Home > Bike Types > Cyclocross

Velocity Adds Versatile 11-Speed Disc Brake Hub for Road, Cyclocross & Mountain Bikes

11 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

Versatile Velocity 11-speed disc brake hub for road cyclocross and mountain bikes

Velocity USA is throwing out some interesting products lately. First, it was the fairly wide Dually 29+ rim. Now, it’s an 11-speed hub that can work equally well on a road, cyclocross or mountain bike. Not only does it come ready for 135mm QR and 12×142 thru axle setups, you’ll have the option of 11-speed freehub bodies for Campagnolo, Shimano/SRAM or XX1. It’ll ship with one set up of your choice, other options will be available aftermarket and are easy to swap.

The official product name is simply Lightweight Disc Hub. At just 265g, that fits. It’ll be spec’d on all of their 2014 Comp and Pro cyclocross and mountain wheelsets, all of which are built in house. It uses an oversized alloy axle and is rated for “all mountain” use on the dirt.

Like bullet points? Make the jump for a quick fix…

  • 265g weight
  • SRAM, Shimano and Campagnolo 11-speed ready
  • 135mm quick-release or 142x12mm thru-axle options
  • 6-bolt ISO disc compatible
  • high-quality double-sealed Japanese sealed cartridge bearings
  • 6 pawl engagement
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

11 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Aaron
Aaron
10 years ago

So… basically an 11-speed road compatible Stan’s 3.30 hub.

Not extremely exciting but it fills a need nonetheless.

wilis
wilis
10 years ago

Not quite Aaron – as I understand, Stans hubs locate the pawls on the freehub body like conventional hubs, whereas in the above photo the Velocity hub is reversed.

These appear more similar to the new Reynolds MTB hubs, which locate the 6 pawls inside the hub shell, and the engagement teeth on the cassette body. Supposedly provides more support to the pawls and springs, and means they can fit in more of them.

Presumably they’re made by the same manufacturer, so I’d expect a few other brands to adopt the new layout.

Otherwise, the Velocity hub looks sound and the modular design is welcome. I imagine they’ll likely be excellent value if their other products are anything to go by.

DG
DG
10 years ago

engagement point…48?

^^*)

Smelly Cat
Smelly Cat
10 years ago

Please tell me there’s more than 48pts of engagement….that’s not quite enough.

ms6073
ms6073
10 years ago

Sure looks a lot like Novatec’s new D712SB 11-speed rear hub.

CXisfun
CXisfun
10 years ago

@ms6073 – I assume the D712SB went through a redesign? This one is way different than the Velocity hub:

http://novatecusa.net/project/d712sb-aa-d702sb-aa/

I’d be curious to check out their redesign, because I like what Velocity has going on here.

Ham-planet
Ham-planet
10 years ago

Not really a big deal from a consumer standpoint, is it? Who is going to be switching from Campag 142 mm to XX1 135 mm? I’m sure it makes things easier for Velocity though.

Ajax
Ajax
10 years ago

I like it for the fact that I can put in on my gravel road bike, and then when thru axle takes over, and it will take over, I can change out some bits and have a thru axle wheelset.

CXisfun
CXisfun
10 years ago

@Ham-planet – You could potentially use a wheelset on your disc road bike with Shimano 11-speed during the summer, or your gravel bike with Campy, or your MTB with XX1. Maybe not all in the same day, though I guess you could. I’m thinking it’d be more handy season-to-season.

bin judgin
bin judgin
10 years ago

velocity needs to come out with some wider inner width mtb rims.

Scott
Scott
10 years ago

Parts of the hub are exactly the same as the hubs Reynolds uses.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.