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TECH NEWS

A more sustainable future for the bike industry? Hunt introduces recyclable carbon fibre to new gravel wheelsets and plans to implement tech more widely "over time"

Fully recyclable carbon fibre and resin technology initially to be available on updated 40 Carbon Gravel Race and all-new 40 Carbon Gravel Dynamo wheels

Wheel manufacturer Hunt has announced its latest gravel wheelsets will be made using fully recyclable carbon fibre.

The performance wheel brand said its H_Cyclo technology will be used in its updated 40 Carbon Gravel Race wheels and an all-new dynamo-equipped 40 Carbon Gravel Dynamo wheelset, something Hunt says is "the next step in reducing environmental impact while continuing to serve riders with high specification performance wheels that improve the riding experience".

2024 Hunt Carbon Gravel Race wheels

And while the recycling is limited to two gravel wheelsets for now, Hunt says there are plans to implement the technology across more of its carbon range "over time".

> Hunt introduces recycled carbon fibre to its wheel range: would you pay just a little more to help the planet?

Explaining how it's done, Hunt notes that the traditional carbon fibre manufacturing process for rims and components sees pieces of carbon fibre pre-preg injected with an epoxy resin and laid within a thermoset mould, the process generally resulting in a higher strength-to-weight ratio than other carbon production methods such as thermo-plastic resin processes.

2024 Hunt Carbon Gravel Race wheels

However, on the down side, the thermoset process with carbon fibre and epoxy resin is a one-time use chemical reaction, or it was until Hunt developed its H_Cyclo technology to use a solution called CleaVER to separate carbon fibres and resin using heat and agitation, so that both components can be re-used.

Hunt reports it was designed initially to enable the recycling of large format glass fibre wind turbine blades to create new, smaller format products — and says the "implementation of recyclable H_Cyclo resin has no impact on the structural integrity or strength-to-weight attributes of the carbon layup, making the technology ideal for precision, high-performance rims".

> How green is your carbon bike? And why your next one could be made from recycled carbon fibre

The brand also says it will cover the collection of products at end-of-life, in order to "make the process seamless and no-cost for riders, should their wheels become unusable in an accident or crash".

"Updated to reduce environmental impact", the 40 Carbon Gravel Race wheels have been around for a while. Priced at £1,099 and weighing 1.4kg they are compatible with tyres ranging from 29-60mm, although the 25mm internal rim width is optimised for 40mm rubber, a wheel Hunt says will offer a "comfortable, compliant ride feel without sacrificing durability".

2024 Hunt Carbon Gravel Race wheels

It has been upgraded with the Hunt's H_Ratchet 40T DBL hubset and the brand reports the 40 Carbon Gravel Race was ridden by Cecily Decker to victory at The Rift Iceland, Bighorn Gravel, and a third place at SBT Gravel, something Hunt says is proof of the wheels' "performance and durability in the hardest gravel races".

The dynamo-equipped version is new to the range and sees a SON 28 Dynamo generator front hub to power lights and electronics, Hunt marketing it as a "fully recyclable ultra distance-capable gravel wheelset". It shares the same rim width and compatibility figures as the non-dynamo equivalent, but "offers increased durability" with four additional front and rear spokes to adapt to the heavier loads a bike featuring the wheels is likely to be used for.

2024 Hunt 40 Carbon Gravel Dynamo wheels
2024 Hunt 40 Carbon Gravel Dynamo wheels

Riders will have the option to purchase the 40 Carbon Gravel Dynamo as a single front wheel with the SON Dynamo front hub or full front and rear set. The dynamo wheelset weighs 1.8kg and is priced at £1,489, both models available now on Hunt's website.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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5 comments

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PeterF01 | 2 months ago
2 likes

Just when you thought Taiwanese brand Hunt had run out of b/s marketing hype, along they come with this utter nonsense. Trying to pretend you're nothing more than a greenwashing marketing company for cheap Alibaba wheels is nothing new unfortunately. Many brands are now trying this "Buy us because we suddenly care about the environment" is cynical. Please wake up and do some background research before publishing this rubbish.

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Aluminium can replied to PeterF01 | 2 months ago
4 likes

Alibaba is a Chinese company.  Taiwan is a different country to China.  (For now anyway).   The highest technology and best quality manufacturing in the world is done in Taiwan and has been for years.  I don't see the equivanlent of NVIDIA, for example, manufacturing in the UK.  Road.cc did a feature on Hunt in June last year where they were actually banging on about their Taiwanese manufacturing.

For the record, I'm not a Hunt fanboy.  I use DT Swiss wheels.  They're made in the Eastern part of Switzerland, which is also known as Taiwan.

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PeterF01 replied to Aluminium can | 2 months ago
0 likes

Taiwanese Pillar (Sha Dar) spoke company is behind hunt. Doesn't mean various parts don't originate on the mainland from several rim companies like Stren and some smaller backyarders to save money. These companies ALL sell equivalent or beter directly on Alibaba. DT-Swiss hubs are sourced from several Taiwanese suppliers. Spokes are Swiss. Rims - Various suppliers. So hunt = Alibaba+ a LOT of marketing b/s.

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Paul J replied to Aluminium can | 2 months ago
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Aluminium can wrote:

Alibaba is a Chinese company.  Taiwan is a different country to China.  (For now anyway).

Actually, they _are_ the same country - just... with 2 different regimes claiming authority over the _same_ country. One in Beijing and Taipei. One regime calls itself the "People's Republic of China", the other the "Republic of China". They both lay claim to the country of China - though they clearly differ in the de facto control over the parts of the territory.

Now, there is apparently a growing nativist movement in Taiwan, which has gained power to a degree, but it has not (yet) changed the definition of Taiwan.

So... it's actually the other way around from what you say. *Same* country. Obviously 2 different regimes. For now.

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bikes replied to PeterF01 | 2 months ago
1 like

It doesn't seem like complete greenwash to me if they're honouring an end of life collection process?

Though I can't imagine anyone will be keen to take 'recyclable carbon' off my hands if Hunt aren't around in x years, unlike alu rims which I can take the recycling centre easily.

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