Reverence: 3T Rotundo Pro

Mimic those who are better than you; this is the underlying principle of nearly everything I do in life, whether in my work, in sport, or hobbies. The less I know about something, the more inclined I am towards this, and the more faithfully I mimic. As my skill and knowledge develope, I mime less and reason more, applying my own mistakes as well as those of others to the process we commonly refere to as becoming ‘experienced’. This process continues until I grow into an opinionated sponge; while I continue to mop up any and every piece of information and advice I can get my hands on, I follow the path that is influenced still by advice, but dictated largely by the unique journey that lays behind me and the lessons I’ve learned along it. But still the underlying premise remains: The Pros must be onto something.

So it was that I became obsessed with classic-bend bars; Gilbert, Hushovd, Basso, Potato, Cadelephant, the Brothers Grimpeur – many of my favorite riders cruised into my heart aboard classic-bend bars. Not to mention the likes of Coppi, De Vlaeminck, Merckx, and Maertens – none of whom had a choice but rode them nevertheless. Over time, the swooping curve of a classic, round drop has found its place alongside the Quick Release, Delta Brake, and Record Hub as some of the Most Beautiful Bits of Kit.

I love the way the bars sweep up from the drops and position the hoods at an elegant, upward pitch as the bar continues it’s journey upward to meet the stem. Each classic-bend bar does this, yet the particular sweep of the 3T Rotundo does it more elegantly than any other; the exact radius of its bend and the pitch of its rise is perfection. I have another set of classic 3T bars which predate the Rotundo whose radius of the bend is within a millimeter of that of the Rotundo and yet the aesthetics are not it’s equal. Like all things of sublime beauty, there is something intangible about its curve that sets it appart from others.

But aesthetics are only skin deep, and the real measure of the bar is how comfortable it is. Since getting ahold of my first Rotundo, I’ve moved to classic bend bars on all my machines. I was apprehensive about the move from an ergo bend, which I’d always ridden, to the round bend of the Rotundos. Whereas I had always assumed that a flat section of bar would be more comfortable to grab hold of, this turns out not to be the case. Evidently, my hand is not straight and is in fact quite good at bending and forming to various shapes. Riding in the drops, wrists pointed inwards towards the V-Locus, my fingers grip the curved surface of the drops perfectly. The classic bend also reduces the reach from the drop to the brake lever, which means that long descents with frequent use of the brakes are also much more comfortable.

The positioning of the hoods is a slightly different matter and depends somewhat on the groupo. Bikes Number 1 and 2 both wear 10 speed Campa Record, while Bike Number 3 wears Dura-Ace 7700. The design of the Campa hoods resemble the Power Triangles of Merckx, while the design of the Shimano hoods more closely resemble pegs. The transition from the bar to the hoods on my Campa bikes is smooth like Keith Stone, allowing you to choose multiple positions along where bar meets hood.  The design of the Shimano levers, on the other hand, cause them to stand up from the bar more abruptly, meaning that there are fewer comfortable positions available. It’s not really a significant issue, but it does provide less positions which can play a factor on longer rides.

As an aside, the matching 3T ARX stem meets nearly every expectation one can have of a stem; it’s light, stiff and simple. My only complaint is that it is only available in a 6 or 17 degree version; those of us who pay careful attention to how low or how high our bars are find that these two combinations don’t provide enough flexibility to dial in the position; I’m running the bars on Bike Number 3 and am stuck riding my bars about 5mm higher than on my other bikes. To be fair, this is not a shortcoming of the ARX stem in particular; very few manufacturers offer choices outside 6 or 17 degrees. However, for perfect positioning, 3T and others should add an 8 or 10 degree stem to the mix.

 

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @scaler911
    Cheers for reminding me of High School. Think skinny white kid, running into a polynesian brick wall.

    @Marcus

    Triathletes playing ball sports. Stupid singlets. Discuss.

  • @Marcus

    @scaler911
    @minion
    Forget Rugby and NFL boys - at least those big pussies know where the hits are coming from and they need to have the ball to get properly hit. Try Aussie Rules Football for nastiness.
    Or for some skills try this...

    Yes. And that's why I can make fun of Aussies from 3000 miles away. I would never do that to their face. Merckx bless the interweb.

  • @minion
    Also, and this again is from across 2 oceans, their kits kinda remind me of 80's NBA players. I'm thinking Dr. J running around a field instead of up and down the court.

  • @minion
    Triathletes? These days elite Aussie Rules "running players" have huge running abilities (cover up to 20+kms in a match) - so to compare them to other elite endurance athletes is appropriate. However their skill levels are slightly different.

    Stupid singlets? Well, we live in a "warm" country so even in winter, we get hot when we run around. No doubt this concept is foreign to you. So long sleeves aren't that comfortable for us. However we can wear long sleeves when we play Aussie Rules - if we so wish.

    And one other reason for no sleeves? To show off the arms!

  • @Marcus

    The thing about that is that I love how footy jocks love bagging cyclists about drugs when 90% of the guys playing their sport are so roided up it may as well be considered a women's sport.

  • On the endurance thing though I love how Ben was able to do the bolt & actually run away from the WA cops for something like 3 hours when he got pulled over because of his fitness & the levels of go faster dust surging through his system!

  • @Mikael Liddy

    @Marcus
    The thing about that is that I love how footy jocks love bagging cyclists about drugs when 90% of the guys playing their sport are so roided up it may as well be considered a women's sport.

    Roids in footy is so 80s/90s (think West Coast 92) - think the cycling drugs du jour would also be more the AFL preference these days?

    @Blah

    @MarcusTakes a lot of cocaine to strip your body fat down to Cuz's level.

    Just as long as you remember that none of the drugs that Cuzzy took were performance enhancing. I mean, whilst he was ingesting the equivalent of pot belge in a regular basis, he never did it before he played. I mean I believe him - he never lied did he?

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