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C35 vs C50: NxT SL2 Climber vs All-Rounder

C35 vs C50: NxT SL2 Climber vs All-Rounder

You've decided on the NxT SL2 wheels — smart move for performance you don't have to remortgage for. Now comes the only hard part: 35mm or 50mm? It's 70 grams and 15 millimeters of rim depth, but it decides whether you've bought the lightest climber in the range or the aero all-rounder that holds speed on the flats. Get it right and the wheel disappears under you on your favorite roads. This guide makes the choice obvious.

NxT SL2 C35 35mm and C50 50mm carbon wheels side by side

Quick Verdict for Skimmers

Choose the C35 (35mm, 1,260g) if you climb, ride hilly or mixed terrain, want the lightest, liveliest wheel, or plan to ride some gravel — it's the most versatile pick in the range.

Choose the C50 (50mm, 1,330g) if you ride mostly road, spend time at sustained speed on flats and rollers, and want a clear aero edge while staying light. Both share the same 23mm internal rim, 36-tooth ratchet hub, and 120J impact testing, and both start at $999 — so this is a fit-to-terrain decision, not a price one.

C35 vs C50: The Specs Side by Side

The C35 and C50 share a platform and differ mainly in depth, weight, and intended terrain. The build quality and testing are identical.

Spec
NxT SL2 C35
NxT SL2 C50
Rim depth
35mm
50mm
Wheelset weight
1,260g
1,330g
Rim weight (each)
378g
386g
External / internal width
32mm / 23mm
32mm / 23mm
Tire optimization
28–30c (25c+)
28–30c (25c+)
Spokes
Pillar Wing 20 aero steel, 24/24
Pillar Wing 20 aero steel, 24/24
Hub
36T ratchet
36T ratchet
Impact tested
120J (3× the 40J standard)
120J (3× the 40J standard)
Best for
Climbing, gravel, versatility
All-round road, aero
Price
From $999
From $999


What the Depth
Difference Means

Fifteen millimeters of depth trades a little aero for a little weight and versatility. The C35 is lighter and more all-terrain; the C50 is more aerodynamic at speed.

A 50mm rim cuts drag more effectively than a 35mm one, and that benefit grows the faster you go. A 35mm rim is lighter, spins up faster, climbs more eagerly, and stays calmer in crosswinds — and its shallower profile is friendlier to mixed and gravel terrain. Neither is "faster" in the abstract; each is faster in its element. The right answer depends on where you ride and how fast you hold it. For the same depth question one tier up, see our QianKun CS50 vs CS60 guide.

KEY INSIGHT
• The C35 and C50 differ by just 70 grams — small enough that you should choose on terrain and aero needs, not weight. The depth and its effect on climbing, gravel-readiness, and crosswinds matter far more than the gram count.


The NxT SL2 C35: The Lightweight, Versatile Climber

The C35 is the lightest, most versatile wheel in the NxT SL2 range — built to climb, handle mixed terrain, and even take light gravel in stride.

At 1,260g with a shallow 35mm rim, the C35 has the lowest rotating weight here, so it accelerates and climbs with the least effort and feels lively when the road points up. The shallow profile also makes it the calmest in crosswinds and the most at home on rough or mixed surfaces. With a 23mm internal width optimized for 28–30c tubeless tires, it doubles as a capable all-rounder for riders who mix tarmac with the occasional gravel detour.

THE WIN
• If you ride hills, want one wheelset for road-plus-light-gravel, or simply value the liveliest possible feel, the C35 is the versatile choice. It's the wheel that says yes to the most kinds of riding.


The NxT SL2 C50: The Aero All-Rounder

The C50 is the road all-rounder — deep enough for a real aero benefit at sustained speed, light enough to climb respectably. It's the default for fast road riding.

Road cyclist at speed on aero NxT SL2 C50 carbon wheels

At 1,330g, the C50 carries a 50mm rim that pays off on flats and rollers where you hold higher speeds, reducing drag where you spend the most energy. It's only 70g heavier than the C35, so it still climbs well; you simply trade a little uphill liveliness for a clear aero edge on the flat. For riders whose world is mostly road and who want one fast, balanced wheel, the C50 is the sweet spot — and it pairs naturally with aero road framesets.

WATCH-OUT
• The C50 is a road-focused wheel. If a big share of your riding is gravel or very steep, hilly terrain, the lighter, shallower C35 is the better tool. Don't buy depth you won't cash in at speed.


