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TECH NEWS

Kinesis launch new website

It's bigger, better and easier to navigate

Kinesis UK have launched a new website that’s bigger, better and easier to use than ever before.

The new site showcases the fully updated Kinesis UK range and allows you to navigate around the site in a more fluid way, so finding information on all aspects of the frames, forks and bikes is far quicker. It has been designed with touch-screen navigation and mobile devices in mind.

“One important aspect of the new site is the 'Technical' section. This explains many aspects of the range that weren't adequately covered with the old site. There is a lot of thinking behind our products and we want people to know about it,” said Dom Mason, designer at Kinesis UK.

“We will also be adding videos for all key products, detailing aspects of design and showing them being used in anger.”

Products can now be registered online and there is a large FAQ section to help out too. A 'Readers Bikes' section will go live soon where you can easily upload your new Kinesis UK bike build.”

Kinesis International is a Taiwanese brand but Kinesis UK design their own products. The range now comprises 17 framesets, four bikes and 12 forks. You can get a Kinesis Racelight T2 winter training bike for example, with a 7005 series alloy frame, a largely Shimano Tiagra groupset and R500 wheels for £999.99.

Check it out at www.kinesisbikes.co.uk.

 

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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