Home > Reviews > Component Reviews

Review: Gulo’s carbon-spoked GME-30 enduro mountain bike wheels ride hard, yet soft

gulo composites gme30 enduro mountain bike wheels riding action for long term review
7 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

You could look at Gulo’s US-made carbon fiber spokes as a bit of a gimmick, but you’d be missing the point of their unique winding process and design. Yes, they’re lighter, which is awesome, but the real reason to consider these trail wheels is the overall ride quality.

The spokes, which come in a low 24 count per wheel, combine with their own carbon fiber rim to create a smooth riding set of hoops that’s easy on the scale. Here’s the details, actual weights, and our riding impressions…

Gulo Composites GME-30 details & actual weights

gulo composites braided carbon fiber spokes closeup detailThe standout feature, visually, is Gulo’s unique braided carbon fiber spokes, which are made in-house in North Carolina. Check out our full feature story on them here for the tech behind their design.

closeup detail of Gulo Composites carbon fiber mountain bike rim

Any good wheel is the sum of its parts, so Gulo uses custom designed carbon rims with drillings aimed straight to the hub flanges for a perfectly straight spoke. The rims are made overseas, but are their own design and layup, and for a 30mm wide rim, they are nice and shallow.

The combination of a rounded profile and shallow depth seems to give them the right mix of lateral rigidity and compliance. And it’s that compliance at the rim paired with the flexible nature of the carbon spokes that creates a supple ride quality that’s totally shred-worthy.

closeup detail of Gulo Composites carbon fiber mountain bike rim

The rim is a hookless design, with a nice bump to help lock the tire’s bead into place on the shelf. They come pretaped, with valve stems installed.

gulo composites carbon rim actual widths measured with calipers

Ours measured right at 30mm wide inside, and about 36mm wide externally.

gulo composites braided carbon fiber spokes closeup detail

gulo composites braided carbon fiber spokes closeup detail

The spokes are threaded into the hub’s flanges, then fixed with Loctite. At the rim, the ends of the spokes have flat sections and slightly visible threads, however they’re installed and trued from inside the rim.

They mate with custom nipples, which thread onto the spoke through the rim bed using a standard hex wrench. So, unfortunately, you’ll have to remove the rim tape to true them, and please don’t try to true them by turning the spokes.

gulo composites GME30 enduro mountain bike wheels actual weights on a scale

The end result is a set of all mountain-worthy wheels at an XC weight. Our 29er set, ready to ride with XD driver body, came in at just 1,479g.

Gulo GME-30 Ride Review

gulo composites braided carbon fiber spokes closeup detail

The nice thing about big mountains on the East Coast is they’re packed with rocks, and they typically involve long climbs and long, rowdy descents. And this is where Gulo’s wheels were born. Based in Brevard, the trails you’re seeing here are their backyard proving ground.

closeup detail of Gulo Composites carbon fiber mountain bike rim

Rocks fly up all the time, or tires compress and rims get dinged. Our test set of wheels ended up with numerous scratches on the rims, but remained strong and true.

closeup detail of Gulo Composites carbon fiber mountain bike rim

It’s worth noting a couple of things:

  • Their rims and spokes come out of the molding process smooth and shiny, they’re not polished or sanded or coated after manufacturing.
  • Their spokes are rated for multiple impacts, and Gulo says they can take quite a few hits.

The spoke above had a bit of a nick just below the alloy end cap, but it seemed superficial. I would say that yes, it does seem like they might be more susceptible to getting cut than a metal spoke, but they’re not going to break or snap like a metal spoke. So, trade offs.

But tradeoffs go both ways, and these spokes are literally half the weight of metal spokes. So, for a 24-spoke wheel, these are about 70+ grams lighter if you compare apples to apples. But, most “enduro” wheels are 28-32 spokes, so the real weight savings -per wheel, just from spokes- is more like 85-95 grams. That’s about 1/3 pound off your wheels…from spokes.

gulo composites gme30 enduro mountain bike wheels riding action for long term review
On the rider: Club Ride Go Long shirt and Mountain Surf shorts.

In Pisgah, I rode these with the latest Specialized Butcher & Eliminator tires in 29×2.3 size, and they inflated to a perfectly rounded profile. The tires themselves are awesome, but it takes a good rim to keep them in place with low-ish pressures, and Gulo’s wheels did just that.

We also took them through Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains (check out our Where To Ride…Roanoke feature to see those trails and terrain), where flatter, sharper rocks abound. And some impressively large, man-made rock gardens and drops. Here I tested with the Vee Rail Escape 2.4 tires, which measured spot on at 2.4″ on these rims.

gulo composites gme30 enduro mountain bike wheels riding action for long term review

As much as we rely on our suspension to tame the trails and maintain traction, our tires, then wheels, are the first line of defense. Even on a longer travel bike, high tire pressure or overly stiff wheels will ruin the ride quality. Gulo solves that with a solid set of mountain bike wheels that track well and seem to absorb sharp-edged, high-speed hits without giving up handling and stability.

That they’re also really, really light makes them a great climbing partner, too. If you’re looking for something that’s tough yet light, give Gulo’s GME-30 a look. Retail is $2,360 and you can choose between XD and Microspline, and black or gold spoke ferrules.

GuloComposites.com

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

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

7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
nooner
nooner
2 years ago

Wait, Spinergy is still around?

B rye
B rye
2 years ago

95 grams is less than 1/4 of a lb. You can’t really round that up to 1/3 of a pound.

Tim
Tim
2 years ago

Spinergy is still around and has what looks like a good product at a very reasonable price (1100US for carbon rims, their plasticky spokes, and 110poe hubs)- but they do not offer modern standards- no Boost rear wheels, and if you click on their MTB product offer, you see gravel wheels with 142mm rear hubs. They even offer QR wheels still, but no Boost.

CR
CR
2 years ago

I see Boost MTB wheels on the Spinergy website, not sure your info is up to date Tim.

DT
DT
2 years ago

Mavic Rsys carbon spoke PTSD!

K-Pop is dangerous to your health
K-Pop is dangerous to your health
2 years ago
Reply to  DT

Mavic R-Sys spokes are tubular like a straw, these are not.

Mike
Mike
2 years ago

meh.. My LB 30mm rims, Onyx Vespers laced with Sapim CX-Rays are 200g heavier. The hubs are worth the weight penalty and these wheels really are not that light.

For Reference LB 30mm ID rims with 28 cx rays and dt swiss 240 EXP 54t (same engagement) hubs are 1444 g +/-25g Spokes are easy to replace hubs are serviceable and a known quality (exp issues aside) Also the LB wheelset is a little more than half price once shipping/handling is factored in.

Would be nice to see some comparisons and knowledge posted in these articles rather than taking a few pictures and posting the marketing copy..

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.