Enroute to Mount Saint Helens on the V to V Cogal

A death is a painful thing to experience. Particularly, I imagine, for the one doing the dying. For those left behind, it takes time to mourn and come to grips with the change; it is an unpleasant process, but such is the way of things.

The crack in the chainstay of my beloved Cervelo R3 had been weighing on my mind ever since I discovered its existence while cleaning my bike in Hawaii. Assuming the crack was superficial, I continued to ride the machine and took it with me to Belgium to rattle along over the cobblestones during Keepers Tour. It was during this trip that Andrew, a carbon fiber engineer for B’Twin, pointed out that the crack was not superficial and in fact quite serious.

I continued to ride it, and slowly made peace with the fact that my favorite-ever road bike was destined for retirement. Denial turned into anger, anger turned into grief, grief into acceptance, and acceptance into glorious Rule #12 obsession, deliberation, and contemplation. Still, my final ride on my trusted friend was bittersweet; I was on great form that day, and together we turned mountains into hills and carved the many curves as we rode along the seaside in the somber knowledge that this would be our last day out together.

I contacted the shop where I bought it and had them reach out to Cervelo for a warranty replacement, but even if they warrantied the frame, I wouldn’t want one on account of the tall head tube they’ve adopted on their large frames. I’m very picky about my position, and loved the ride and fit of my R3, so I was left with a conundrum as to what bike to get as my new #1. Then Mark, the owner of Veloforma, pointed out that he’d designed his Strada iR based on the R5ca, along with several improvements to the design. And he could do it in a custom Velominati paint scheme. Sold to the obsessive-compulsive Dutchman in the back! (That makes two Veloformas bought in the span of a few months, the VMH pointed out when I delivered the news.)

As much as I loved my R3 for its ride quality and fit, I have never been crazy about the 73 degree head tube angle. You wouldn’t think a half degree would have much effect, but the Strada’s head tube is relaxed just a hair to 72.5 degrees, and it really smooths out the handling compared to the the Cervelo. Aside from that, the dimensions are similar enough to my Cervelo that the first ride on the new steed felt like a reunion with my lost friend.

This thing is embarrassingly light at 6.3 kilos. For a 61cm. The head tube is nice and short at 19.5cm so I can get as low as I need to but tall enough that I still get to slam my stem. I also got a new carbon Pro Vibe stem whose paint job accidentally matches the markings on the frame’s custom Velominati paint job. It is almost too glorious for my tiny little brain to handle. Also, the front derailleur hanger is mounted at a slight angle which brings the derailleur cage in perfect alignment with the chain rings, which results in lightning-quick front shifting. Its little things like that which really impress me about Mark’s attention to detail when designing the bikes. Now that I think of it, both my Veloformas have the best front shifting performance of any bikes I’ve owned. Finally, the internally routed cables makes it astoundingly quiet; the lack of rattling cables makes this machine the high water mark in my quest for the Principle of Silence. And that paint job, oh that paint job.

I haven’t ridden the Strada a whole lot, but I did the V to V Cogal on it which consisted of two long days in the saddle and featured a lengthy session with my old friend, the Man with the Hammer. I’m happy to report that she climbs and descends like a monster. The bike has the road feel of my R3, but is more responsive with a stiffer BB and steering column. But the relaxed head tube makes it handle like a Merckx; the descent off Mount Saint Helens had some seriously sketchy tarmac in places and her handling probably gave me too much confidence in light of my Schleckian descending skills.

What started as heartbreak ended in a love affair. Funny how that works out some times.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Strada iR/”/]

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

  • @Ron

    In my spare time I really enjoy writing strongly worded letters to companies/manufacturers when their products aren't up to snuff. Gotten lots of broken or failed stuff replace that way.

    I sense a new thread coming on...

    @eightzero

    Eat a fucking pie you skinny bastard. Nice bike! I always forget how normal your bikes look when you're standing next to them, as opposed to when they're posed for photos with2 kilometers of seatpost and the stem Marcus keeps in hs pocket in case of x-rays.

  • PS that bike is a timely reminder that Record is the top of the food chain, no matter what Shimano does.

  • Oh, I'll retract that now if I may, now I see my Grey Sea Urchin has been revived - muchos!

    I've been trying to find a decent bit of video of the Tour of Poland, but am amazed there hasn't been the traditional outpouring of Phinney Love following his awesome display of Vick Turpin on stage 4 - did no-one see it?

    Up there with Iljo Keisse at the Tour of Turkey last year, except he didn't fall off on the last corner, and Phinney rode the entire peleton off his wheel with 7km to go rather than just the breakaway (Turkey had no radios, so that helped, but Phinney's name will have been raging over the earpieces for this one)

    Something really special to see one of the big hitters taking a flier, and drilling it to the finish - unlike the usual efforts which are punctuated by frequent head swivelling to see when the bunch were going to swallow them up, Phinney didn't look back once, until he was 10m from the line, with the sprinters all full gas bearing down on him, 3 seconds later he was engulfed, but with his arm aloft - pure V-class!!

    I hereby submit this as an entry to the V-Moment of the Year 2013

    Sadly the vid is only the last 4km, so you don't see his perfectly timed assault at 7km out

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Af8qs38-K4

  • Great prose and a stunning beauty of a bike.

    I am betting that the wait time for a Veloforma just went up by a few months after this article!  Seriously will be listening to your updates on her as I need to think about getting a dedicated gravel bike in the near future.

  • @Dr C I second that proposal, ride of the year hands down. I never thought that a stage of the Tour of Poland would have me yelling at the TV in excitement.

  • @Dr C

    Oh, I'll retract that now if I may, now I see my Grey Sea Urchin has been revived - muchos!

    I've been trying to find a decent bit of video of the Tour of Poland, but am amazed there hasn't been the traditional outpouring of Phinney Love following his awesome display of Vick Turpin on stage 4 - did no-one see it?

    Up there with Iljo Keisse at the Tour of Turkey last year, except he didn't fall off on the last corner, and Phinney rode the entire peleton off his wheel with 7km to go rather than just the breakaway (Turkey had no radios, so that helped, but Phinney's name will have been raging over the earpieces for this one)

    Something really special to see one of the big hitters taking a flier, and drilling it to the finish - unlike the usual efforts which are punctuated by frequent head swivelling to see when the bunch were going to swallow them up, Phinney didn't look back once, until he was 10m from the line, with the sprinters all full gas bearing down on him, 3 seconds later he was engulfed, but with his arm aloft - pure V-class!!

    I hereby submit this as an entry to The V-Moment of the Year 2013

    Sadly the vid is only the last 4km, so you don't see his perfectly timed assault at 7km out

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Af8qs38-K4

    Poor quality, but at least you can see it.

    http://www.steephill.tv/players/720/dailymotion/?title=Last+10+Km+of+Stage+4&dashboard=tour-de-pologne&id=x12keys&yr=2013

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