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Tom Boonen says disc brakes "the biggest improvement I've seen in my career" and he will be racing on them in 2017

Former world champion to race on discs in 2017 - final race will be Paris-Roubaix

Tom Boonen is in the swansong of his career – the former world champion, one of the greatest ever riders over the cobbles, will retire after Paris-Roubaix in April. And for the final few races of what has been a stellar career, he’ll be riding on disc brakes.

The use of disc brakes in the peloton is a controversial one, with many riders including Mark Cavendish voicing their opposition in the past on safety grounds.

Concerns intensified after Paris-Roubaix in April last year when Movistar rider Fran Ventoso claimed his knee had been badly cut by one in a crash at Paris-Roubaix, leading the UCI to suspend its trial of disc brakes.

But world cycling’s governing body has given the green light to the trial being reintroduced this year, and riders including world champion Peter Sagan seem likely to ride bikes sporting disc brakes this season.

Boonen’s bike is a Specialized Venge ViAS Disc, which he will be riding at the Vuelta a San Juan in Argentina, which runs from January 23 to January 29.

> “Best bike I've ever had…” Tom Boonen likes his new Specialized Venge Disc then

Some people may speculate that Boonen is riding a disc-brake equipped bike because that’s what his team’s supplier wants to sell, and it’s true that Specialized and other brands are pushing the tech.

But given he is in the last few months of his career and will be having his last ever tilt at winning the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix, we can’t help thinking that perhaps Boonen himself has chosen what he believes to be the best tool for the job.

If he’s just being loyal to his sponsor, he’s doing a very good job of it. Over the weekend he told Patrick Fletcher of Cyclingnews that disc brakes “work better, they're easier to control, they lock out less fast than normal brakes. Of course I can control normal brakes but with disc brakes you have so much more feeling. It's the biggest improvement I've seen in my career – I don't know what all the hassle is about.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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19 comments

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davel | 7 years ago
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Are there any poor hydraulic bike sets or are they just all good?

I know how car hydraulic brakes work so I'm assuming it's (massive over-simplification alert) basically the same and other than a regular (yearly?) bleed/service/pad change they just all 'work'?

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Yorkshire wallet | 7 years ago
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Thing is though, you need only go a small way up the hybrid scale to get to hydraulic brakes. Theyre still £1000+ stuff on road bikes. The bottom end shimano hydraulic brakes are still very good.

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davel | 7 years ago
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This argument is more nuanced than 'discs or rims'. To expand on herrow's one negative: this is a pretty large negative, in my book.

There's a world of shit, entry-level disc brakes being flogged at the moment, under the 'discs are better' line, and in my experience, they're more shit, more difficult to maintain and more likely to suffer a 'wtf' sudden-ish failure (ie just not work rather than get progressively less effective) than similarly shit rim brakes. And for those disadvantages, they'll cost you more.

That's a shit situation, and a major black mark against the 'disc' argument.

So yeah, I've every reason to believe that decent hydraulics are the best brakes you'll get on a bike. But I also think that the 'disc' label covers the worst brakes being stuck on hybrids and commuters when half-decent rim brakes would be cheaper to start with and easier to maintain.

Are discs better? Yeah. Are discs worse? Shit yeah.

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herrow | 7 years ago
1 like

My reasons for using discs:

  1. I commute, when someone pulls their car out in front of me in the wet a disc will grab faster than a wet rim, meaning I am less likely to end up in the side or back of a car.
  2. I don't have a huge amount of money to spend on my bike, rims wear down very quickly when you ride everyday, as I found on my last road bike with rim brakes meaning a new set of wheels/rims are needed more regularly and wheels tend to be a lot more expensive than disc rotors.
  3. I have in the past had the brake pads go into the tyre (I know badly setup, but sometimes this happens as the pads wear down or after a crash) causing the sidewall to tear and pucture the inner tube. New tyre required as well as an inner tube. Discs have stopped this from ever being an issue.
  4. For me weight isn't as important as keeping running costs down. I have  one bike for all my commuting and road cycling, I can't afford more than one (except for my old 26" wheeled! mountain bike) and the disc so far have kept my maintenance costs down.

I only really have one negative from my point of view:

I only have cable discs which definately aren't as good as my hydraulic mountain bike disc brakes lever feel is not great and I can't use just one finger to feather them but I find the cost of hydraulic road disc systems prohibitive at the moment compared to dirt cheap mountain bike systems.

For the pro's, bikes are always having weights added to keep them over the UCI weight limit so I don't think disc weight will bother them either, it just means they can run a bike without added weights. They also don't have to worry about costs, so it's their choice.

At the end of the day, ride what you want, it's all personal preference.

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Billy1mate | 7 years ago
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Once you've ridden and used discs brakes, you won't want rim brakes, the bite, control and feel that discs offer I s excellent.

 

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cyclisto | 7 years ago
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Well the "proper" hydraulic disk brakes with road levers today cost the price of an entry level bike. I would prefer them over rim brakes at least for 30mm wide+ tires, but now they are quite expensive for my budget.

And yes I am not a pro, and bikes like many other things need to be foolproof and as efficient as they can get. Especially the day that somebody will decide to drive through a stop sign...

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nadsta | 7 years ago
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If you choose to run carbon rims in the wet then you'd better have some proper skills if you think you can brake as safely as a  disc brake. Or be able to change physics. With discs there is no delay and once practiced, superior modulation without locking up. I prefer my rim brake bike for sure, but once the weather looks iffy I'll ride the disc brake. Which is quite often. 

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Andreeoouu | 7 years ago
5 likes

I have both disc and rim brake bikes which I have been riding for a good while now. I can't say there is a massive difference between them, certainly not enough to justify the weight differences. I read about modulation, riding in the rain but for the average person, who can really tell and slow down. Traction is far more important in wet conditions. 

