We showed you young Adam Yates’ Scott Foil the other day, now let’s take a closer look at his Orica-BikeExchange team mate Simon Gerrans’ Scott Foil.
Compared to the Addict, the Foil is Scott’s aerodynamic road bike. It’s designed to reduce drag with carefully shaped tube profiles to make it slipperier than the Addict.
- The fastest aero road bikes
This is the latest version of the Foil, the original was first launched in 2011 and represented one of the first available aero bikes, and marked a whole new period of development for bike manufacturers. Now you can’t move for aero bikes at the Tour.
Scott Foil 2016 - first ride review
Key changes to the new Foil include improved ride comfort, a lighter frame weight (claimed 945g for a medium) and increased stiffness at the bottom bracket and head tube. Oh, and it’s more aero, too, with a claimed 6 watt drag reduction. That’s worth about 27 seconds over 40km at 45ph, according to a test by the well respected German TOUR magazine. Those are the sorts of speed the Tour clocks along at.
Simon has his bike built up with a Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 groupset with an SRM power meter, and Dura-Ace C50 wheels, the default choice for those teams running Shimano groupsets. There are the optional sprint shifters on the drops as well for an extra gear changing option.
Orica-BikeExchange also uses Shimano’s PRO equipment and here Simon’s bike has a PRO aluminium stem, shunning the aero stem that Scott developed specifically for this new frameset. It’s a 120mm length stem with just a couple of slim spacers underneath it, and the Di2 junction box strapped to the stem.
Unusually perhaps, he uses a carbon fibre handlebar from PRO. It’s wrapped in fetching green PRO handlebar tape.
Tyres are supplied by Continental with the ubiquitous Competition ProLtd in a 25mm width.
His saddle of choice is a Fizik Antares. Notice how the saddle clamp has been worn away by the constant rubbing of his inner thigh on the seatpost? That’s due to the shape of the saddle and the fact he has it pushed back quite far on the rails.
This bracket glued to the back of the seatpost is the number plate holder. Wondering why the bike is so dirty? Simon had just returned from a training ride in the rain when we arrived at the team hotel in the days leading up to the Grand Depart.
Oh don't get me wrong - it's for sure warmer and wetter if we're looking back over the last hundred or more years....
For anyone in the Sheffield area https://bsky.app/profile/ppushbike.bsky.social/post/3lgnamkc4t226
I bet this is a case of “something was supposed to be there, but never actually materialised”, which is apparently more common than I realised....
Yet more pro-cycling news for the media to ignore! I'm especially looking forward to the 24/7 blackout imposed by the BBC.
I ride quite a bit in Italy too, and the drivers are every bit as dangerous as in the UK. Close passing is terrible....
Wow! I find it hard to understand sometimes - but I guess I'm woke now....
That's probably the point - they don't want you to have the standard colour scheme - they want you to pay for a custom one.
There's no way this design is lighter than a conventional design of equivalent strength.
Your criticism is specious. Road.cc has never purported to be a site that covers racing of any sort in any detail. They leave it to other sites....
If you're buying a commuter bike, then there is nothing wrong with them. However, the Synapse was a World Tour race winning bike not so long ago...