It’s Strade Bianche this weekend, so tonight we’re looking back at one of the bikes raced by the most successful Classics riders of modern times, Fabian Cancellara. This is the Trek Domane that Spartacus rode for Paris-Roubaix in 2016, his final year of racing. He might not have won the Hell of the North that year (he won it on three previous occasions), but he did take his third Strade Bianche win on the brand new (at the time) Trek Domane SLR.
> New Trek Domane breaks cover at Strade Bianche
Trek officially launched the 2016 Domane SLR just before Paris-Roubaix 2016, although Cancellara had already been riding it for ages, having been involved in its development prior to racing.
The bike featured a new adjustable rear IsoSpeed decoupler that, Trek said, allowed you to dial in the level of compliance: the amount the seat tube – and therefore the saddle – would move to smooth over bumps in the road and reduce vibration. Trek said you could have the same level of stiffness as its Madone road bike, or 14% more compliance than the previous-generation Domane.
The bike featured a two-part seat tube, the different sections connected via the IsoSpeed decoupler with a lower bolted joint. A slider adjusted the space between the two halves of the tube, allowing the seat mast to deflect rearwards.
Adjustment was simple enough; a single bolt needed to be loosened to adjust a slider. While most members of the Trek Segafredo team had the slider set to the lowest, maximum deflection setting, Cancellara took the middle ground.
This iteration of the Domane SLR also featured front IsoSpeed – a decoupler that allowed the steerer tube to move back and forth, resulting in a claimed 10% increase in vertical compliance.
Modern Trek Domanes don’t have front IsoSpeed and the rear design isn’t adjustable, although today's models are considerably lighter.
> Trek launches new, lighter Domane endurance road bike and ditches front IsoSpeed system
Cancellara preferred Shimano’s mechanical Dura-Ace to the electronic Di2 components that most of the peloton, including his teammates, were using. Old school! Some riders stuck with mechanical shifting because they preferred the lever feel. It was harder to shift accidentally in the wrong direction, especially over the cobbles when normal riding goes out the window.
Cancellara went with a 53t outer chainring and a 44t inner ring for the mostly flat Paris-Roubaix course. Oh, and rim brakes were the order of the day, naturally.
A 1.86m-tall rider, Cancellara liked a wide handlebar – in this case, a 44cm aluminium Bontrager bar. He liked a long reach, too, with a 140mm Bontrager carbon stem with one spacer above and below. The Domane SLR that Cancellara rode was built to a Pro Endurance Geometry, which meant a shorter head tube than standard Domane bikes, along with a longer wheelbase.
Cancellara’s saddle preference was a Bontrager Team Issue – a classic shape, with generous padding.
Like most of Cancellara’s Treks, this Domane SLR had a special paint job. You get that kind of thing when you’re a cycling superstar. The main feature of this one was a top tube decorated with the details of his numerous Paris-Roubaix wins and podium finishes, and a textured finish, representing the cobbles.
Most riders in the race were using 27mm, 28mm or 30mm tyres. Cancellara and the entire Trek Segafredo team rolled on Bontrager Aeolus 5 wheels, all fitted with 27mm FMB tubulars.
Check out loads more Bikes at Bedtime here.
It also means a detour which is a big deal when you have to pedal so cyclists will tend to stick to the road. Also such a cycle path will be used...
You should learn to share the road: like the drivers do.
I don't think Lime are anywhere near folding.
As you said the pedals will be hidden anyway. My shoes, 3 pairs of them, have reflective strips on the heel and my winter trousers do too on the...
Other drivers only care about disabled people when it gives them a way to object to cycling infrastructure.
I'll put you down as a no then.
Well if you *can* interview the original riders at all surely they worked, at least?...
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This should do it...
And finally: I wonder how many of the "more than 3,000" signatures on that petition are actually locals, who live or work there (and are not just...