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TECH NEWS

6 slippery aero road bikes + video

Starring Canyon, Bianchi, Look, Ridley, Wilier and Basso

Most of the big bike brands have an aero road bike in their range these days. Here are six of the most interesting that we spotted at Eurobike last week.

Wilier Cento10Air

Wilier Cento10Air - 1.jpg

Wilier’s new Cento10Air uses Kamm tail shaped NACA airfoil tube shapes for every section of the frame and for the seatpost. too.

The profiles and the junctions of the different tube sections have been designed with the use of CFD (computational fluid dynamics), computer software which allows easy manipulation of the frame and test results. Wilier says this is accurate enough that it doesn’t feel compelled to conduct expensive wind tunnel testing. 

The Cento10Air uses a new one-piece integrated handlebar called the Alabarda. Like the frame, it uses a NACA profile that’s intended to contribute to the overall aerodynamic improvements. Wilier routes the gear cables inside the handlebar and stem and directly into the frame.

Find out more about the Cento10Air here. 

www.wilier.com

Ridley Jane

Ridley Jane SL Dura-Ace - 1.jpg

We’ve looked at the Ridley Noah loads of times in the past but it is now joined in the range by the Jane women’s models. This is the Jane SL Dura-Ace.

Ridley takes a different approach to making women’s bikes from many other brands in that it doesn’t modify the geometry. It says that in terms of torso and limb proportions, men and women are very similar so there’s no need to alter things there.

Instead, Ridley changes things like handlebar width and gear size for the women’s market.

The Jane keeps the Noah’s aero features like the F-split fork, integrated fork crown and F-surface technology, the textured surface that’s moulded into sections of the frame to reduce drag. 

Check out the Ridley Noah SL ridden by Andre Greipel in this year’s Tour de France. http://road.cc/content/tech-news/196130-tour-tech-2016-andre-greipel%E2%...
www.ridley-bikes.com

Look 795 Light

Look 795 Light - 1.jpg

The Look 795 is one of those bikes that divides opinion. Some people think it looks high-tech, other people think it looks like it has taken a beating with the ugly stick, to put it bluntly. You decide.

We reviewed the Look 795 Aerolight here on road.cc earlier in the year and we were impressed by the performance. 

This is the 795 Light as opposed to the 795 Aerolight, the difference being that it has conventionally mounted brakes rather than a front brake that’s integrated into the fork and a rear brake hidden behind the bottom bracket. This is in a Paris-Modena special edition.

You can adjust the angle of the Aerostem along with the length of the Zed 3 cranks.

The junction box for the Di2 electronic shift system is hidden away inside the top tube with a little cover over the top making it easily accessible.

www.lookcycle.com

Bianchi Oltre XR4

Bianchi Oltre XR4 - 1.jpg

Bianchi recently unveiled the newest version of its Oltre aero road bike, this one being the XR4. 

The new version incorporates Bianchi’s Countervail technology that’s designed to cancel vibration leading to reduced fatigue and improved control. Bianchi already uses Countervail on other bikes in its range, including the Infinito endurance road bike, the Aquila time trial bike, and the Specialissima lightweight race bike.

As well as adding Countervail technology, Bianchi has made several important changes to the shape of the frame as a result of CFD (computational fluid dynamics) and flow visualisation. It says the changes have resulted in significant aerodynamic improvements over the XR2. 

The aero head tube is said to have been inspired by Aquila CV time trial bike profiles, the seatstays are positioned wide of the rear wheel and they’re aero profiled to reduce drag, and Bianchi has switched to direct mount brakes, the rear one completely shielded by the wishbone seatstays.

Check out our story from when Bianchi officially unveiled the bike. http://road.cc/content/tech-news/197447-bianchi-officially-unveils-oltre...

www.bianchi.com

Canyon Aeroad CF SLX Disc

Canyon Aeroad CF SLX Disc  - 1.jpg

This is a disc brake version of Canyon’s yet-to-be-released Aeroad CF SLX. As you can see, it’s decked out in Movistar livery although the UCI has suspended the use of disc brakes in the pro peloton, at least for the time being.

Movistar is sponsored by Campagnolo and those are prototype Campag disc brakes on there along with EPS electronic shifting.

Canyon is using the common flat mount standard to attach the disc callipers to the frame and fork, and there are 12mm thru-axles at both ends. It has routed the hydraulic hoses inside the frame and fork.
www.canyonbikes.com

Basso Diamante SV

 

The new Diamante SV is intended to mark Basso’s 40th anniversary, the brand having been founded in the Italian village of Dueville back in 1977.

The Diamante has been in the Basso range for years, it’s the SV version that’s new. SV stands for Super Veloce and that translates to ‘super fast’ in English.

Basso Diamante SV - 1.jpg

The Diamante SV is quite different from the Diamante. Although the geometries are virtually the same, the Diamante SV has dropped seatstays to reduce the size of the frontal area, for example, a hidden seatpost clamp and straight fork legs. 

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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9 comments

Avatar
ChrisB200SX | 7 years ago
0 likes

Canyon looks good but SpeedX Leopard looks impressive for the price!

Avatar
Must be Mad | 7 years ago
2 likes

From this list, I’d have the Canyon.

That look should be shot and then locked in a dark windowless vault. A crime against cycling aesthetic.

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Colin Peyresourde | 7 years ago
0 likes

I'd take the Look, but I like the Wilier too.

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notfastenough | 7 years ago
0 likes

Nah, I'd take the Ridley, replace bars etc with 'male-sized' (is that a thing?!) parts and lose the ridiculous Jane stickers. Who the hell calls a bike Jane?

Avatar
fukawitribe replied to notfastenough | 7 years ago
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notfastenough wrote:

Nah, I'd take the Ridley, replace bars etc with 'male-sized' (is that a thing?!) parts 

Nah, it's not a thing.

Avatar
ajd replied to notfastenough | 7 years ago
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notfastenough wrote:

Nah, I'd take the Ridley, replace bars etc with 'male-sized' (is that a thing?!) parts and lose the ridiculous Jane stickers. Who the hell calls a bike Jane?

 

Maybe a Serenity fan?

 

Love the Ridley, and the Basso.

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tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

It's a personality thing.. love anything techy looking. Appeals to my inner cyberpunk 

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StraelGuy | 7 years ago
0 likes

Really?! I think it's the fugliest bike I've seen for a long time. The Bianchi? I think I'd have children with it if it was interested cheeky.

Avatar
tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

As mind-blowingly gorgeous as the XR4 is..

 

I'd take the Look if given the choice! 

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