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TECH NEWS

2013 WorldTour Team bikes… the whole peloton

Merida and Focus in, Colnago and Wilier out - our guide to who's riding what this season

The 2013 race season is now in full swing with races currently taking place across the world. With these early season races it’s our first chance to see the latest bikes and equipment, many in new livery as new sponsors have stepped forward.

There are 19 WorldTour teams, and many are sticking with the same frame and component suppliers as last year. There’s a couple of new brands, and we welcome Merida to the peloton for the first time. It’s perhaps surprising that one of the world’s very biggest bike brands has never dipped a toe in the professional road scene before, but they come from many years of backing the fastest mountain bike racers, so they’re no strangers to supplying race winning kit. They’ve joined up with Italian squad Lampre, leaving previous bike sponsor Wilier absent from the 2013 pro scene.

Focus are back as well, making a return to the top level of cycle racing with Ag2r-La Mondiale. They’ve signed a three year deal which should give them the stability they’ve not yet enjoyed in their time as a pro race team bike supplier.

A huge brand notable by their absence is Colnago, a marque steeped in racing history. The Italian bike brand supplies bikes to the Europcar squad, but they didn’t get the WorldTour license they were hoping to this year. This is a real shame as the C59, in my humble opinion, was one of the prettiest bikes in the peloton.

A new look team this year is Blanco Pro Cycling, with Rabobank having pulled the plug on their sponsorship at the end of last year, we’ll not see the iconic orange kit in the peloton anymore. This team has the backing of Giant, who supplied Rabobank for the past two years, and continue for the foreseeable future. 

Those are the big changes this season, the other 16 teams remain with the same bike sponsor they had in 2012. There’s a few new bikes this year, and we’re sure there will be a couple of other new bikes to be revealed in the run up to the Tour de France. The most notable news on this front is Giant’s Propel, their first aero bike which is making its debut in the Tour Down Under.

Shimano dominant + year of the electronic groupset

As for equipment, Shimano is still the dominant drivetrain supplier with ten teams running Dura-Ace. Five teams are on Campagnolo Super Record EPS and just three teams are on SRAM RED.

Most Shimano and Campagnolo teams, as far as we can tell, will be using the electronic versions of the groupsets. Electronic groupsets are really popular this year, and just about every single Shimano and Campagnolo sponsored team will be running Di2 or EPS, respectively. Of course there will be a bit of pressure from the component manufactures on the team to use the newest groupsets, and it’ll be interesting to spot which riders prefer the mechanical version.

Without question, SRAM’s mechanical RED groupset is the lightest on the market. There’s no sign of an electronic (or wireless) groupset from the US company yet, but who’s to say they haven’t got something up their sleeves this summer.

A couple of trends we’ve spotted this year: lots of PRO and FSA components. FSA has always been a prominent sight and this year it’s almost hard to spot the team that isn’t looked after by the Italian company for stems, handlebars and seatposts. Also noticeable is the number of Shimano sponsored teams that now appear to be using the company’s PRO range of stems, handlebars and seatposts. Are Shimano offering a better deal to these teams perhaps?

There’s also more Shimano wheels in the peloton this year, and less Zipp and Mavic than we have seen in previous years.

Katusha

Frame: Aeroad CF + Ultimate CF SLX
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 9070 11-speed
Wheels: Mavic
Components: Ritchey/Canyon

First they were out, then a CAS appeal saw their WorldTour licence upheld, and they're back in the pro peloton. Katusha are supported by German manufacturer Canyon, and have the choice of two road bikes, the aero Aeroad CF or the lighter Ultimate CF SLX. The latter is a 790g frame, for a size large, and is made from a ultra high modulus carbon fibre with details like the flattened top tube, bulged seat tube and slim seat stays. The dropouts on the frame and fork are carbon, there’s a press fit bottom bracket, and cables are routed internally, with two versions of the frame for electronic or mechanical shifting. We’ve had a ride on it and been very impressed.

The team are supported by Mavic, and it will be interesting if any of the team ride the Cosmic Carbon 40 clincher wheels throughout the season. Shimano’s latest Di2 groupset and Ritchey bars and stem with Canyon’s own seatpost complete the details.

