Giant has redesigned its TCR Advanced Pro bikes for 2016, making them lighter without losing any stiffness, according to the brand. The top level Advanced Pro 0, priced at £3,799, has just arrived here at road.cc for testing.

Giant divides its road line up into three: you have the Propel which is an aero bike, the Defy which is designed for endurance and comfort, and the TCR which is designed for light weight – or, more correctly, stiffness-to-weight, but we’ll come on to that in a mo.

Giant TCR Advanced - top tube
Giant TCR Advanced - top tube (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The TCR range is further divided into the Advanced (starting at £1,049), the Advanced Pro (starting at £1,299) and the Advanced SL bikes (starting at £1,999), in descending order of weight.

We went to the launch of the new TCRs back in June  and took the TCR Advanced SL out on a First Ride

Giant TCR Advanced - down tube
Giant TCR Advanced - down tube (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The Advanced Pro is made from what Giant describes as its ‘Advanced-Grade Composite’. Giant takes T-700 raw carbon-fibre and uses it to produce a custom composite material in its own composite factory. 

Giant has slimmed down the Advanced Pro for 2016, reducing the profile of the top tube, seatstays, chainstays, seatpost and fork legs, and making the walls a more consistent thickness than before to minimise excess weight. 

Giant TCR Advanced - cable route
Giant TCR Advanced - cable route (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Giant says that it has been able to shave off the weight without sacrificing stiffness. This is something that the brand was keen to emphasise at that TCR launch I mentioned. There have been plenty of superlight bikes launched lately, but Giant says that it doesn’t want to compete solely on a battle of the scales. It points out, rightly, that making a lightweight bike is easy if you don’t mind the frame flopping about all over the place as soon as you crank up the power. It’s retaining stiffness while reducing weight that’s tricky, and Giant reckon that’s exactly what it has managed with the Advanced Pro. We’ll find out when we get it out on the road.

Giant TCR Advanced - head tube
Giant TCR Advanced - head tube (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The TCR Advanced Pro’s geometry has been tweaked very slightly from before, but it’s still completely race-driven and exactly the same as that of the TCR Advanced SL. We have the M/L model here with a 57cm top tube, a 50cm seat tube, and an 16.8cm head tube. That seat tube length is effectively shortened by the sloping top tube, the Advanced Pro being built to Giant’s Compact Road Geometry. The idea is that this design reduces the size of both the front and rear triangles to create a lighter, stiffer bike.

The stack (the vertical distance between the bottom bracket and the top of the head tube) is 56.7cm and the reach (the horizontal distance between those points) is 40.5cm. 

Giant TCR Advanced - bottom bracket
Giant TCR Advanced - bottom bracket (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

At the heart of things is what Giant calls its Powercore oversized bottom bracket/chainstay area, with an 86mm-wide BB and asymmetric chainstays that are designed to provide stiffness. The head tube is designed for stiffness too, Giant using oversized bearings both top (1 1/4in) and bottom (1 1/2in). This is what it calls its Overdrive 2 system.

Giant TCR Advanced - rear mech
Giant TCR Advanced - rear mech (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The TCR Advanced Pro is available in three different builds, the most affordable of these being the TCR Advanced Pro 2 at £1,799, built up with a Shimano 105-based spec and Giant’s own SL 1 wheels. Next up is the £2,599 TCR Advanced Pro 1 with Shimano Ultegra components and Giant SLR 1 wheels. Finally, there’s the TCR Advanced Pro 0 that we have, built up with a Shimano Dura-Ace mechanical groupset and Giant’s SLR 0 wheels. It’s available as a frameset too, priced £1,299. 

Giant TCR Advanced - drive train
Giant TCR Advanced - drive train (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Like all the other TCR Advanced SL and Pro bikes, ours has a 52/36-tooth chainset, often called semi-compact or faux pro. It’s a popular option that gives you a good mix of high and low gears. The only non-Dura-Ace groupset component here is the KMC X11SL chain.

Giant TCR Advanced - rim
Giant TCR Advanced - rim (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The Giant SLR 0 wheels aren’t your typical in-house wheels in that they come with DT Swiss hub internals and a claimed combined weight of just 1,335g. We’re really looking forward to trying these out.

Giant TCR Advanced - seat post junction
Giant TCR Advanced - seat post junction (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

A couple of other components that deserve a mention are Giant’s own Variant seatpost, made from composite and designed to offer compliance, and a new Contact SL saddle that features what the brand calls its ‘Particle Flow Technology’. Two separate pockets of padding contain free-flowing particles that, according to Giant, reduce pressure points by more than 20 percent. 

The complete bike weighs in at 6.83kg (15.1lb).

Giant TCR Advanced - rear brake 2
Giant TCR Advanced - rear brake 2 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Of the bikes that we’ve reviewed here on road.cc recently, the closest in price to the Giant TCR Advanced Pro 0 is the £3,600 De Rosa Idol equipped with a Campagnolo Athena groupset and Fulcrum Racing Zero wheels. The De Rosa has a very stiff frame but it can’t live with the Giant in terms of weight, coming in almost 700g heavier.

Giant TCR Advanced - front brake 2
Giant TCR Advanced - front brake 2 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Right, that’s plenty of info to be going on with. We’re going to get the Giant TCR Advanced Pro 0 out on the road. We’ll be back with a review soon.

www.giant-bicycles.com