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OPINION

Distance is the new speed

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Stu Kerton embarks on a new bike building project

I’d done an Audax before, three or four years ago, and to be perfectly honest I didn’t quite get the concept. Coming from seasons of time trialling and the odd sportive I couldn’t get my head around a maximum average speed - I mean why wouldn’t you fly around a set route as fast as your legs allow you to?

Yet, back in December tech ed Dave Arthur and I were stood in a damp, dark car park somewhere in Tewkesbury with forty or so other riders about to embark on a 200km ride around the lanes.

We didn’t exactly blend in: I was on a six grand carbon, Di2 wielding Cube with Dave on similar exotica, no bar bags, mudguards or maps but once under way, swapping gels for sausage and bacon rolls I actually found myself enjoying it and by the time the 207km (too busy chatting to see the right turn on the Garmin) was over I was hooked and a plan was hatched to ride as many as I could.

So new bike time. I haven’t bought an off the peg bike, as I find the choosing of the components and assembling each bit just as much fun as riding the finished product. Settling on a frame was actually pretty simple; it had to take full guards, be comfortable with stable handling but without sacrificing speed or looks, oh yeah and it had to be a Kinesis.

I’ve been lucky enough to test both versions of the GF Ti, GF Scandium and the TK3 and they have all provided exactly what I was looking, for plus Kinesis seem to have nailed making winter style bikes kind of sexy.
Unfortunately all of the above were out of my price range due to the kids expecting such luxuries as heating and food in their tummies so the T2 it was, a cracking frame in its own right especially with the carbon DC07 fork.

The 3T Integra Team stem was going to be the centre of the build, setting the theme if you like. I love the lines and as the Garmin is always going to be attached for route finding purposes, I thought it might as well be integrated into the bike. It is very stiff though so for long distance comfort carbon bars were an extravagant shock absorber.

Tempting as it was to go for 3T to match the stem I quite liked the understated look of the Cinelli Neos seatpost calming the front end down a bit. I’m not a huge lover of too many logos.

I’m a Campagnolo fan. I like the way it looks (what can I say, I'm a bike tart) and the shape of the hoods seems to match my hands. Obviously the groupset had to be black and I didn’t take much persuading to pay the small premium for the shiny red bits on the Centaur groupset. A 50/34 chainset with a 12/25 cassette should see me getting up most inclines in the saddle.

For the wheels, I had a choice of Campagnolo’s new asymmetric Vento’s or the Scirroco 35mm’s hanging in the shed. After a little Twitter poll it was the Scirroco’s that come out on top. Well the aim here is speed so a little aero advantage could come in handy. Wrapping them in 23mm Continental Gatorskin's should hopefully provide a decent balance of rolling and puncture resistance. 

As for the saddle, I had a couple of options, either a Fizik Arione that was in my spares cupboard or the Prologo CPC. I’ve always found Prologo’s take a lot of breaking in but the little rubber tubes on the upper provide a decent amount of shock absorbence so should be perfect for long days in the saddle.

To finish things off I’m waiting for TRP’s new deep drop brakes to arrive which should take care of the slowing down especially as the Miche ones are pretty cheap and use wine gums for brake blocks plus I might change the guards for some PDW ones as well.

So that’s that then, we’re ready to roll. The first ride is planned for the Gillingham & District Wheelers reliability ride this weekend with the Chippenham ‘Flapjack’ in February. The aim is then to do at least a 200km every month starting with the worryingly titled 214km Barry’s Bristol Ball Buster in March.

Distance is the new speed.

As part of the tech team here at F-At Digital, senior product reviewer Stu spends the majority of his time writing in-depth reviews for road.cc, off-road.cc and ebiketips using the knowledge gained from testing over 1,500 pieces of kit (plus 100's of bikes) since starting out as a freelancer back in 2009. After first throwing his leg over a race bike back in 2000, Stu's ridden more than 170,000 miles on road, time-trial, track, and gravel bikes, and while he's put his racing days behind him, he still likes to smash the pedals rather than take things easy. With a background in design and engineering, he has an obsession with how things are developed and manufactured, has a borderline fetish for handbuilt metal frames and finds a rim braked road bike very aesthetically pleasing!

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39 comments

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stuke | 10 years ago
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I finally got round to riding the Kinesis yesterday. 102km around the sunny lanes of Wiltshire.

A couple of tweeks but other than that it rode exactly as expected http://app.strava.com/activities/110705303

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Sir Wobbly | 10 years ago
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Welcome to the slightly bonkers world of Audax!

>The aim is then to do at least a 200km every month

Do that for 12 consecutive months and you earn a Randonneur Round The Year award.