BMC Racing Team

Frame: TeamMachine SLR01 / TimeMachine TMR01
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace
Wheels: Shimano Dura-Ace
Components: 3T

BMC back their own team and the riders have the choice of the TeamMachine, which has been around for a couple of years. It’s their go-to all-rounder. The riders also have the option of the newer TimeMachine, the aero bike launched at the Tour de France last year. The riders are clearly allowed to make their own choice, and we’ve only seen a few opting for this bike over the trusty TeamMachine. We expect to see more of its presence this season, as the aero bike war is hotting up. We imagine the team will be on the GranFondo GF01 again for the cobbled classics.

Movistar Team

Frame: Pinarello Dogma 65.1 Think2
Drivetrain: Campagnolo
Wheels: Campagnolo
Components: Pinarelloa MOST

The Spanish squad will be riding the newer Dogma 65.1 Think2, as opposed to the Dogma 2. They dress their frames, finished with a discrete Movistar logo colour stripe on the inside of the front triangle, and white chainstay/seatstay insides, with Campagnolo Record EPS electronic 11-speed groupset. Wheels are from the Italian company too, with the 50mm deep-section Bora’s the most likely choice for all races except the classics.

Blanco Pro Cycling Team

Frame: Giant Propel
Drivetrain: Shimano Di2 9070
Wheels: Shimano C-50
Components: Giant

With new title sponsor Blanco taking over when Rabobank left the sport last year, Giant are still a major player at the top level of the sport, and they used the Tour Down Under to reveal their first ever aerodynamic road bike, the Propel. It promises much, this new bike, with a frame weight of 950g, decent stiffness and, according to their testing, it's faster than all other aero bikes. We expect to see some riders still opting for the lighter TCR Advanced (about 820g) when the races head into the mountains this summer. Shimano continue to supply groupsets and it'll be the new Dura-Ace Di2 11-speed.

Cannondale Pro Cycling

Frame: Cannondale SuperSix Evo
Drivetrain: SRAM RED
Wheels: Vision
Components: FSA

Another big sponsor, along with Rabobank, to leave the sport is Liquigas. Never fear, because Cannondale have picked up the bill and will provide the financial support the team, which carries over from 2012 virtually unchanged, need to compete at the highest level. Riders like Ivan Basso and Peter Sagan will campaign this season on the same SuperSix Evo as they rode last year. 

There’s a lighter version of the frame available, but seeing as the Evo is already one of the lightest in the peloton, and mechanics have to fit weights (solid axles is the rumour we’ve heard), they probably won’t be making the leap anytime soon. They continue to use SRAM’s RED mechanical groupset, the lightest on the market, and they’ve dropped Mavic wheels in favour of Vision. They’ve also a new tyre sponsor, Kenda, this season.

Astana Pro Team

Frame: Specialized Tarma
Drivetrain: Campagnolo Recod EPS
Wheels: Corima wheels
Components: Specialized (including cranks)

Astana have been on Specialized bikes for a while now and most riders will be racing the Tarmac SL4. A notable change is the switch from SRAM to Campagnolo for their drivetrain supplier. They, like every other team running Campagnolo, will use the Record EPS 11-speed groupset. As well as frames, they’ll use cranks, stems, handlebars and seatposts from Specialized. They’re the only team to roll on Corima wheels as well. They'll use the Aero or MCC, which both feature a full carbon rim with a foam core. Spokes are carbon too and so is the hub. So they're light, very light, they tip the scales at just over 1kg.

Francaise des Jeux

Frame: Lapierre Xelius EFI Ultimate Di2
Drivetrain: Shimano Di2
Wheels: Shimano wheels
Components: PRO

French team FDJ are still on fellow French firm Lapierre’s bikes for 2013. The company has developed the new Xelius EFI Ultimate for the team, it’s their lightest (890g) and stiffest frame they’ve ever produced. Frames will be fitted with Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 9070 11-speed groupsets, with the battery hidden in the seat post. They’ve also shopped at Shimano for the components and wheels this year.

Lotto-Belisol

Frame: Ridley Noah FAST / Helium SL
Drivetrain: Campagnolo Record EPS
Wheels: Campagnolo
Components: Deda

The Lotto-Belisol team, headed by fearsome sprinter Andre Greipel and Grand Tour potential Jurgen Van Den Broeck, have the choice of two top-level race bikes.

