We first met new British bike brand Tresca at the London Bike Show last year, and now we’ve received the company’s first aluminium road bike to hit the market. The TCA-1 is the company’s very first model and it costs £1,600 with a Shimano 105 groupset.
Tresca has been formed by a couple of engineers who wanted to put their skills into developing a road bike with a focus on offering good performance at an affordable price. They’re selling bikes directly through their website with a choice of groupsets from the 105 we have here right up to Dura-Ace, which pushes the price up to £3,500.
It’s rather satisfying to be able to spec a high-end groupset on an aluminium frame because a lot of brands simply don’t let you, keeping them pegged at a price that doesn’t compete with their carbon models. Whether there’s a market for a Dura-Ace specced aluminium road bike is another matter. You can also buy the frameset for £850 if you'd prefer to build your own bike.
It’s a smart looking frame and like nothing else we’ve seen before. The company has clearly invested a lot of time developing its own frame with custom tube profiles, utilising the aerospace engineering background of those involved, rather than simply picking a frame off the shelf and sticking a logo on it.
The frame is constructed from 6066 aluminium, a material that best allows Tresca to meet its two objectives of performance and price, and it’s a pretty good looking frame with some distinctive details. We're liking the hydroformed seat tube which curves gently around the rear wheel into the dropped seatstays.
This tubing manipulation is all about extracting the necessary balance of stiffness for responsive ride performance whilst ensuring adequate comfort, according to the company. “Every tube on the TCA-1 is the product of countless optimisation cycles targeted at pushing the boundaries of what is possible for an aluminium frame. Exploiting the full range of hydroforming, taper butting and CNC machining technologies to create something truly special,” explains the company.
The purpose behind the flared seat tube, along with an oversized downtube, reinforced bottom bracket and tapered head tube are to deliver the necessary level of stiffness to best transfer your power into going forward and provide responsive handling. The lowered seatstays and chainstays are said to provide a bit of compliance to ensure it provides a bit of comfort.
Slotted into the tapered head tube is a carbon fibre fork with a tapered head tube. One detail that will get a round of applause is the sensible decision to spec a threaded bottom bracket. Other details include full internal cable routing, an external seat clamp and two bottle mounts.
It’s rim brakes as well, something we see less and less of on test bikes passing through the road.cc office, but very typical still on bikes in this price range.
The frame comes in three sizes (small, medium and large) and we’ve got a medium which equates to a size 54cm. The bike weighs 8.03kg (17.70lb) on our scales.
That's with a complete Shimano 105 mechanical groupset, DT Swiss wheels with Continental Grandsport tyres and Fizik finishing kit.
There are quite a few rivals in this price range that the new Tresca will obviously be compared to during the review process. There’s the Canyon Endurace AL Disc 7.0, Bowman Palace:R, Cannondale CAAD12 and most recently the Trek Emonda ALR 5 Disc. Some tough competition then, so stay tuned to see how it fares.
If you like the look of it you can get more info here www.trescabikes.com
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11 comments
Good luck finding a £1600 disc brake bike that weighs 8.03kg from a small, independent British maker.
This looks like a great summer bike for haring round the lanes on whilst not blowing the budget. Use a different bike when it's chucking it down with rain or do what most people do nowadays and do a turbo session instead.
What's your point?
I've ridden and raced MTB for 15-20 years, still racing MTB and CX, wouldn't ever question disc brakes for either discipline (if only for the mud clearance in CX).
I've not had a ride yet on gravel or road, where I've wanted disc brakes, and have had rides on my CX bike where I've actively wished I'd had my rim brakes instead.
That being said, I'm not saying road bikes shouldn't have disc brakes, I'm just saying a manufacturer shouldn't be criticised for speccing a bike with rim brakes, which was the jist of the comment I replied to.
Nice looking bicycle, very tidy with the internal cable routing, detail of the hydroformed tubes and I like the colourway and graphics. Ticks some boxes with screw thread bottom bracket and sensible drive train options.
Not to think I know better than the people who have designed this and presumably asked their target market but:
Mudguard mounts?
Disc brake option?
Long may it continue, there will always be a market for rim brakes (people like me who for whom the drawbacks of discs far outweight the benefits). I'd be gutted if nobody made rim brake framesets any more, although hopefully by the time that happens I'll be able to afford something custom.
Liked the look of the Tresca but couldn't see anything on tyre clearances?
Just like rim brake MTB's then?!
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Is it me or have bikes gone up about 60% in price for certain groupsets the last few years?
Guy at work has a 105 Caadx from 2016 (I think) and it was £1000.
I tested a Focus Cayo in about 2006 and it was a £999 for a carbon frame/fork with Shimano 105/Ultegra, so yes bikes have gone in price, and there's a variety of factors that have contributed to this. But then prices for most thing have gone up in the last 10 years that much is clear. While prices might be higher, the bikes and equipment are much better than 10 years ago so there is clear progress on one level at least
Dolan are currently selling their excellent aluminium Preffisio with a 105 groupset for £699. Now, I know this is a low-tech frame compared to this one featured but that's a big price difference. They probably sell a fair few bikes (I have had a few) but they don't exactly have the buying power of Giant.
It probably doesn't show in my quote, but viewed on my screen, in the article, the three sizes you have listed appear to be small, medium and 'looser!' (instead of what is surely meant to be an L, there is the 'looser' emogi).
Is this a dig at the taller members of the human race, or have Trasca come up with a new size of frame for those less successful in life?
Looks lovely, all the cables looks very neat and tidy. I (think) I like the paint job - is that bare aluminum with the black?
I just think that designing and making a new bike frame now that uses rim brakes is a bit like a car company putting the majority of their R&R into old engine tech and not into electric. Surely eveyone must know that disc brakes are the future whether we like it or not (I do).
It looks like it uses a 25.4mm seatpost - why? Just make it easier as use the standard 27.2mm.
Also, need some bottle cage bolts!
Anyway, after all that I wish them luck, I am all for my British companies.