>starting with the worryingly titled 214km Barry’s Bristol Ball Buster in March.

I wouldn't worry about it too much. The organising club (the splendid Las Vegas Institute of Sport) ensure you are supplied plenty of cake en route. And I do mean plenty of cake!

I've also entered Barry's Bristol Ball Buster and I'm riding it on this svelte speed machine  4

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stuke replied to Sir Wobbly | 10 years ago
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Sir Wobbly wrote:

Welcome to the slightly bonkers world of Audax!

>The aim is then to do at least a 200km every month

Do that for 12 consecutive months and you earn a Randonneur Round The Year award.

>starting with the worryingly titled 214km Barry’s Bristol Ball Buster in March.

I wouldn't worry about it too much. The organising club (the splendid Las Vegas Institute of Sport) ensure you are supplied plenty of cake en route. And I do mean plenty of cake!

I've also entered Barry's Bristol Ball Buster and I'm riding it on this svelte speed machine  4

now that is a Beast! I'll keep my eyes peeled for you

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Sir Wobbly replied to stuke | 9 years ago
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Well I managed to finish Barry's Bristol Ball Buster on the Pashley Roadster Sovereign. Ahead of a good few roadies too I might add  4

How did you do Stu?

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stuke replied to Sir Wobbly | 9 years ago
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Sir Wobbly wrote:

Well I managed to finish Barry's Bristol Ball Buster on the Pashley Roadster Sovereign. Ahead of a good few roadies too I might add  4

How did you do Stu?

I take my hat off to you Sir  41

I've been battling tonsillitis & a cold since last monday so after 275km of commuting I needed the weekend to recover, only got back on the bike today.
The T2 hasn't been out much due to the amount of test bikes I've had lately but it has had the brakes upgraded to TRP's RG957 deep drops, the review will be up soon.

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TimC340 | 10 years ago
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Nice build, Stu. But Hamsterskins? I have to say that I've found them unresponsive and less durable than you might expect. Durano Plus FTW, and 25s work really well with that frame and forks. If anyone wants something similar but a lot cheaper, I have a Racelight T for sale (and, yes, it has Gatorskins on...  40 ).

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stuke | 10 years ago
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I won't mention the 21mm Veloflex Master's on my Sarto then  4

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dave atkinson | 10 years ago
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that comment was sponsored by a nice bottle of Graves. or most of it.

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dave atkinson | 10 years ago
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i'm not a fan of 23s either mike. but like i say, broad church. one man's one thing is the other man's other thing and that.

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koko56 replied to dave atkinson | 10 years ago
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Dave Atkinson wrote:

i'm not a fan of 23s either mike. but like i say, broad church. one man's one thing is the other man's other thing and that.

Gold absolute gold!  4  4  4

Tim - Hamsterskins!! Just awesome!

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stealth | 10 years ago
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I cannot use 25's & mudguards on my PX Superlight, so I am using 23's through the winter. However I plan on finding some good quality 25's for the summer...

They just fit, but you have to fit the wheels/tyres to the bike before inflating them!!!

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snooks | 10 years ago
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25's or 28's was my first thought too. I've seen nothing good about the Garmin 510 either.

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stuke replied to snooks | 10 years ago
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snooks wrote:

I've seen nothing good about the Garmin 510 either.

Care to elaborate snooks? I've been using mine six days a week since last summer and have no complaints.

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arrieredupeleton | 10 years ago
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10/10 for frame;
10/10 for the anodised red bolts;
8/10 for groupset;
3/10 for tyres;
2/10 for the brakes; and
1/10 for stem.

By the way, mine came with tekro brakes which had pads made of Imperial Leather. Shimano R650's FTW

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sponican | 10 years ago
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Careful Stuart, it's a slippery slope. Heed my story.
http://thebikeshow.net/the-healing-machine/ (at the start of the episode)

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durrin | 10 years ago
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I rode almost my entire 2013 brevet (Audax for you brits!) season on 32 and 35mm tires (Grand Bois Cypres and Schwalbe Kojaks). This included 2 SR series and 1 1200km (Super Brevet Scandinavia). The Grand Bois tires are fantastic, they feel like good tubulars, but even more comfortable.

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KiwiMike | 10 years ago
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By all the gods in Asgard, anyone doing more than 4hrs on 23's needs their head reading. There is simply no reason not to go for 28's. None. Yes, they weight 30g more a piece (GP 4 Seasons, anyway). 60g is nothing. You could not tell the difference on a built bike, picking it up, let alone while rolling.

