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TECH NEWS

Rapha reveals new clothing for Team Sky to tackle the Tour de France in

Being raced and tested by Team Sky, and available to buy soon, Rapha's new Pro Team Shadow Jersey and Extreme Rain Jacket

Rapha’s partnership with Team Sky has been a fruitful one, with the London-based clothing company gaining access to and feedback from the likes of Chris Froome, helping it to develop new clothing that meets the specific demands of racing in the toughest and most demanding conditions.

Many of the developments from this partnership with Team Sky have eventually found their way into Rapha’s growing Pro Team range. And it’s set to add two more, the Pro Team Shadow Jersey, coming later this year, and the Extreme Rain Jacket, which Rapha says has no current timeline for release. We'll just assume that means it's not ready for production yet, but you can be certain it will be soon.

Both have been put to use by Team Sky during this season and you might spot them during the Tour de France if the conditions demand it.

Pro Team Shadow Jersey

The new Pro Team Shadow Jersey is the closest to being available to buy, with a scheduled release date for later this year. It’s a garment with the wind, rain and cold protection of a jacket, but with the comfort of a jersey. Rapha boldly describes the new Pro Team Shadow Jersey a “ whole new approach to bad-weather clothing in the sport.” 

It’s designed for riding in the rain and wind and the changeable conditions that can make clothing choice really tricky, especially for racing in. Rapha has designed this new jersey to be adept at dealing with such constantly changing conditions, and reckons it can be worn all day.

Castelli has enjoyed huge success with its iconic Gabba top which is designed for racing in bad weather, offering rain protection but with fit, comfort and breathability of a jersey that means you can leave it on for longer compared to a traditional rain cape which you'll want to whip off the moment it stops raining, but that's not always practical when racing.

The problem with regular rain jackets, says Rapha, is that the laminate and membrane construction keeps rain out, but also prevents perspiration from escaping. It’s the age-old problem with riding in the rain; don a waterproof jacket to keep the rain out, but boil-in-the-bag and get damp from sweat on the inside instead.

Rapha has therefore developed a fabric with a DWR (durable water repellent) finish that is applied both to the yarn and the finished fabric, which it claims lets rainwater bead off, but the lack of a laminate layer lets body heat and perspiration escape through the fabric, maintaining the essential breathability to avoid the dreaded boil-in-the-bag syndrome.

Rapha claims the jersey “is far more breathable than all other wet-weather options, yet maintains impressive ‘hydrophobic’ qualities to keep the rain off too.”

That’s about all we know at this stage, we’ve no word on options (short or long sleeve) or prices, but Rapha does tell us the Pro Team Shadow range will be released later this year, and it also sounds like it has more up its sleeve for this new jersey as well. 

Extreme Rain Jacket

For really foul weather, Rapha has developed the Extreme Rain Jacket. The clue is in the name with this one. Rapha says it’s a response to the 2013 Milan-San Remo (which rocketed the Gabba into thousands of wardrobes around the country) when Team Sky’s Head of Performance Operations Rod Rod Ellingworth challenged Rapha to developed a survival jacket that could “begin the recovery process during the race, rather than afterwards, and maintain the health of riders in these trying conditions.”

Rapha has responded to his demands with the Extreme Rain Jacket. It employs a new fabric called Outlast that uses a “phase change” technology that apparently can store heat, say from the warmth of a team car, and maintain this stored heat when given to a rider. It’s technology developed by NASA, which started developing phase change materials to regulate astronauts temperature in the 1980s. You can read more about it here, and here's a short video explaining its benefits.

If that wasn’t clever enough, the jacket has a heat pad bonded into both lower sleeves that provides three colour-coded temperature settings, so the temperature can be controlled. Inside the jacket is a fibre-pile fleece lining, wide sleeves to fit over bulky gloves, and oversized velcro zip pullers. It has a neoprene hood with an integrated peak that fits under a helmet, and an extra long dropped tail. The outer layer is constructed from the same fabric used in Rapha’s existing Hardshell jacket.

There’s no timeline for release on this jacket, it’s still in development according to Rapha. We'll update this story when we get more information. For now the best thing is simply to pay close attention to Team Sky if there's any racing in bad weather during the rest of the Tour de France.

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

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9 comments

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BikerBob | 9 years ago
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Outlast isn't new it's been around for years  37

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sethpistol | 9 years ago
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So the 'Shadow' would be a Sportful Fiandre/NoRain tech then - 'water repellency without laminate for better breathability. - great but there's no windproofing without laminate so you will get pretty cold riding in wet weather - best solution is to Windproof panels that face the wind and use the non laminates for the places where breathability is needed more... which is already available in aforementioned range and used by Tinkoff Saxo for several years now...

OutLast - the stuff that was in Snowboard boots and Gloves in the 90s and didn't seem to do much, as for heated jackets, again come and gone in ski industry and never really taken off for a number of reasons. The way they are talking about the Extreme Rain jacket it sounds totally un-raceable unless you are riding Iditabike - really what race would require that level of insulation and heating without the organizers pulling the plug?! Neoprene hood...are they going down to inspect some pipeline under the Brent Delta?!

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Quince | 9 years ago
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Pah. I'm working on on a Rain Jacket made from exclusive NASA-developed nano-materials that create an anti-gravity force-field around rider to literally propel the rain away.

Problem is, NASA don't seem to have started developing the materials yet, which is slowing development. I've made a prototype bin bag with arm holes though, which kinda works.

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Metjas | 9 years ago
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they should link the Extreme jacket to the Di2 battery  1

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crikey | 9 years ago
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It'll be interesting to see if any riders not sponsored by Rapha choose to use these garments; that was the best advertising that Castelli never paid for...

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bendertherobot | 9 years ago
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The shadow sounds precisely like the Pro Team softshell which, for me, didn't work. It was very Gabba like but somehow colder and less water resistant.

Perhaps this is them learning from that. Interesting that that piece is still £200 and, personally, given you can get a Gabba for £120 or even a short sleeve and nano flex warmers for £110, simply not worth it.

The extreme sounds good mind. I rate the Hardshell jacket very highly. Arguably, if you size that one up, you can use that as a winter jacket.

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MattCartwright | 9 years ago
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I hope the 'Shadow' range continues along the lines of the new Pro Team Softshell range Rapha did, but maybe refines it a little. The kit worked really well, but was just let down by some sizing issues. I rode in the Softshell Jacket all last winter, with one or two base layers, never once got cold or really wet. Very impressed.

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MNgraveur | 9 years ago
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That last one sounds like it'll be inexpensive.

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MNgraveur | 9 years ago
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That last one sounds like it'll be inexpensive.

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