The Helium SL is their superlight option while the Noah FAST is their cutting-edge aero bike designed for the pursuit of speed. They’re using Campagnolo’s electronic EPS 11-speed groupset with wheels from the same company. Deda bars, stem and seatposts complete the build.

Ag2r-La Mondiale

Frame: Focus Izalco Team SL Carbon
Drivetain: Campagnolo Record EPS
Wheels: Fulcrum
Components: Fizik Cyrano


Focus aren’t strangers to the pro peloton, having supplied Milram and Katusha in past years. They’re back with a three-year deal signed with Ag2r, which should see their bikes being the constant presence they really deserve to be. The Team SL Carbon is the latest and lightest version of the long-running Izalco. The frame has never been the lightest, but it’s now under a kilo at 960g. It’s built with Campagnolo Record EPS 11-speed with matching wheels. They’re the only team to be using Fizik’s new Cyrano handlebar, stem and seatpost setup. Saddles will be Fizik too.

Orica-GreenEDGE

Frame: Scott Foil
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2
Wheels: Shimano wheels,
Components: PRO

The Australian team retain Scott as bike supplier, and the Foil aero bike, which has been around for a couple of years, is their bike of choice. Are we due for an update or new bike from Scott this year? I wouldn’t put it past them. The frame is still very cutting-edge with aerofoil shaped tube profiles and a sub-1kg frame weight. It’s dressed with Shimano Dura-Ace Di2, and will be running the 11-speed version of the new groupset as we get into the season proper. Shimano also supply wheels to the team and PRO the handlebars and stem. The Foil has a special aero seat tube that is Scott’s own design. Continental supply the tyres.

Radioshack-Leopard

Frame: Trek Domane 6.9 and Madone 7.9
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 9070
Wheels: Bontrager Aelous
Components: Bontrager

No bike or equipment changes for Radioshack: they’ll be using the Madone and Domane bikes that were introduced last year. The Domane, built for races like Paris-Roubaix, didn’t get the best showing with the rider who helped develop it, Fabian Cancellera, as he crashed and broke his collarbone in the Tour of Flanders. This year should be different.

Where outright speed and weight matter, the team will use the Madone. It’s more of an all-rounder and is the company’s first attempt at an aero road bike. It borrows KammTail technology to shape the tubes, and repositions the rear brake under the chainstays to make it slip through air cleaner and more quickly.

The only notable change is that they’ll be using Shimano’s new Dura-Ace 9070 electronic groupset, which permits stowage of the essential battery inside the seat post, allowing for a much cleaner looking frame.

Bontrager continue to supply most of the finishing components, including their new-ish Aelous wheels. The tyres, though, come from Schwalbe.

Team Argos-Shimano

Frame: Felt F1
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2
Components:
Wheels: Shimano C-50 wheels

Argos-Shimano have stepped up from a UCI Professional Continental Licence to the big league this year and that means we’ll be seeing a lot more of Felt’s flagship F1. It’s their lightest and stiffest race bike ever produced. It was quick last year, as John Degenkolb’s showed.

For 2013 Felt have upped their carbon fibre manufacturing process and are using a new TeXtreme woven carbon fiber fabric to construct the frame.This TeXtreme is produced by a Swedish company, oXeon, who supply Formula 1 teams. It's advanced stuff, it has woven fibre piles that are very thin and means less material is needed for the same level of stiffness. So the new frames are the same the stiffness department, but lighter.

Felt also produce the AR1, a slippery aero bike that was one of the first of this new breed of race bikes, when it launched a good few years ago. It has been changed for 2013, and drops a bit of weight due to a new InsideOut moulding process for the bottom bracket, head tube and seat stays. Basically it leaves the insides fo the tubes cleaner and the walls thinner. It’s now boasting a frame weight of 1,050g (down from 1,400g).

The team will build this bikes with Shimano’s new Dura-Ace Di2 and wheels. As a Shimano backed team, this is a good one to keep any eye out for in early season races, as they might try out new wheels on this team first, before rolling them out to the rest of its sponsored teams.

Take a look at John Degenkolb’s 2012 team bike.