I can see some merit when it comes to comparisons to carbon rim brake wheels vs aluminium or disc brake rims. Put simply, carbon rim brake rims are inferior especially in the wet. Skill is definitely required in the wet on carbon rims more than with the other two options.

With the exception of very few expensive branded wheels, it's hard to find a light disc brake option compared to that if rim brakes, although I'm sure this will change over time.

And what about the unsightly and unergonomic hydro levers? I know that this is also being addressed by Shimano and Sram in newer versions of their top end groupset but seriously hat far off before this becomes more accessible.

I'm currently in the process of building up a new bike and have chosen to stick to rim brake with no regret.

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willythepimp | 7 years ago
3 likes

I for one could not care less. When was the last time you were watching the peloton whizz along thinking about the brake calipers of the different teams or riders?

 

And if you do or don't want it on your bike matters not a jot to me, or the rest of the internet.

 

 

 

 

 

They are superior though.

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wycombewheeler | 7 years ago
9 likes

and yet

disc brakes mean expensive carbon rims are not consumable wearing parts

disc brakes allow the use if larger tyres

disc brakes do work better in the wet.

It's not just about hoping to brake later and harder.

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Chapo | 7 years ago
1 like

Whether a Pro-rider picks discs or not is irrelevant to Joe Public.

Whether the manufacturers can make them light and cheap enough is the real question.

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The_Vermonter replied to Chapo | 7 years ago
3 likes

finkcreative wrote:

Whether a Pro-rider picks discs or not is irrelevant to Joe Public.

Whether the manufacturers can make them light and cheap enough is the real question.

 

I'm not totally disagreeing with you but for "Joe Public" is weight that relevant considering most ride with a saddle bag, will have 2 full bottles, carrying a phone, and most likely wearing heavier kit? Those few ounces added by a disc setup aren't really importantt. I would think aerodynamics are the most important thing an amateur should think about. You can climb in an aero bike if you're a strong climber/light enough AND excel on the flats with an aero bike but the super light bike does not provide any performance benefits on flats. In between my argument and your argument is the "Horses For Courses" argument but for those of us who are only buying new bikes every few years, it would seem aero is the better investment. There is also the the "If you want to make your bike lighter, weigh less" argument. Finally, as discs continue to move into lower price-points, the decision is being made for us already.

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psling replied to Chapo | 7 years ago
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finkcreative wrote:

Whether a Pro-rider picks discs or not is irrelevant to Joe Public.

 

I think you underestimate how many people seek to emulate the pros and buy accordingly, cheap not necessarily being a major consideration!

The main brands are marketing and promoting them, as soon as they're allowed in tour teams they'll be everywhere; only old curmudgeons like me will be left riding rim brakes lamenting the good old days...

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joules1975 replied to psling | 7 years ago
3 likes

psling wrote:

finkcreative wrote:

Whether a Pro-rider picks discs or not is irrelevant to Joe Public.

 

I think you underestimate how many people seek to emulate the pros and buy accordingly, cheap not necessarily being a major consideration!

The main brands are marketing and promoting them, as soon as they're allowed in tour teams they'll be everywhere; only old curmudgeons like me will be left riding rim brakes lamenting the good old days...

 

finkcreative is right in many ways, and psling, I think you have things the wrong way round.

Disc brakes are possibly the only example in road bikes of the consumer dictating the market. The more enlightened amongst us have been not just choosing bikes with discs but more many years were having to actively search them out and settle for other compromises due to very few options there were out there for until very recently.

The explosion in disc brakes is the manufacturers catching up with the fact that many people ride both road and mtb, and that most of those have been wanting the same braking on our road bikes as we have enjoyed for almost 20+ years on their mountain bikes.

So, what the pros ride, both in terms of brakes and now with wider tyres matters much less because people are realising that what the pros want and need does not necessarily translate to what we the public appreciate the benefit of.

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JonD replied to joules1975 | 7 years ago
3 likes

joules1975 wrote:

finkcreative is right in many ways, and psling, I think you have things the wrong way round.

Disc brakes are possibly the only example in road bikes of the consumer dictating the market.

 

I disagree - manufacturers would probably have wanted disk brakes on road bikes a long time ago, but I'd suggest roadies are a generally conservative bunch and there *is* an element of wanting bikes more like the pro end of things, tho' I dunno what proportion that is. And there are cerainly enough weight weenies around that fuss over the last 50 or 100g. I wonder if they would appeared on road bikes at all in the last year or so if things weren't slowly changing re cyclocross and rumours of change re the UCI regs.

One thing manufacturers need - or at least want - is some sort of built in obsolescence. If there's no reason to swap a bike for an updated model then folks are less likely to do so, hence endless tinkering for quite often very little effect. Adding disks gives all manufacturers an instant refresh on much of their range even if nothing else changes, and they've then got a new 'story' to sell.

 

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The_Vermonter | 7 years ago
3 likes

Oh no! He's going to murder the entire field with his discs to win Paris-Roubaix! The anti-disc crowd are the same as the Flat Earthers. Stop holding up progress! The UCI does enough of that.

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Mungecrundle | 7 years ago
1 like

Well hopefully that will put the "people who use disc brakes just don't know how to ride a bike" line of argument to bed.

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Rich_cb replied to Mungecrundle | 7 years ago
11 likes
Mungecrundle wrote:

Well hopefully that will put the "people who use disc brakes just don't know how to ride a bike" line of argument to bed.

Tom Boonen's opinion pales into insignificance when compared to the expertise present on these boards...

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sneakerfrfeak | 7 years ago
3 likes

I'm cool with him using disc brakes this year, as long as he remembers to wear socks,  preferably long ones!!

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