28 let the average 75kg rider run between 20 & 30psi lower. That translates into a greatly improved ride quality, far less power needed over non-smooth surfaces, less fatigue, more grip, fewer flats, etc etc etc. Particularly as the 30psi lower is on the front, where vibration kills the wrists/shoulders during a long ride.

It's all good, no bad.

http://janheine.wordpress.com/2010/10/18/science-and-bicycles-1-tires-an...

http://www.bikequarterly.com/images/TireDrop.pdf

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mrmo replied to KiwiMike | 10 years ago
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KiwiMike wrote:

By all the gods in Asgard, anyone doing more than 4hrs on 23's needs their head reading. There is simply no reason not to go for 28's. None.

Nothing wrong with 23's, did 5 1/2 hours last Sunday and was fine.

I am not buying a new bike just so I can fit bigger tyres and mudguards.

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KiwiMike replied to mrmo | 10 years ago
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mrmo wrote:
KiwiMike wrote:

By all the gods in Asgard, anyone doing more than 4hrs on 23's needs their head reading. There is simply no reason not to go for 28's. None.

Nothing wrong with 23's, did 5 1/2 hours last Sunday and was fine.

I am not buying a new bike just so I can fit bigger tyres and mudguards.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome

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Metjas replied to mrmo | 10 years ago
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mrmo wrote:

I am not buying a new bike just so I can fit bigger tyres and mudguards.

shhhhhh - that's precisely the excuse I have been putting forward lately  3

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snooks replied to mrmo | 10 years ago
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Yet you say it is a distance bike. Ok then...

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dave atkinson replied to KiwiMike | 10 years ago
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KiwiMike wrote:

There is simply no reason not to go for 28's. None.

except, maybe, i dunno, you've done tens of thousands of miles on lots of different test bikes for road.cc in the past few years and you've just decided that after all that, 23s pumped up hard is what you like? it's a broad church, cycling.

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KiwiMike replied to dave atkinson | 10 years ago
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Dave Atkinson wrote:
KiwiMike wrote:

There is simply no reason not to go for 28's. None.

except, maybe, i dunno, you've done tens of thousands of miles on lots of different test bikes for road.cc in the past few years and you've just decided that after all that, 23s pumped up hard is what you like? it's a broad church, cycling.

Heh. Woe betide he who invokes the wrath of a Road.cc deity  3

Seriously tho, for me it's all about the science. Which squarely points to lower rolling resistance, fatigue and risk of flats. Sure, some might 'feel' that 23's give something that 28's don't, I'm not saying they are 'bad' or 'wrong' - just that the reasons are not at all clear to use 23 over 28. I rode 23's at 120 in Switzerland this summer, and loved them. But on UK roads? year round? Eeeeeep.

Imagining a noob reading that headline report, they'd be off to order 23's. When in reality, would probably be better served by 28's. According to the science. Ahem.

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therevokid | 10 years ago
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ah ..... Kinesis and Campag .... as I had redundancy my route
went GF Ti V2, Chorus and handbuilts but 25's  1

Still - nice build and all the Kinesis I've had have been ace
on any distance at any speed so you'll love it !

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Guyz2010 | 10 years ago
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Nice spec, loving the Campag. Duranos for me at the moment, Gators didn't fair we'll with rough old Devon lanes.

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Jack Osbourne snr replied to Guyz2010 | 10 years ago
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Kinesis DC21 forks would have allowed you to use standard drop calipers and therfore Campag brakes.

Anybody got a copy of that rulebook anywhere?

Joking aside, that's a nice build if a teeny bit 'roadie' looking.

Once you've put divots in the paint, acquired a leather saddle and Carradice (or three - Barley, Nelson Longflap and Camper Longflap) swapped the speedplays for Atac/Candy/SPD pedals to use with your coffee stop friendly mtb shoes, killed the sciroccos and replaced them with open pro rims on hope hubs and generally exorcised carbon fibre from your life (except forks) you'll be on the way.

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Gasman Jim | 10 years ago
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I used to use Gatorskins on my winter bike, and could never understand why it felt so "dead", until I swapped for GP 4 Seasons. The Gatorskin is heavy, stiff and not that puncture proof.

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pedalingparamedic replied to Gasman Jim | 10 years ago
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Gasman Jim wrote:

I used to use Gatorskins on my winter bike, and could never understand why it felt so "dead", until I swapped for GP 4 Seasons. The Gatorskin is heavy, stiff and not that puncture proof.

+1

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GerardR replied to pedalingparamedic | 10 years ago
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+2

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ajmarshal1 | 10 years ago
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If you hadn't have lobbed £200 on that hideous stem you could have afforded the TK3 you desired. Just saying like.

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