anybody ever use them? any better than conventional?
Marc Salvisburg of Factory Pro demo'ed a ceramic bearing to me once. He held it in his hand and spun it. You could make a sandwich and eat it before that thing slowed down.
Marc Salvisburg of Factory Pro demo'ed a ceramic bearing to me once. He held it in his hand and spun it. You could make a sandwich and eat it before that thing slowed down.
If you do long wheelies on a straight like Thunderhill, you'll notice ceramic because the wheel won't have slowed down nearly as much as steel bearings and won't upset the bike much.

Yes. But take two identical wheels with identical rubber where there are dust seals, grease etc on both, spin both up to identical speed and the difference isn't nearly so dramatic.
This.
Even the cheapest bearings have low friction. You start factoring in grease type, grease fill percentage, rubber seals, and preload, and suddenly there are way more variables than how hard the balls are.