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Five cool things coming soon from Ribble, Vittoria, Scribe, Rapha and Giro

Some of our top picks from the road.cc test pile this week, with reviews coming soon...

Will this rain ever stop!? We've been trying our best to keep riding through the torrential downpours where the local lanes aren't flooded with mixed results, and we're hoping for the sun to make an appearance at some point this week...

Giro Imperial road shoes

£374.99

Giro Imperial Road cycling Shoe.jpg

We'll get straight in at the deep end with this week's round-up... deep as in deep pockets you'll need to buy them that is, with the new Imperial road shoes from Giro coming in at a wallet-busting £374.99. For that you get what Giro promise is a light (215g for a size 44) and breathable shoe that is very easy to adjust, offering pro level performance for racing and training. Giro say their Synchwire upper offers more support than most lightweight shoes, thanks to a monofilament mesh reinforced with thermal-welded TPU to offer max support for minimal weight. The ultimate light performance road shoe? Dave Arthur's verdict is coming soon...

zyrofisher.co.uk 

Ribble Endurance SL R Series Disc with SRAM Red eTap AXS

£6,399.00

Ribble Endurance SL R Series Disc - riding 4.jpg

We're not used to seeing Ribble bikes in this price bracket... but then the spec of this Endurance SL R model is absolutely top notch, and you get a lot for your money. It features SRAM's new 12 speed Red eTap AXS with hydraulic disc brakes, and this is the first test bike we've had in with SRAM's new top-of-the-range electronic groupset. The Endurance SL R itself is designed to be light, with 'carefully considered geometry that offers precise handling, excellent responsiveness and stability' according to Ribble. Rounding off the build are Zipp's dependable 302 carbon rims... find out how the package performed in the review later this month. 
ribblecycles.co.uk

Rapha Women's Souplesse Aero jersey

£140.00

Rapha Womens Souplesse Aero jersey.jpg

Refined in the wind tunnel and made for moving at speed, say Rapha, the Souplesse Aero has smooth fabrics for the most part to make it slip through the air and textured fabrics at the back to increase the aerodynamic performance. The front zip also has an extended placket  to stop it from rubbing against bib shorts when you’re tucked tight in the drops, and there's also an updated valuables pockets compared to the previous version with an easy-pull zip for easy access to contents with one hand.  
rapha.cc

Scribe Aero Wide 50-D wheels

£870.00

Scribe Aero Wide 50-D.jpg

"Glide at speed, open gaps on the flats, jump across to breakaways", Scribe say of their new carbon disc brake wheels... and while you'll need a good pilot to do that too, Scribe promise the 50mm deep rims with U-shaped aero profiles will maximise the advantage across a wide range of yaw angles. They weigh in at 1,438g for the pair, impressive for aero wheels, and they're paired with Scribe's Five4 hubs with 54-teeth and 6.6 degree engagement. The internal width is 19mm which gives you the option to fit wider tyres, and they're tubeless-ready with centre lock disc as standard. Did they make Stu Kerton break away from the pack? His test report is due soon. 
scribecycling.com

Vittoria Rubino Pro Graphene 2.0 

£44.99

Vittoria Rubino Pro Graphene 2.0

Vittoria's Rubino is their workhorse tyre, not offering the mega rolling resistance gains of their Speed series tyres but paying you back in earnest with better puncture protection and decent grip. The new Rubino features graphene infused like Vittoria's all-out race tyres, and they have a 150 TPI nylon casing that will see you through thousands of miles. There are three compounds in the tread that increase their life and make them roll better than the previous versions, and the Graphene 2.0 compound was specifically designed to allow for increased wet grip. We'll be seeing how our tester got on with them in the full review, due early next month...
zyrofisher.co.uk

To read all road.cc's latest test reports, head over to our reviews section. If you want some more advice before splashing the cash, check out our buyer's guides

Jack has been writing about cycling and multisport for over a decade, arriving at road.cc via 220 Triathlon Magazine in 2017. He worked across all areas of the website including tech, news and video, and also contributed to eBikeTips before being named Editor of road.cc in 2021 (much to his surprise). Jack has been hooked on cycling since his student days, and currently has a Trek 1.2 for winter riding, a beloved Bickerton folding bike for getting around town and an extra beloved custom Ridley Helium SLX for fantasising about going fast in his stable. Jack has never won a bike race, but does have a master's degree in print journalism and two Guinness World Records for pogo sticking (it's a long story). 

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8 comments

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Scoob_84 | 5 years ago
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That Ribble is nice, but i'd rather save £700 and go for the eqivelant Canyon. 

https://www.canyon.com/en-gb/road-bikes/race-bikes/ultimate/ultimate-cf-...

 

Avatar
Prosper0 | 5 years ago
0 likes

A Ribble bike with Zipps is like a Ford Focus with gold hubcaps. No doubt a good bike but an odd mix. 

Avatar
zero_trooper | 5 years ago
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Cheapest thing in the round up is a ‘workhorse’ tyre.

All £45 of it 

Avatar
fukawitribe replied to zero_trooper | 5 years ago
1 like

zero_trooper wrote:

Cheapest thing in the round up is a ‘workhorse’ tyre.

All £45 of it 

Yeah - that looks slightly off though... the RRP seems to be £40, not £45, from the sites i've looked at (including that Tredz link) and it's available for just over £22 from at least one

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds replied to zero_trooper | 5 years ago
1 like

zero_trooper wrote:

Cheapest thing in the round up is a ‘workhorse’ tyre.

All £45 of it 

I thought the workhorse tyre was the zaffiro, the rubino pro was considered to be a higher end tyre 20 years ago, but at £45 that's a piss take considering the hierachy.

Avatar
fukawitribe replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
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BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

zero_trooper wrote:

Cheapest thing in the round up is a ‘workhorse’ tyre.

All £45 of it 

I thought the workhorse tyre was the zaffiro, the rubino pro was considered to be a higher end tyre 20 years ago, but at £45 that's a piss take considering the hierachy.

It's not £45 at list, it's £40 (the Rubino Pro Speed G+ was £45 though) - that seems to put it about half-way between the Zaffiro Pro (£21 RRP/~£12 online) and something like a Continental GP4000s II (£60 RRP/~£30 online). Doesn't seem too far off..

Avatar
KoenM | 5 years ago
1 like

Still waiting on the review of the Ribble CGR that's with u since oktober, GET TO IT PLEASE! https://off.road.cc/content/news/is-ribbles-cgr-the-answer-to-your-road-...

Avatar
jollygoodvelo replied to KoenM | 5 years ago
0 likes

KoenM wrote:

Still waiting on the review of the Ribble CGR that's with u since oktober, GET TO IT PLEASE! https://off.road.cc/content/news/is-ribbles-cgr-the-answer-to-your-road-...

Hear hear  4

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