Tradition and innovation sit mostly comfortably alongside each other in Cycling. The bicycle itself is inherently a very simple machine, the basic design of which has remained the same for centuries; frame, two wheels, cranks, saddle, handlebars. It’s what has been done to these elements along the way that has shaped what the modern road bike (because mountain bikes are way out there and another realm altogether) now looks like.
To me, they look like crap.
The ‘advancements’ made through the use of carbon fibre have without doubt benefitted those who really need to benefit in incremental steps, and that is Pro riders. These guys and gals are paid to ride a bicycle as fast as they can and to get it across a line hundreds of kilometres away from where they started before hundreds of others, sometimes by the barest of margins. That’s not us. We ride because we love the freedom, the health benefits, all that bullshit that Bicycling magazine will give you 7 tips on how to do it. We don’t need aero-tubed frames and deep dish carbon wheels, but we want them. Sure, all this stuff makes our experience better, and I’m not suggesting we all ride around on K-Mart bikes, even though we’d still probably have some form of fun if we did. Even if you race, even A grade at club level, or have a crack at Nationals, the bike isn’t going to make you win. I’ll repeat; you’re not a Pro.
This whole ‘aero’ frame fad that has taken over the peloton is all well and good when the sport’s top prizes are at stake. When rolling around with your mates and having a coffee before and a beer after is the modus operandi, then why not do it with a modicum of style? Aero bikes are not stylish. Those oversized, flattened, sharp edged carbon members (I refuse to call them tubes) are just downright ugly. The curvy swooping lines and bent-six-ways stays are an abomination. And some of the stems popping up now look like tumours growing from Frankenstein’s neck. I don’t like them, in case you’re not picking up on that.
The more I look at the new crop of ’boutique’ builders working with steel, the more I realise how much of a blight these carbon race frames are. My eyes are attuned to the simplicity of round, straight tubes, with a sensible diameter, and if they’re held together with lugs, well that’s not a bad thing either. But even these simple things of beauty can be sullied by another modern invention, the sloping top tube. A lot of the bikes that appeared in my feeds from the recent NAHMBS featured quite radically sloping tt’s, and whenever a flat tt’ed bike popped up it was even more apparent that flat is where it’s at. And I’m not saying this because I own such a bike; in fact, there was a period after purchasing my Jaegher where I questioned whether I should have had some slope built in. But the more I witness the glut of ugly that is is the Pro peloton, I’m glad I listened to the denizens who lovingly handcrafted my beauty, and kept the tubes like they are meant to be: flat, round and straight.
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All this steel frame talk has me wanting to get the Mulholland Cyclops out on the road once it stops raining here.
Really nice for solo rides but need the Ridley Noah when riding with my foes.
@balty
Practical they may be, but they are still ugly as fuck.
@Beers
"everbody" does not use them. Many do, but not "everybody".
@frank
Okay, that's so very cool I'm chilly. Nice work, Don Walker. Well done, Frank.
@David Maver
Beautiful touch, and even better hearing your late father built them. I've built a couple of pairs of them and would love some myself - beautiful ride.
So many beautiful bikes in this thread, and I include some of the non-ferrous sloping top tube examples also. Being avowedly retro though I'm particularly enamoured of the Holdsworth and the pink DeRosa. Lovely.
@RedRanger
great snapshot of a gorgeous bike. Very cool.
@Teocalli
Pinarellos can be all black with no markings and a person just knows it a Pinarello. Awesome lines. My daughters first race bike was a Pinarello btw. Was the straight tubed alloy frame set. She'd go, "I'm gonna take a spinarello on my Pinarello". She raced with toe clips! This bike is still in the garage. Hard to believe Sky's racing 'em w/group-san. What's up with that?
@ChrisO
Hey, I'll back you up. I have a Giant (#3) and like the look. I'll take a Giant over a Spesh Tarmac any day in terms of aesthetics.
#1 and #2 are all-black steeds. #2 has an orange spacer atop the stem ans a wee bit of orange on the seatpost clamp. #1 has the orange spacer.
A man in Italy is building a Scapin Eleanor for me. And it will Look Fantastic!
Like this, but more gears.