http://www.mavic.com/road/products/Open-Sport.323975.aspx
(different name, same basic section).
What appears to have happened is I wore through the bottom half of the brake
track first, so a gap appeared there. The tyre pressure pushed the sides
out, so it bulged a bit (which told me it was worn out), but it didn't split
catastrophically as it was all held together by the inner web.
When I let the tyres down to take it all apart for a new rim, the gap opened
up amusingly - there's not much metal in quite a lot of that rim :-)
cheers,
clive
Do you do a lot of rear braking? Or was the wheel of some considerable
age? Any rear wheels I've lost have been through spoke fatigue or hub
failure. I don't remember wearing out a rim.
Anyway, glad there was no catastrophe to report.
--
Brian G
www.wetwo.co.uk
Don't do a lot of braking. Rim is about 17000 miles old, year round use.
Might have had some harsh blocks on it at one point. They do seem to wear
out faster these days though.
(it's on the second hub (flange failure), but I think original spokes).
cheers,
clive
Fair enough. I'd think 17k miles is a decent turn for a modern alloy
rim. Our old steel rims seemed to last forever, but then they tended to
slide sedately between the brake blocks even at white-knuckle grip on
the lever!
--
Brian G
www.wetwo.co.uk