Crosswinds and Terrain: The Everyday Differences

The C35's shallower rim is steadier in crosswinds and friendlier on mixed terrain; the C50's depth is best where roads are smooth and fast.

A 35mm rim catches less side wind than a 50mm, so the C35 is more reassuring on exposed roads and for lighter riders. Its shallow profile is also more forgiving on broken tarmac and light gravel. The C50's depth is an advantage on smooth, fast roads but a touch more sensitive in strong gusts. If your routes are windy, hilly, or unpaved in places, lean C35; if they're fast, smooth, and mostly flat, lean C50.

Which Should You Choose?

Match the wheel to your terrain and how fast you ride it. Here's the decision in one table.

If you...
Choose
Why
Climb and ride hilly terrain
Lightest, liveliest uphill
Mix road with light gravel
Shallow, versatile, all-terrain
Ride exposed, windy roads
Calmer in crosswinds
Ride mostly fast road
Aero edge at sustained speed
Spend time on flats and rollers
Holds high speed efficiently
Want one road wheel, balanced
Aero all-rounder sweet spot
Want stability + some aero
C35/50 mixed
Shallow front, deeper rear


Shared DNA: What You Get Either Way

Both wheels are the same value-performance platform, so your depth choice never costs you build quality. The hardware and testing are identical.

Both use Pillar Wing 20 bladed aero steel spokes — 24 per wheel, simple and inexpensive to service anywhere — on a 36-tooth ratchet hub for reliable, quick engagement. Both are built with Filament Winding Technology for consistent, repeatable layup, run a tubeless-ready 23mm internal rim with no rim tape needed, and are tested to 120 joules of impact, three times the 40J industry and UCI baseline. Both carry a 3-year warranty and start at $999 — accessible premium delivered through DTC efficiency, where the saving on the channel goes into the carbon, not into a retail markup.

KEY INSIGHT
• Because the C35 and C50 share spokes, hub, width, testing, warranty, and starting price, you can choose purely on terrain. Pick C35 for climbing, versatility, and gravel-readiness; pick C50 for road speed.


36T ratchet hub and Pillar Wing 20 spoke lacing

The Verdict

The C35 is the versatile climber: lightest, liveliest, calmest in wind, and ready for road-plus-light-gravel. The C50 is the aero all-rounder: deeper and faster at sustained road speed, still light enough to climb well. Seventy grams and 15 millimeters separate them, and they share everything else — hub, spokes, width, 120J testing, warranty, and a $999 starting price. Choose the C35 if your riding climbs and wanders; choose the C50 if it's fast and mostly paved. Either way you've bought elite-level performance at honest value.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the C35 or C50 better for climbing?

The C35 is better for climbing. At 1,260g with a shallow 35mm rim, it has the lowest rotating weight in the range, so it accelerates and climbs with less effort. The C50 still climbs well — it's only 70g heavier — but trades a little uphill liveliness for aero speed.

What is the difference between 35mm and 50mm rim depth?

A 50mm rim is more aerodynamic at sustained speed, while a 35mm rim is lighter, climbs more eagerly, handles crosswinds more calmly, and suits mixed and gravel terrain better. The NxT SL2 C35 and C50 differ by 70g, so terrain and aero needs should drive the choice, not weight.

Can the NxT SL2 C35 be used for gravel?

Yes. The C35's shallow 35mm rim and 23mm internal width optimized for 28–30c tubeless tires make it a capable road-and-light-gravel all-rounder. For dedicated rough gravel, Yoeleo also offers a wider gravel-specific NxT gravel wheel, but the C35 handles mixed terrain well.

Do the C35 and C50 use the same hub and spokes?

Yes. Both use Pillar Wing 20 bladed aero steel spokes (24 per wheel) on a 36-tooth ratchet hub, with the same 23mm internal rim, tubeless-ready build, 120J impact testing, and 3-year warranty. Only depth, weight, and intended terrain differ between them.

Are the NxT SL2 wheels good value?

Yes. The NxT SL2 line starts at $999 and delivers 1,260–1,330g weights, 23mm internal rims, a ratchet hub, and 120J impact testing — three times the 40J standard. Yoeleo's DTC model puts the saving into the carbon and testing rather than a retail markup, which is where the value comes from.

 

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