But because my experiences with bikes are my own and not yours, I spend a lot of time talking to riders I meet in the real world—and also looking at their bikes. I’m less interested in brand-new, off-the-shelf bicycles; I want to learn more about why riders adjust and modify their bikes the way they do. As a result of all this thinking and talking and looking, I recently had a head-slapping moment: I’ve been categorizing road bikes incorrectly. And many brands, shops, and riders do as well.
What we so often call road bikes—like the Specialized Tarmac, Trek Émonda, Cannondale SuperSix EVO, Cervélo R5— aren’t road bikes. They are race bikes.
These bikes are honed to go very fast on nearly perfect paved surfaces. They’re designed for use by talented athletes who are attended to by a team of mechanics and a caravan of support vehicles. Calling them road bikes makes them seem more inclusive than they are. They’re not versatile, nor are they adaptable. That’s because they’re built for use in competition in very controlled and specific circumstances. That pursuit of focused performance is why you get things like integrated front ends, proprietary parts, and aerodynamic shaping. The nonstandard parts and quick handling make perfect sense for their intended purpose. But proprietary parts and highly integrated designs also make race bikes high-strung and more difficult to live with day-to-day for average riders like you and me.
Bu hikaye Bicycling US dergisinin Issue 05, 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Bicycling US dergisinin Issue 05, 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
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THE RIGHT SADDLE CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE
UP UNTIL RECENTLY, I WAS, AT BEST, A TWICEa-month cyclist.
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I'VE HAD THE PRIVILEGE OF INVOLVING myself in a few populous and dramatically different cycling communities.
CHOOSE GEAR THAT INSPIRES YOU TO HAVE FUN E
EVEN THOUGH I TEST LOADS OF CYCLING gear for a living, sometimes I get locked in on particular items and find it difficult to enjoy competing products, even if those products have obvious advantages.
WHY YOU DESERVE A CUSTOM BIKE
Custom. The word evokes passionate opinions about what constitutes a custom-made bike and who gets to ride one. There's this idea that they're wildly expensive pieces of functional art meant only for the fittest, fastest riders.