A new Hunt Sustain series of wheelsets hopes to lessen the environmental impact of upgrading your bike. Hunt admittedly aren’t going to save the world by slightly tweaking how they build wheels, but they have found a few ways to make 3 of their most popular wheelsets easier on the environment. The result is recycled content in both carbon and aluminum rims made in Europe – the first carbon rims I’ve seen made with recycled carbon fibers. Plus, silver stainless spokes & raw brass nipples that I think look better without unnecessary coatings. Then, all laced into EU-made hubs in Europe, and surprisingly not much more expensive than their Asian-made wheels…
Hunt calls this Sustain Phase One, a first step to building affordable carbon and aluminum wheels in a more environmentally sustainable way. A project to lessen the environmental impact of them building wheels to upgrade your bike, but without sacrificing quality, performance, or value for the end consumer. Hunt describes the 3 new Sustain wheelsets as “developed leveraging recycled materials, less resource-intensive manufacturing processes, sustainability-focused specification choices, and shorter transportation distances to reduce [their] environmental impact“. Cnc Machining Online
Recycled materials are usually an easy one to look at. And all three new Hunt Sustain wheelsets feature rims with recycled content. But that’s a bit complicated when it comes to carbon rims. Carbon doesn’t typically recycle well – once the thermoplastic resin is applied, there’s no separating it from the actual carbon fibers.
But the new Hunt Sustain 42 Carbon Disc Ti rim takes advantage of a unique carbon recycling process.10% of the carbon in the rim is made up of a mix of EU-sourced pre-consumer aerospace & automotive carbon scraps, as well as a mix of off-cuts from carbon bicycle rim production. That reclaimed carbon seems to be shredded and “processed into a dense fleece” that Hunt uses in the outer portion of the rim to reinforce the bead for extra impact resistance, while virgin raw fibers are used for the bulk of the rim’s structure. They manufacture the carbon rims via Resin Transfer Molding over a wax core. That means no resin is added until the final step, so scrap carbon can easily be recycled. And the melted wax can be reused more than 20x instead of using disposable foam, silicone, or plastic to form the inner rim cavity.
The Sustain 42 Carbon rim features a blunt aero shape with a 22mm internal hooked tubeless bead, 42mm deep and 29mm wide outside. Hunt describes it as an all-rounder road rim for 25-35mm tires.
The Sustain 42 Carbon wheels are built with triple-butted Sapim CX-Ray blade spokes, laced to 10° engagement Hunt Europa H_Ratchet Ti alloy hubs CNC-machined in Belgium. They of course get a 36T ratchet freehub mechanism and one-piece titanium freehub body.
Recycling aluminum is a bit more straightforward. And both new Sustain 6000 series alloy rims are made from 75% recycled aluminum. Overall 45% of the total is pre-consumer content including industrial scrap like shavings left after CNC-machining, but a full 30% is post-consumer – think recycled Coke & beer cans.
Hunt builds up the two alloy wheels in Europe with Sapim spokes and EU-machined hubs, too. This time the 23mm internal (27mm external x 22mm deep) Sustain 4 Season wheels feature double-butted D-Light spokes and Hunt Europa 48T / 7.5° hubs CNC-machined in France. While the 30mm internal (34mm external x 20mm deep) Sustain Trail Wide wheels combine D-Light spokes and French-made Europa Boost 48T hubs.
Looking at most modern wheels, it’s a fairly obvious step in my mind to stop making spokes & nipples black. Hunt calls them ‘Zero Coated’ for all of the Sustain wheels. But spokes are made of corrosion-resistant stainless steel anyway. So style is the only reason to use a ‘electrical chemical coating process’ to make them black. And silver spokes feel faster anyway, right? As for nipples, it’s the same thing. Raw brass is also naturally corrosion-resistant and effectively self-lubricating, so no functional reason to electro-plate them. And yes, classic brass nipples look better in my book, too.
Now, if they’ll just roll that out across the rest of the Hunt wheelset line-up!
Hunt Sustain Phase One – 42 Carbon Disc Ti
Sustain Phase One – 4 Season All-Road Disc
Hunt Sustain Phase One – Trail Wide
The new three wheelset range of Hunt Sustain Phase One range of wheels are available for pre-order now Limited quantities of the new wheels pre-ordered now will make it into customer hands from August 2024.
The most expensive is the Hunt Sustain Phase One 42 Carbon Disc Ti wheelset, selling for $1449 / 1349€. That’s maybe a 40% premium over Hunt’s cheapest carbon wheels, but about the same price as their other mid-tier carbon wheels with aero rims and higher-spec hubs.
On the alloy front, the Hunt Sustain 4 Season All-Road Disc wheelset sells for $549 / 489€. That’s technically cheaper than the regular version when it isn’t on sale. Then, the Hunt Sustain Trail Wide mountain bike wheels sell for $589 / 549€, just a bit more than their regular counterpart (also now on sale.)
Hunt’s been working for years on ways to make everything they do a bit more sustainable. Since their start in 2015, they’ve made sure to keep service parts & spares available so your Hunt wheels can last as long as possible. Hunt also started a RE:NEW program two years ago. There, they offer refurbished used wheels to consumers, that might otherwise be scrapped.
They are also now sharing details of “a company-wide carbon emissions measurement and reduction plan” base on the Science Based Targets Initiative framework that will see them reduce direct & indirect emissions from their business by 50% over the next five years. Hunt will publically share company-wide emissions and progress data annually from the end of this year.
Hunt says Sustain Phase One is just the start, “Further sustainability-focused product development updates will roll out in the coming months.”
We’re curious to hear more about their next steps…
Cory Benson is the EU Tech Editor of Bikerumor.com.
Cory has been writing about mountain bikes, enduro, cyclocross, all-road, gravel bikes & bikepacking for over 25 years, even before the industry created some of these names. Prior to Bikerumor, Cory was a practicing Architect specializing in environmental sustainability, has designed bike shops & bike components, and worked as a bike shop mechanic.
Based in the Czech Republic for 15+ years, he is a technical mountain biker, adventurous gravel rider, and short & medium-haul bikepacker. Cory travels extensively across Europe riding bikes, meeting with key European product developers, industry experts & tastemakers for an in-depth review of what’s new, and what’s coming next.
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Black spokes looked good when they first came out, but all-black-everything-bikes are now oppressive. Free The Spokes! Long Live Silver!
Indeed. Gimme shiny stainless steel spokes and mirror polished aluminum rims every day any day.
I’ve been using silver spokes for years. I like the look and they don’t show scratches. “Zero coat” finish is pretty funny IMO- They should call the carbon rims “zero aluminum” too hahah
A O.2% percent improvement doesn’t sound like much, but apparently it is when you’re talking about aerodynamics.
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