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Reynolds Boosts Braking on Carbon with New Cryo-Blue Power Pads, New Tubular Aero 46

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Reynolds-Powerpads

Mountain bikes don’t get all the fun when it comes to new products this year from Reynolds. Sure, the Black Label line looks killer, but road bikes get something that prevents them from being killer – new brake pads. The Achilles heel of carbon wheels has always been the braking performance. Many companies, including Reynolds, have developed their own brake pads for use with carbon rims with varying degrees of performance. Reynolds’ original Cryo-blue brake pads were actually pretty good, but they say the new Cryo-Blue Power brake pads are even better.

Put the brakes on after the break and check out the new Aero 46 tubular…

Reynolds Black Label launch high end carbon mountain20140130_0837

Compared to the Cryo-Blue pad, the new Brako co-branded Power pad is 44% bigger and has 6 diagonal slots instead of the 3 vertical slots – which drastically improve the water shedding of the pad. Designed specifically to work with the CTg (Cryogenic Glass Transition) brake track, the combination of pad and hybrid carbon laminate reduce heat build up and dissipate heat faster to offer 42% better stopping force in the wet, and 33% better in the dry.

cryo blue power pads

Sets of 4 brake pads will ship with every Reynolds 2014 carbon road wheelset and they are also available after market for $70 per set of 4. It’s important to note that all rims and pads are not created equal and you should only use the Cryo-Blue Power pad on Reynolds wheels.

Reynolds-46AERO-front Aero 46

New to the AERO family is the 46 tubular, which was previously only offered in clincher. The 46mm rim is the most versatile, lowest profile in the AERO series and uses Reynolds Dispersive Effect Termination (DET) design which according to Reynolds is a true airfoil design. The shape is designed to decrease boundary layer turbulence creating a low drag, low lift wheel with less impact on steering. The tubular 46 is now the lightest rim in the line as well, with wheelsets coming in at 1405g per set (640g front, 765g rear). AERO 46 wheels use a 16h radially laced front and 20h 1x rear, laced with DT Swiss Aerolite Double butted spokes and G2 external alloy nipples. The custom DT Swiss straight pull hubs are 11 speed Shimano/SRAM or Campy compatible.

2014-Reynolds-AssaultSLG

The Assault SLG also gets the tubular treatment creating a 41mm deep, 25mm wide light weight set at 1315g. (clincher shown above)

Reynolds Boosts Braking on Carbon with New Cryo-Blue Power Pads, New Tubular Aero 46

The Assault series features Reynolds enhanced SLG or Swirl Lip Generator which is essentially a lip on the top of the rim that provides an aerodynamic advantage to the wheel. Only effective on wheels deeper than 3omm, shallower wheels have a deeper SLG that according to Reynolds provides the aero advantage of a deeper wheel. Assault wheels use a 2oh radial front, and 24h radial/2x rear laced with DT Swiss Aero Comp double butted spokes and external G2 alloy nipples to a Reynolds Racing straight pull hubset.

ReynoldsCycling.com

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Jason Spiker
Jason Spiker
10 years ago

These look nice. The prices?

manny
manny
10 years ago

i think the 1405g weight you quoted for the AERO 46 is for the clinchers.

William
William
10 years ago

It’s about damn time they improved their pads…

Riding Reynolds might be faster, but you increase your personal injury from failure to stop ten fold… They are some of the scariest wheels on the market… just can’t stop with them when there is a hint of rain!

gabbia
gabbia
10 years ago

@William
If you weren’t a rookie rider you’d probably be able to brake.
In case you haven’t riden any of the other carbon offerings out right now…the current brake surface and the blue pads are the best out there. Ride, compare, don’t speak foolishly, and when you stop worrying about personal injury you can take the training wheels off your bike.

Eyal
Eyal
10 years ago

Pfft! Reynolds days are numbered. They just don’t know how to market their gear. And they’ve overpriced those pads by a mile, really $70

Nevertheless, I love my thirty two tubulars and that’s why I have 3 pairs, they’re just amazing!

@William I think you probably have never seen Reynolds wheels.

imp0r
imp0r
10 years ago

70$ for breakpads? Are they f*kin nuts?

Fisho
Fisho
10 years ago

I’ll just wait for disc road before I will invest in carbon rims.

bikermark
bikermark
10 years ago

I guess some of you’ve never bought carbon pads, because 70 bucks/set is the going rate for Shimano and Swiss Stop. The price is ridiculous, but it’s what everyone else is charging. If you want better braking and cheaper pads, then don’t buy carbon wheels.

Greg
Greg
10 years ago

I want better braking and cheaper pads.

Larry Falk
Larry Falk
10 years ago

The main question is: Do they squeal? I sold my first generation Reynolds Attack wheels because I couldn’t stand the squealing noise.

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