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French Company ACSE Parts Rolls Super Light Hubs With A 5 Year Warranty

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ACSE-French-Hubs

Super light European hubs are always great to look at, and adorn dreamy 11lb road bike builds. French company ACSE is building a line of hubs that fit the bill, yet also offer a 5 year warranty. Of course, following the mantra of “strong, light, cheap; pick two”, the pair of hubs runs €568, or about $670, even with today’s low exchange rate to the Euro.

The hub shells are made from 7075-T6, and ACSE says that even though the hubs are lighter than most, using this stronger material, and proper design means the hubs have no maximum spoke tension limit. Even without the low weight, a hub with no tension limit and a 5 year warranty is pretty impressive.

Take a look inside to see more details on the impressive hubs, and one unfortunate detail that will keep them from Americans for the time being…

ACSE-Axles

The axles are interchangeable and the 6-bolt disc brake hubs can be used in QR 9mmx100mm or through-axle 15mmx100mm in the front, and QR 10mmx135mm or through-axle 12mmx142mm in the rear. They are very proud that all of the parts of the hub are made in France, except for the high-precision bearings that are made in Switzerland.
ACSE-Front-Hubs

Sadly, owner Sebastien Arcile says that with French law and insurance, he cannot sell the hubs to the USA at this time. When dealing with North American markets, he says his insurance will increase dramatically (and further increase the cost of the hubs) to sell them to us. To get a set, you will need to take a trip across the pond.

 

 

ACSE-Hub-Shells

The hubs are available in black, red and orange initially.

ACSE-Pawls

The engagement mechanism they use looks eerily similar to DT-Swiss’ Star Ratchet system, yet has enough distinguishing features that we know they are not DT-Swiss parts. ACSE says they use the design because it creates a 100% engagement when the two plates are engaged to each other, instead of transmitting the force through the tips of traditional pawls. They say this reduces the specific loads of the mechanism by 7 times, which can contribute to reducing material and weight from the overall hub. They do offer an option on the hub to have the clutch plates made from aluminum to further reduce the weight, for riders who weigh less than 70kg, and they also have a high-engagement-point 108t with traditional pawls, but you lose the 5 year warranty on that option.

ACSE-rear-hub

The front hub comes in at 107g for the 15mm through-axle, and the rear comes in at 253g for the 12mm through-axle with an XD driver body.

SPECS – 

Front Hub

  • Body: 7075T6 aluminum
  • Axle: 15mm hollow axle, 7075T6 aluminum
  • Axle ends: 7075T6 aluminum
  • Bearings: 61903, ACSE’s specifications
  • Standards: 15×100 thru axle, IS disc fixing
  • Holes: 32
  • Diameters (L/R): 56mm / 40mm
  • Distance to the center (L/R): 25mm / 37.5mm
  • Origin: France, excepted bearings (Swissmade)
  • €199

Rear Hub

  • Engagement Mechanism Option -036 (36 notches, steel, Shimano 9/10/11v)
  • Engagement Mechanism Option -036 XD (36 notches, steel, Sram X-Drive XX1/XO1)
  • Engagement Mechanism Option -036 L (36 notches, aluminum, Shimano 9/10/11v – Pilot <70kg)
  • Engagement Mechanism Option -108 (108 notches, aluminum, Shimano 9/10s)
  • Body: 7075T6 aluminum
  • Axle: 7075T6 aluminum
  • Axle ends: 7075T6 aluminum
  • Bearings: 4x 61902, ACSE’s specifications
  • Standards: IS disc fixing
  • Holes: 32
  • Diameters (L/R): 56mm / 50mm
  • Distance to the center (L/R): 37.6mm / 23.7mm
  • Origin: France, excepted bearings (Swissmade)
  • €369

www.acse-parts.fr

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16 Comments
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pdxfixed
pdxfixed
9 years ago

tease!

Souleur
Souleur
9 years ago

hmmmmm….100grams weight loss for double the price, or better yet, for the price of a prebuilt descent set of hoops……

forget about it….I’ll take the hoops any day

Weightweenies, have at it

r1
r1
9 years ago

I have rode them and they are worth Chrisking without the lovely prestigious touch. Good value for money.

scant
scant
9 years ago

those prices are actually less than chris king in the UK. can someone else buy them & let me know if they’re anygood 🙂

kos
kos
9 years ago

AFIK, 5 years also offer Hope, Chris King and True Precision. Than you’ve got 10 from Syntace, and (try to match) lifetime from Phil Wood!

Weight is good, but not great, there is comparable priced Tune’s Kong, and cheaper American Classic’s 225

tom
tom
9 years ago

hoops? you mean rims good sir!

ObligatedToSay
ObligatedToSay
9 years ago

I can’t speak for price, but the weight puts on par with DT Swiss 180 Carbon ceramic with centerlock.

gatouille
gatouille
9 years ago

I have a front hub, n°103, 10x100mm, for near 2 years. It works perfect.
ACSE hub have a simple design, low probability problem, no adjustement, easy maintenance, clean esthetic.
A few guy had problem on rear hub and Sébastien found solution for each people.
I’m surpised to see these product on Bikerumor. ACSE is not a factory like Chris King, Tune, Hope or other manufacturer. There is only 1 people. He design product himself. No lucrative target.
All parts are really manufactured in France except ball bearing. Others people have the same speech but when we probe, we find stranger manufacturing.
Target of these hubs is to get light and durable components. It’s a different target than Chris King for example.
Yes, these are expensive product (but no more than CK), but quality product and we know who is the person who design.

Dodo
Dodo
9 years ago

Hard to tell were is the gain. 250 grams for rear hub is pretty standard … And it would bee nice never to hear tribalisms such as: I am proud this or that is made here!

Prowheelbuilder
9 years ago

If you purchase I9 Torch Road Disc hubs they only weigh 10 grams more, engage in 3 degrees, are made in the US, come is a bunch of colors and sell for $577.50 versus $668.88. I realize I grabbed the ROAD Torch model as my comparison however they use the same internals as the standard Torch MTB hubs.

gatouille
gatouille
9 years ago

I made a comparison with weight, price, warranty, user review and :
Tune -> too light, not strong, medium quality, expensive.
Phil wood, Chris King, DT Swiss -> good but heavy and expensive.
FRM -> review ?
There is Hope, American Classic, Industry Nine, Shimano, … and some small brand like ACSE in the same range of weight and price. There are no so many products.

Dodo, I want to make clear : country isn’t the subject. What I say : the designer of this brand is alone and is a honest people. When it’s like that, I like. 250grs isn’t standard. On my bike I have products from around the world (:-)

xc-fr
xc-fr
9 years ago

Have also a look at MACK hubs. Seems to be better in every point.

andrea petroni
9 years ago

interesting hubs, but only to take a look on their page … i prefer stay with Soul Kozak hubs

Adventurebybike.be
9 years ago

For me also the Soul Kozaks…..

Kernel Flickitov
Kernel Flickitov
9 years ago

Too much weight emphasis put on hubs. You’d be faster if you rode more, not switching from King to DT to Tune, SK, or ACSE. The only thing gained from weight-weenie hubs is excruciatingly boring conversation at a coffee shop. [facepalm!]

ugp
ugp
9 years ago

Appart from the weight, warranty, engagement,… the main interest is the geometry.
The best on the market. Far better than CK, hope, I9.
Good for the lateral stifness.

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