Home > Bike Types > Road Bike

Campagnolo updates Scirocco C17 aluminum clincher wheelset & QR

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

Pairing with the reintroduction of a Centaur groupset – now updated to a wide range 11 speed gruppo – Campagnolo also has updated their aluminum Scirocco wheelset bringing it up to date as well. The new standout feature of the updated wheelset is of course the move to a Campagnolo’s wider C17 rim profile that started with their Shamal wheels last year to give better support to the wider tires most roadies are riding these days. The wheels are still firmly planted on the road and aren’t designed for super wide gravel tires, but at the same time they offer a solid value coming down in both price and weight from the previous generation of Sciroccos.

Plus, it looks like the wheels are showcasing a new low-cost QR lever that combines the best of both internal & external cam designs. Leave it to the company of quick release skewer inventor Tullio Campagnolo to innovate a QR on a budget wheelset ninety years later…

The new Scirocco C17 wheels get the same 17mm internal width of the rest of their updated road wheels (now including Scirocco, Zonda, Shamal Ultra in rim brake and all of Campy’s disc brake wheels.) C17 is an update to deliver a better, more efficient shape for 25-28mm tires but still is very much a road oriented rim width, as opposed to the current trend of even wider all-road and gravel tires. Campagnolo also claims that the wider rim profile provides an improvement in aerodynamics with a smoother tire to rim shape transition, especially with 25mm tires.

The wheels carry over most of the tech from the previous version of the Scirocco and retain the same 35mm depth in the alloy rim that Campagnolo feels offers an optimal balance of aero performance and light weight. Weight is a pretty big update and the new Scirocco C17 wheelset drops to 1654g (746g front/ 908g rear) for a savings of around 70g over the previous wheelset.

The Scirocco C17 uses a welded rim (not a tubeless ready profile) & machined brake surfaces, something you don’t always get at this price point. The wheels use variable profile, straight pull stainless aero spokes, with 16 spoke radial lacing in the front and 21 spoke G3 grouped lacing on the rear and an oversized driveside flange to balance out spoke tension.

They also get Campy’s Internal Spoke Support tabs, effectively eyelets inside the rim that act as ‘self-aligning’ washers to evenly distribute spoke tension inline with the spoke angle.

Coming in at just 350€ for the wheelset, the Scirocco is actually a few Euros cheaper than the previous generation and now is the lowest price offering from Campagnolo in their C17 wheel update. The wheels are also available with either Campagnolo or Shimano freehub bodies to satisfy anyone looking for an affordable 11 speed road wheelset.

Packaged with the new Scirocco C17 wheels were a new set of Campagnolo quick release skewers. Campy didn’t have much to say about them, but it is a design that I personally haven’t seen from Campy before. One of the big benefits to me with Campagnolo wheels has been their continued use of internal cam QRs, which although they almost always are heavier than external cam designs function much more smoothly, deliver better clamping force, and keep working for many years. The problem besides weight has always been that external cam designs are much cheaper to produce, so often end up as a cost cutting measure on low-cost wheels.

It looks like Campagnolo developed these QRs to trim costs as well, but their design retains the basic structure of an internal cam, meaning that the cam & the cam follower cannot rotate independently like in most external cam designs. This means that the QR still cam develop a high degree of clamping force without having to worry with alignment. We played with these a bit and were pleased with their performance. The question will just be how the stand up over time to contamination for dirt & grit.

Campagnolo.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
Matty
Matty
6 years ago

Looks like they’ve finally caught up with the Fulcrum Quattro LG from what, 12? months ago…

Robin
Robin
6 years ago
Reply to  Matty

I’m willing to bet that since Campy owns Fulcrum and since they share the same technologies that Campy knows exactly where the new Scirocco fits in the Campy and Fulcrum lines.

VeloKitty
VeloKitty
6 years ago

I think the Fulcrum Quattro LG (17 mm internal width) has been out closer to 2 years. This Campy version seems a wee lighter… though you can never trust manufacturer’s weight specs.

Hawk75
Hawk75
6 years ago

About weight differences. Apparently Campagnolo have switched from steel to aluminum freehub body for Shimano version.

At least that was the case with my Zonda C17 vs. previous C15 version. Alu freehub is about 40g lighter but may not be as durable.

Simon Thompson
Simon Thompson
6 years ago

Those QRs look exactly the same as the ones that came with my Kamsins 5 years ago…Nothing wrong with them though…

Sam Cichanowicz
Sam Cichanowicz
3 years ago

Xdr compatibility or dies that start with Zonda c17? Fulcrum xdr freehub body literature claims 17 mm axle compatibility.

Crash Bandicoot
Crash Bandicoot
2 years ago

Greetings from the future, I have these wheels, avoid them. The freehub bearings are trash, also they come in at similar weight to the Specialized Roval Rapide SL 35s I had on my wife’s bike but aren’t remotely as stiff or positive when turning into corners. They have a tendency to knock out of true very easily as well (I’m 175 and have had to re-true them twice in 3-5000 miles of smooth AZ road riding.)

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.