With the cyclocross season fast approaching, Vitus has added to its range of ‘cross bikes with the new Energie Evo, a race-focused bike that has been on a diet while offering massive mud clearances which Vitus says will allow you to go further without needing to change bikes. Vitus also claims that it has worked “shoulder physiology” into the newly designed top tube, making those lung-burning runs while carrying the bike a little more comfortable.
Redesigned frame
One of the most notable claims with the new Energie Evo concerns the underside of the top tube which Vitus says has been shaped to add comfort when shouldering the bike. Cyclocross races often have features that can’t be ridden or mud so thick that running becomes the faster option. Riders will pick the bike up and carry it on their shoulder and if you think that the weight of a muddy bike resting on a bony shoulder sounds uncomfortable, you’d be correct.
Vitus doesn’t exactly detail what the “shoulder physiology” they’ve used is, but it seems that the line of the Energie Evo’s seat stays continues past the seat tube, before curving into a flattened top tube. We’ll send Stu off to run up some grassy banks to test the comfort.
Dropped Seat Stays
Speaking of the seat stays, Vitus has dropped them slightly compared to the old Energie in an effort to aid comfort at the saddle. The rough terrain of your average cyclocross course can be very jarring, so the seat stays have also been made thin to provide extra give.
BB386EVO
Vitus has opted for a BB386EVO bottom bracket shell that they claim “gives the bike a solid platform for excellent power transfer into the cranks.”
Weight Savings
Vitus says that a painted medium size frame weighs in at 880g, putting it “among the lightest CX frames on the market,” which they say is particularly important in races where there is a good amount of running to be done.
Vitus says that it got to this weight by using a “no-compromise approach to R&D, design and manufacturing techniques” that resulted in “585 individual pieces of carbon creating a race-ready one-piece monocoque carbon frame.”
Mud Clearance
While Vitus says that the “class-leading mud clearance” should allow you to ride deeper into the race before needing to swing into the pits to pick up a fresh bike, for the majority of riders in local races, a second bike isn’t an available luxury. Simply having a bike that keeps going for a 60-minute race is crucial for just finishing, so Vitus’ claims around the clearance will be interesting to test.
Stu currently has a 56cm and says that the gap between the chainstays where the tyre would sit is around 55 to 60mm. When using a UCI race-legal 33mm tyre, that should give a fair amount of clearance.
Refined Geometry
While Vitus says that the frame has been completely redesigned, it’s more of a slight tweak for the geometry with the standout change being a longer top tube paired with shorter stock stems. Vitus claims that this move “puts your hands and body weight in a superior position for stable and predictive steering through technical terrain.”
For a size medium, the effective top tube has gone from 545mm up to 560mm while the head tube has also increased from 135mm to 142mm. The changes result in an increase in both stack and reach with the medium now measuring 565mm for stack and 396mm for reach.
Range
The Energie Evo range consists of four bikes with prices starting at £1,799.99 and topping out at £3,499.99. Each model uses the same carbon frame and all groupsets come in 1X form from SRAM. Here’s a breakdown of the range.
Energie C - £1,799.99
- Claimed weight: 8.7kg
- Groupset: SRAM Apex 1x11, 40T chainring, 10-42T cassette
- Wheelset: Alex/Novatec Disc Aluminium Clincher Tubeless
- Bar: Vitus CX Alloy
- Stem: Vitus CX Alloy
- Seatpost: Vitus Alloy
Energie CR - £1,999.99
- Claimed weight: 8.4kg
- Groupset: SRAM Rival 1x11, 40T chainring, 10-36T cassette
- Wheelset: Alex/Novatec Disc Aluminium Clincher Tubeless
- Bar: Vitus CX Alloy
- Stem: Vitus CX Alloy
- Seatpost: Vitus Alloy
Energie CRS - £2,499.99
- Claimed weight: 8.1kg
- Groupset: SRAM Force 1x11, 40T chainring, 11-32T cassette
- Wheelset: Prime Baroudeur Disc Aluminium Clincher, Tubeless
- Bar: Prime Doyenne Alloy
- Stem: Prime Doyenne Lightweight Alloy
- Seatpost: Vitus Alloy
Energie CRS eTap - £3,499.99
- Claimed weight: 7.7kg
- Groupset: SRAM Force eTap AXS 1x12, 38T chainring, 10-33T cassette
- Wheelset: Prime Black Edition 38 Disc Carbon Clincher, Tubeless
- Bar: Prime Primavera X-Light Carbon
- Stem: Prime Doyenne Lightweight Alloy
- Seatpost: Prime Primavera Carbon
The bikes are available later this year with stock due in late September/early October.
vitusbikes.com
Your full post describes very well why the current model isn't viable. Not enough people watching to sell adverts for beer and gambling. Probably...
Norwich cycling said it doesn't cut through and uses an exsiting path parallel with the allotment border.
Mr Havers has just been on the news, bemoaning the size of potholes in London and, I quote - "now I'm on two wheels, in London , which makes it...
Similarly, I get it with my EE mobile phone contract. No way I'd pay the extra otherwise
I tend to agree that regular re-tests is a good idea, although AIUI it's already very hard to get a test, and so there would need to be massive...
The quote from her mother is so sad. No family should have to go through that.
How to make absolutely no sense in just a few short words:...
(emphasis in the original)...
Not really - just like all those other things, there is a negative externality of driving (increased pressure on the NHS, due to health...
Depends what you want to count (e.g. on the West - how wide you'd cast the net over deaths due to the Western military). But I'd point you in the...