What to Check After a Crash: Carbon Rim Safety Inspection Guide

Crashes—big or small—can cause hidden damage to a carbon wheelset. Even if your bike still rolls fine afterward, carbon rims require a careful and systematic inspection to ensure they’re still safe to ride. This guide walks you through the key checks every rider should perform after a crash, impact, or sudden side hit.

1. Start With a Clean Wheel

Before inspecting, wipe your rim with a clean cloth.
Dirt, mud, or brake dust can hide cracks, scratches, or resin fractures.
A clean wheel makes flaws easier to spot.

2. Look for Visible Cracks or Chips

Rotate the wheel slowly and inspect every section.
Pay special attention to:

Braking tracks (rim brake models)

Inner rim walls

Spoke hole areas

The area near the valve hole

Red flags:

Hairline cracks

White stress lines

Deep chips

Splintered carbon fibers

If you see any of these, stop riding immediately.

3. Check for Soft Spots or Delamination

Press gently on the rim with your thumbs.
Carbon should feel firm and consistent.

Warning signs:

Areas that flex more than others

“Crispy” or “crackling” sounds

A hollow feeling under compression

These can indicate delamination or internal structural damage.

4. Inspect the Spoke Holes for Stress Marks

Crashes can overload spokes, causing surrounding carbon to fracture. Look for:

Star-shaped cracks around spoke nipples

White rings or stress halos

Lifting or separation around the spoke bed

Damage in this area may lead to sudden spoke pull-out—do not ride until repaired.

5. Spin the Wheel for Trueness and Roundness

Mount the wheel back onto the bike or a truing stand.
Spin it and observe:

Side-to-side wobble

Up-and-down hops

Rubbing on brake pads or calipers

A crash can cause spoke tension imbalance or rim warping. Minor issues can be trued, but major distortions may indicate structural failure.

6. Listen for Unusual Sounds

While rotating the wheel, listen closely.
Troubling noises include:

Clicking

Creaking

Soft popping sounds

These may point to internal cracking, even when the outer surface looks normal.

7. Examine Brake Tracks or Disc Braking Surfaces

For rim brake wheels:

Look for gouges

Edge deformation

Burn marks from sudden hard stops

Cracks or lifted resin layers

For disc brake wheels:

Inspect the rotor interface

Ensure the rotor mount isn’t bent or cracked

Check for rotor wobble caused by impact

8. Check Hub Integrity and Axle Alignment

Crash impacts can transfer force into the hub or axle. Inspect for:

Play or looseness in the bearings

Grinding or rough spinning

Bent axle or misalignment

Cracks around the hub’s carbon–alloy interface (if applicable)

If the wheel no longer spins smoothly, service is required.

9. Evaluate Spoke Tension

Crash impacts frequently loosen or overtighten individual spokes.
Lightly squeeze spoke pairs around the wheel.
Look for:

Unusually loose spokes

Overly tight ones

A sudden change in pitch when plucked

Inconsistent tension signals that a full re-tension or rebuild may be necessary.

10. If in Doubt, Get a Professional Inspection

Carbon damage is often internal, invisible, and progressive.
If you suspect anything unusual—or the crash was severe—take the wheel to a professional carbon repair technician or wheel builder.

Do NOT continue riding unless you’re 100% sure the wheel is structurally sound.

Final Reminder

Even though carbon wheels are strong, impacts can cause hidden failures. A careful post-crash inspection protects you from unexpected rim failure and keeps your wheelset safe for future rides.