D
DT Swiss
In production2013–

XM 1700 Spline

mtb EUR
01

Origin

The 'do-everything trail wheelset' — light enough for XC marathon use, tough enough for enduro race days, priced to be OEM-able on €3,000-€5,000 production bikes Bring the legendary 350 hub (and the now-fundamental Ratchet EXP system) to a wheel that the average European trail rider can afford as an upgrade or accept as OEM-spec without complaint Mavic Crossmax, Easton Heist, Fulcrum Red Zone Hope Fortus 30, Spank Spike 350, Crankbrothers Synthesis Enduro, Race Face AR 30, Stan's Flow MK4

02

Specifications

Weight
kg
03

The verdict

+Strengths
  • Bulletproof reliability — the Ratchet EXP system has essentially no failure mode in normal use. No pawls to snap, no springs in pockets that can launch lost during service.
  • World-class serviceability — 6902 cartridge bearings are €5-12 anywhere, freehub bodies swap tool-free between Shimano HG/MS, SRAM XD/XDR, full exploded parts diagrams on DT Swiss website.
  • 30mm internal width is the modern trail sweet spot — 2.4" Maxxis Minion DHF/DHR2 sits at perfect casing shape, 2.6" Schwalbe Big Betty works without sidewall roll.
  • Asymmetric rim profile dramatically extends wheel life — equal spoke tension drive/non-drive on rear means no more 'cracked nipples on drive side' that plagues symmetric wheels at high mileage.
  • Tubeless setup is genuinely plug-and-play — factory tape and valves, rim profile holds tyre bead with floor pump on most tyres without needing an air tank.
  • 54t Ratchet EXP upgrade kit transforms engagement from 'fine' to 'class-leading' for €60 and 5 minutes — best cost-per-performance upgrade in MTB hubs.
  • Aerolite bladed spokes are top-tier — same spec as DT Swiss road flagship wheels, won't fatigue at the J-bend (because they're straight-pull, no J-bend exists).
  • OEM ubiquity = parts everywhere — every European bike shop stocks 350 hub bearings, Ratchet EXP springs, freehub bodies, spokes, and nipples.
  • Rider weight tolerance — comfortably handles 100kg+ riders on trail / light enduro use. Many heavier riders (110-130kg) report multi-season service without truing required.
  • Compatibility breadth — 6-bolt or Center Lock, all freehub standards, both 29" and 27.5", Boost-only but that's the current trail bike standard.
Weaknesses
  • Loud freewheel — the characteristic DT Swiss buzz is divisive. Some riders find it satisfying ('audible insurance'), others find it intolerable, especially on long descents where the constant noise becomes draining.
  • Stock 36t engagement is fine but not exciting — at €700+ wheelset price, competitors offer faster engagement out of box (Hope Pro 5 = 108 POE / 3.3°, Industry Nine 1/1 = 90 POE / 4°). XM 1700 needs the 54t upgrade to be competitive on engagement spec.
  • Weight is class-average, not class-leading — 1880g for 29" alloy is solid but DT Swiss XM 1501 (€1100) drops 215g, and many competitors (Hope Fortus 30 = 1860g) match or beat the weight at similar or lower price.
  • Visible weld seam on the rim is cosmetic but bothers some buyers — sleeve-and-pin rims (cheaper) look 'cleaner' even though weld is the technically better construction.
  • Freehub buzz volume increases noticeably as grease degrades — many users mistake this for failure when it just means time for a basic regrease.
  • Standard Squorx Pro Head nipples require the DT Swiss Squorx tool (€8-15) — not catastrophic, but not the universal hex/square interface that older wheels used.
  • No tubeless valve length options shipped — included valves are short stem, riders with deep-rim aero compatibility (rare on trail bikes) need to buy longer valves separately.
  • Spoke replacement requires DT Swiss Aerolite spokes — not universal stainless straight-pull. Available at any DT-stocking shop in Europe but not at every small-town bike shop globally.
  • Boost-only — no QR or 100/142 fitment options for older frames. Riders on pre-2017 frames need a different wheelset.
  • Front 28-spoke count is light for heavier enduro use — works fine up to about 100kg trail use, but enduro racers over 90kg sometimes prefer 32-spoke wheels for sustained heavy hits.
04

Who it’s for

Trail and all-mountain MTB rider 70-110kgE-MTB rider on a mid-power motor (Bosch CX, Shimano EP8, TQ HPR50) — note H 1700 is the dedicated e-MTB variant for higher powerRider buying a Cube/Canyon/Trek/Orbea trail bike at €2,500-€4,500 — high probability the bike already ships with XM 1700Rider upgrading from entry-level wheels (Shimano MT500, Mavic Crossride, generic OEM)Mechanic/wrench-it-yourself rider who values universal parts and easy serviceBaltic/Northern European rider — Hawaii Express EE, Sportland EE, Bike-Discount.de all stock parts in Tallinn/Riga/Vilnius logistics zones
05

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