Interbike in Vegas has never really been a road show, sure they have road bikes there, but the emphasis has always been more on mountain bikes and these days most of the top road stuff will already have been seen at Eurobike. Most, but not all, as this year proved with the Cervelo P4 making its debut in Vegas. Mark and Chipps from our partner site Singletrack have selflessly volunteered to brave the sun, free booze and general decadence of Las Vegas to not only look at all the new mountain bikes, it’s a tough job etc, watch Lance compete in a cyclo cross race (he came 9th, which was mightily impressive says Mark); but also keep an eye out for interesting road stuff. Here’s what the Demo day and Day 1 in the hall yielded…
At first sight the Ascend looks like one of those WTF bikes you always get at shows, but we’re nothing if not broad-minded. These guys have been selling a mountain bike for the last couple of years… and now they’ve come up with a road bike. Here’s what they have to say about it: "At 1.8 pounds and $5,995 for the Ascend frame, Delta 7 Sports introduces what it believes is the strongest road bike in its weight class, a "superior race machine that’s solid under sprint forces". Okaaaay. The bike is built from Iso-Truss based structures – essentially pyramids of trusses (the idea comes from architecture and the Iso-Truss was developed by a professor of civil engineering). In the bike frame the trusses are formed from metal mandrils with carbon fibres wrapped around them which then have a further layer of Kevlar added over the top – the whole lot is then baked for four hours, and the resultant structure is, say the makers, both very light and very strong. They also say that if has slightly less drag than a normal cylindrically framed machine. Mind you, there aren’t many of those about these days. Sublime or ridiculous? Without riding one, or without knowing anything about the properties of Iso Trusses it’s very hard to make a call on whether this is so much marketing BS or a serious bike worth considering. Hopefully the latter… cos we’re just big kids around here. For more info on Iso Trusses visit http://www.isotruss.org.
Next up, some definite sublimeness – the Salsa Pistola is definitely sublime. It’s the US steel-meister’s take on a frame for century rides – so ideal for sportives. The frame is made from True Temper OX Platinum tubing, paired with an Alpha Q CS10 fork with OX Platinum steerer tube. The tubes are double butted and also size specific – so more butting for lighter lads and lasses less for you big types. The accent is very much on giving a balance of efficiency, comfort and smoothness that makes long rides a joy rather than a chore. The Pistola will be available in February and it’s already on our wish list.
Now, a couple of singlespeed/fixies. First up the Cannondale Pinkenger – not sure if that’s it’s official name, but that’s what Mark and Chipps dubbed it and you can’t argue that it’s not appropriate. What we have here is one of Cannondale’s Six, carbon/alu frames minus gears but plus lots of extra pinkness – they’d made their point with the bar-tape and rims really chaps isn’t the saddle just a step too far? Obviously we want one.
Next, the Soulcraft Alma Pura, dunno what it was, but Chipps just couldn’t seem to maintain the necessary distance that all us journos have to keep between us and the subject, even when it’s a bike… especially when it’s a bike. Maybe it was the combination of steel and orangeness? Understandable, even more so when you realise that this is a limited edition bike built by US frame-building legend Ross Shafer who taught Soulcraft supremo, Sean Wallings to build frames . What you get is a beautifully built traditional lugged steel frame made to measure but with hardly any options – maybe you can drop the bottle bosses, but that’s about it. Oh, and it might take a while, but it will be perfect. For more information check out the Soulcraft website– they come across as a very sound outfit.
Speaking of Salsa and steel, remember the Salsa Fargo “extreme tourer” we spotted at Eurobike, well, Chipps got to ride on at the Demo day. Here’s what he had to say, “Out on the trail, the Fargo rides like a mountain bike, rather than a ‘cross bike with bike tyres.” Not sure if that’s a good thing or not. “ A very impressive ride”. That clears that up then. Thanks Chipps. We’ve had weirdness, we’ve had steel… let’s end with some reassuringly high end custom carbon from Parlee… with a really weird paint job. We saw this one at Eurobike…
…and here it is again. We’d like to think someone from Parlee rode it all the way, possibly in one of those Cipo flayed man bodysuits, but somehow we doubt it. Shame. For lots more Interbike pics along with witty and infomative (no, really) captions check out our Interbike gallery. More from Vegas soon.