Team Saxo-Tinkoff

Frame: Specialized Venge and Tarmac SL4
Drivetrain: SRAM RED
Wheels: Zipp
Components: Zipp

Specialized support three WorldTour teams, the third being Saxo-Tinkoff, headed by Alberto Contador. They too will have the pick of the aero Venge or the light and stiff Tarmac SL4.

They will be using SRAM’s RED groupset There’s no news on anything electronic from SRAM yet, but based on the popularity of both Shimano Di2 and Campagnolo EPS, maybe SRAM will make an announcement of something similar this year. And they’re one of two teams to roll on Zipp wheels (the other is Quickstep). They also use Zipp bars, stems and seatposts.

Garmin-Sharp

Frame: Cervelo S5
Drivetrain: Shimano Di2 + Rotor cranks
Wheels: Mavic
Components:3T

At the time of writing, the Garmin-Sharp team rolls out on identical kit to last year. That means either the Cervélo R5 or S5, depending on rider preference and race profile, wrapped up with Shimano Dura-Ace Di2, Mavic wheels and Rotor chainsets.

Cervélo partnered with Magura to develop the latter’s RT8 hydraulic rim brakes, and expect to see these perhaps being used throughout the season. There’s much talk about SRAM releasing a hydraulic rim brake (with disc brakes not currently allowed in UCI road races), this could be a hot topic of debate.

Both the S5 and R5 are over a year old now so chances are there’s something new from Cervélo in the pipeline this year. If we had to put money on it, we’d point to the R-series as the most likely to receive a new model.

Euskaltel Euskadi

Frame: Orbea Orca
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2
Wheels: Shimano C50
Components: FSA

The Spanish outfit sticks with Spanish bike brand Orbea for their race bikes. The Orca appears unchanged this season from the one they raced last year. They’re without doubt the most distinctive bikes in the peloton, and not just because of the orange paint jobs. The all-carbon frame is cutting-edge with a tapered head tube and BB30, and has a sleek seatclamp design that I think looks just lovely.

As last year, they have Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 drivetrains, Shimano Dura-Ace wheels and FSA finishing parts.

Omega Pharma-Quick Step

Frame: Specialized Tarmac and Venge
Drivetrain: SRAM RED
Wheels:Zipp
Components: Zipp

The team of Tom Boonen and Mark Cavendish is sponsored for another season by Specialized. Many of the team, including Cav, will be on the wind cheating Venge aero bike for most of the season.

They’re one of two teams to get Zipp wheels. The same company also supplies stems, bars and seatposts. No electronic groupsets here, it’s mechanical all the way with SRAM RED. Cav has been outspoken on his delight at being back on Specialized this season, after a year spent on the Pinarello Dogma. He has good history on the Venge; it’s the bike he raced to victory in the World Championships in 2011.

Lampre-Merida

Frame: Merida Scultura SL
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2
Wheels: Fulcrum
Components: FSA

The really big news on the bike front this year is that of Merida, the world’s biggest producer of bicycles, stepping up to the professional racing scene. After many years supporting top-level mountain bike teams, the company is keen to earn some respect as a road bike producer.

They’ll supply the Italian squad with the Scultura SL, their top-end frame that tickles the scales to just 830g. Like most modern road bikes, it’s packed with features, but also has some interesting unique touches. Double Chamber reinforcement ribs within the frame is something they’ve developed, and significantly stiffens it up.

The Scultura SL will be fitted with Shimano’s Dura-Ace Di2 groupset and FSA components. And here’s a pairing we don't’ see often, Fulcrum wheels on a Shimano equipped bike. Fulcrum wheels are made by Campagnolo, they’re essentially the same but they picked a neutral name that allows non-Campagnolo equipped bikes to use their wheels happily.


Team SKY

Frame Pinarello Dogma
Drivetrain: Shimano Dura-Ace Di2
Wheels: Shimano
Components: PRO

Team Sky raced most of last season on the Dogma 2, but this year they’ll be switching to the newer, but very nearly identical, Dogma 65.1 Think 2. The Dogma, with its curved seat stays and fork legs, is one of the distinctive bikes of the peloton, and also the most successful last year. Should they ride the newer Dogma 65.1, they’ll be riding a frame is made from 65-ton Torayca 65HM1K Nanoalloy Carbon (see where the 65 in the name comes from now?) which leads to a stiffer frameset.

