .

That's what started me down the "titanium all the things" road.
And isn't it too weird that it didn't happen to my bikes. Conversely, we lived in Navy housing, about two blocks from the beach, on Naval Station Mayport, FL in the 80s. I covered my old Triumph in the carport before deployment and returned to ruse on everything, to include the hubs. Well, the cad plated fasteners survived well.

I cleaned it up as best I could with hee local vintage bike shop owner told me to spray WD-40 all over it for my next deployment. It helped. When I got to Virginia, I bought new rims and SS spokes, bead blasting and painting the front hubs.

We lived at the back of the base on Pearl Harbor at Hospital Point right near the USS Nevada monument. I'm just wondering if we were more protected.
 
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