Interbike Pt 1 – the weird and the wonderful, but mostly the weird
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Hey, but their wool blend cycling adjacent t-shirts are/were fantastic.
@Surreyrider Still the boss. Ride one, you'll see why
@Smoggysteve "Most would happily ride on the roads and be treated with respect by drivers". But people aren't - and as far as I can see they won't be. Not until there is a lot less driving and it's slower around cyclists, and far more people driving have "skin in the game" eg. they sometimes cycle and their friends and family do also. That's what leads to the model - which is perhaps most advanced in NL - where cycling, walking and driving are all seen as separate normal transport modes. Their needs, vulnerabilities and any dangers to others are considered. And *that* leads to "mix / share when possible, separate when necessary". But "possible" is "where your 10-year old would be safe to cycle unsupervised" - so very few motor vehicles, going slow! And AFAICS everybody - even "existing cyclists" - is happy with the result. (I dunno about a few pro cyclists - but don't they tend to have training camps in different counties anyway?)
@quiff as an Edinburgh resident I can confidently say he's speaking without moving his lips in one sense: - while as I noted in a separate comment there *is* now some real separated cycle infra, all the examples i can think of have *at least as much space* for pedestrians. The rest of the "cycle infra" is essentially similar to the situation in the rest of the UK: eg. bus lanes*, cycle lanes and shared use paths (eg. "build" infra by sticking up a sign). Edinburgh is one of the places with a moderately extensive network of former railways which have been converted to "shared use" paths (completely motor traffic few). However though shared they are not narrow by UK standards. And this is all effectively a "free extra" for all non- motorised users, not like the "sign a cycle path" where pedestrians do lose space. I think this all comes from the "popular understanding" of cycling in which ultimately cyclists are the "other". They don't fit "motor vehicle" or "pedestrian" (including wheelchairs on the very rare occasions people think about that). Thus "cyclists are cheating" in multiple ways! They shouldn't get their own space as "there aren't enough" of them. And "they can just use the road / path". But being able to *choose* "on the road" or "on the footway" (shared use path) is clearly unfair - nobody else gets to do that! BUT of course even if they did pick just one of road OR pedestrian space it's still not fair anyway because they're "too slow" for the road (don't pay "road tax" etc...) and "far too fast" for pedestrians... * Though some existing cyclists may appreciate them when there are few buses, buses and bikes are a very poor mix for several reasons.
Whilst a shame for any employees, their bib shorts had the worst chamois pad I’d ever encountered, utter waste of my money. Even though they were Strava challenge discount purchases, still a waste of money.
Thanks, just going to have to suck it up. Got next week off and will take the easy, if expensive option...
@ktache Just go for the TNT Sports only package, £30.99 for a month. Alternatively have you considered experimenting with a VPN for a few pounds, allowing you to sign up for a free stream abroad, e.g. SBS Australia which streams the Tour live? If I didn't have a kind mate's login that's what I'd do!
So, it's now the month of July and I'm going to have to pay to watch the TdF, for one month only. On a tablet unfortunately, as I didn't manage to get a laptop to rig up to the TV, grrr. Just wondering, what package will I have to fork out for? Not wanting to pay for the wrong one...
Not that it sounds like a dealbreaker given the other faults you've identified, but that cable isn't really a "proprietary" cable, four pin magnetic cables like that are quite common on bone-conducting headphones and other devices (my inexpensive smartwatch uses one) and they can be had for £4.99 on UK Amazon.
1 thought on “Interbike Pt 1 – the weird and the wonderful, but mostly the weird”
*what* is going on with that parlee
honestly, surely even cipo himself wouldn’t straddle something that tasteless. what’s with the red-weed-from-war-of-the-worlds paintjob? i’ve seen naked-nymph-bedecked juggernauts that are easier on the eye. someone’s got too much time on their hands, and not enough good ideas…
the pistola looks lovely though. get one of them on test, whydontcha.