The frame is now better suited to integrating electronic groupsets, and the team will continue to use Shimano Dura-Ace Di2. Wiggins and Froome use O.Symetric chainrings rather than stock Shimano round rings. Wheels are Shimano (though we did see a few interesting non-Shimano issue wheels last year, Chris King and Tune hubs on non-branded rims) and components once again come from the PRO range.

Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team

Frame: Bianchi Oltre XR
Drivetrain: Campagnolo Super Record EPS + FSA chainset
Wheels: FFWD wheels
Components: FSA

Vacansoleil-DCM continue to be supported by Italian bike firm Bianchi, and this season get the new OItre to race. It’s their best performing road bike, is stiffer and lighter than the previous Oltre, with a frame weight of about 890g. The Oltre XR is a carbon monocoque with UMS 40 and CN 60 ultra high modulus carbon fibre used in the construction. Like most other pro-level bikes these days, it gets an oversized BB30 bottom bracket and a tapered head tube. And inside the head tube is their unique X-Tex, which increases structural stiffness with a cross weave layer. It’s a bike that impressed us when we tested it recently.

They will rely on a Campagnolo Super Record EPS and will be the only team mixing it up with an FSA K-Force chainset.

We'll update this article (and the photos) as the season progresses.

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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27 comments

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imaca | 11 years ago
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Has there ever been so much variety of form of road frames?
Not just the aero vs light vs comfort, but the rather scuptural Pinarello and Ridley, vs some of the other more function driven designs.
Is there actually any wind tunnel data on the Trek Madone? I'm curious about the performance of the Kamtail at high yaw angles.
Also no surprise to see electronic shifting pushed so hard.
Probably the biggest boost to groupset manufactures profit margins in a long while (perhaps since integrated lever/shifters?) and if they can achieve the sort of permanent price increase that integrated lever/shifters brought about, I'm sure they will be very happy.

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WolfieSmith | 11 years ago
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I agree that the Colnago is a very pretty bike. Shame we won't be seeing it this year.

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billyman | 11 years ago
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I prefer the look of the BMC it may look like it's been designed by university students with their square rules but that's the look that is sexy for '13 same with the Cs5 but the former just edges it for me.
great article btw

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Lungsofa74yearold | 11 years ago
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Trek Domane 6.9 or the Orbea get my vote for the simple reason they are the only ones I could more than 2 miles without getting chronic back ache, old fogey that I am. Trek paint job is utterly dull though.

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koosiegreen | 11 years ago
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liked that article, thanks dave. there are a number of good looking bikes out there this year. not many in the price range we would like though. got to admit that the lampre paint job is not the greatest  31

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Mikeh789 | 11 years ago
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Why aren't Ridley suppling their in-house 4ZA components?

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jasonbrim | 11 years ago
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19 teams maybe...

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dannycrap | 11 years ago
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the ridley didley, only because europcars colnago aint there

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Chuck | 11 years ago
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The paintjob on that Merida is absolutely horrific- hides what is probably a nice enough looking bike, which is a bit of a shame.

Liking the BMC, Giant, and Lapierre most out of the lot above.

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American tifosi | 11 years ago
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Looks like electronic shifting is here to stay. I am amazed none of the bicycle mechanics schools (BBI,UBI)seem to think it is worthy of adding to their course training. I posed this question to them as I am (was) considering attending one of these schools. Seriously behind the times regarding technology. A smart entrepreneur would open a state of the art school and do well in training the next generation of quality technicans.

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Pierre replied to American tifosi | 11 years ago
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American tifosi wrote:

A smart entrepreneur would open a state of the art school and do well in training the next generation of quality technicans.

A smart entrepreneur might well be able to make a lot of money out of a few home mechanics who want to service their own very expensive kit, but for the sort of person who needs specific and specialist training on this sort of thing, there are already plenty of "smart entrepreneurs" taking their money for things like iPhone app guide magazines and books on how to set up your broadband router.

Seriously, most top-level professional mechanics have a proper grounding in the knowledge, skills and experience needed to service bikes. They may well attend industry seminars on the launch of these products and read the technical data, but after that it's the same as everything else: RTFM. Shimano and Campagnolo provide extensive technical documents for the industry, they're not hard to understand and as long as you have the skills and knowledge you don't need a "smart entrepreneur" to talk you through an instruction manual.

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Pitstone Peddler | 11 years ago
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Hm, Time Machine for me. That said, I do like the look of the Focus too, and the Cannondale. Need to ride them I spose!

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mr-andrew | 11 years ago
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That Giant is pretty damn sexy. I definitely prefer the cleaner straighter looking bikes, like the BMC and Focus over the more curvy swoopy things. They all seem needlessly over the top.

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mustard | 11 years ago
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Good pic of Degenkolb's freshly built up Felt F1 on their facebook page https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151683971024199&set=a.18779100...

Dunno if this'll work; //www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151683971024199&set=a.187791009198.160524.148429884198&type=1&theater)

Definitely one of the best looking bikes this year IMHO, especially with those 80?mm deeps  1

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pmpeev | 11 years ago
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The frame of the ASTANA rider is way too small for him, IMO.

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ubercurmudgeon replied to pmpeev | 11 years ago
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pmpeev wrote:

The frame of the ASTANA rider is way too small for him, IMO.

Either that or the rider is a giant (and he couldn't get a spot on Team Blanco.)

Actually, it's because Vino spent half the team's budget on bribes, so they could only afford to pick their bikes from the Specialized childrens' catalogue.

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Birdoman | 11 years ago
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Is the "Double Chamber" the same as the "Double Chamber" used in BeOne bikes since 2010? AFAIK BeOne use a semi-open mould (the same frame are sold under different companies in Canada and Denmark) and the patent for double chamber is held in Taiwan.

Either way it's a pretty gimmicky idea as the material would be much better spent reinforcing the circumferential walls. Hardly the product of high-end R&D as all these brands claim.

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joules1975 replied to Birdoman | 11 years ago
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Birdoman wrote:

Is the "Double Chamber" the same as the "Double Chamber" used in BeOne bikes since 2010? AFAIK BeOne use a semi-open mould (the same frame are sold under different companies in Canada and Denmark) and the patent for double chamber is held in Taiwan.

Actually, Merida developed the double chamber idea years ago, and are the guys in taiwan who own the patent. For the past few models though, the double chamber technology on Merida frame has been used in the bottom bracket area only, and sometimes in the forks.

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seabass89 | 11 years ago
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That BMC bike looks sooo pretty!

Can't wait to see Hushovd win Paris-Roubaix on it  16

(Well, the Gran Fondo)

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notfastenough | 11 years ago
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"Also noticeable is the number of Shimano sponsored teams that now appear to be using the company’s PRO range of stems, handlebars and seatposts. Are Shimano offering a better deal to these teams perhaps?"

From what I know that appears to be part of the package - you go with Shimano, and that means groupset, wheels and finishing kit. Of course, if you had Andy Rihs-levels of funding, you could choose to just buy the bits you want like anyone else and forego the lock-in deal.

Similarly, if you go with SRAM, they want you to have Zipp wheels etc since they are part of SRAMs company portfolio.

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Leviathan | 11 years ago
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But who will be the first rider to change bikes because they have a 'box of neutrals' like a F1 car?

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Vili Er | 11 years ago
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Also no Wilier this year. Lampre's loss and Colombia's win though  1

Good to see Campagnolo on the up. I think we'll see more teams on EPS as time goes on.

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Super Domestique | 11 years ago
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Great write up.
Thanks.

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jackh | 11 years ago
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Surprised to see Movistar and Lampre-Merida breaking the first rule of bike photography... Always have your big ring engaged at the front.

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Linkinbassist | 11 years ago
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This article would be doubled in awesomeness if the TT bikes were profiled here too. Perhaps in another article?

Either way, I'd have either the Venge, The Cervelo R5 or a BMC Teammachine...

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Mostyn | 11 years ago
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Love the Ridley's that Lotto Belisol are using; and they're race proven with some excellent results. Would be my bike of choice. Noah Fast looks the business.

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aslongasicycle | 11 years ago
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Great stuff Dave. The BMC looks the most pro. Love the angular lines. Aggressive.
The Merida is an absolute pig.
Shame Europcar's Colnagos can't be here of course. Mmmm, green/Campag/etc.

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