Tired of constantly getting beaten by stronger riders? Always wondering what people mean by low yaw? Have more money than watts? Well here's your answer. Hours and hours have been spent painstakingly skimming Slowtwitch threads, looking at wind tunnel results, and following ERO social media pages in order to build the fastest bike possible. It doesn't have fancy electronic shifting or pulley wheels as big as the espresso saucers you use before your ride but that's because this bike was meant to be fast, not bougie. (It is bad though.) But it doesn't have integrated bento boxes either, you say? Who cares! Everyone knows that starvation is the key to getting aero. Plus you'll be moving so fast you won't even be out there long enough to eat!
Value stopping quickly? Like brakes that are easy to adjust? Well then you probably should get some real damn excitement in your life and buy this bike. You haven't feared for your life until you've ridden this bad boy down a hill with carbon rims in the rain. If that doesn't make you value life, nothing will. #AeroOverEverything You'll also save a ton of money by skipping out on all those dumb Yoga classes everyone is telling you to take. Having to adjust this rear brake in between wheel changes will teach you all the patience and meditation that can be known. It might as well come with a damn Buddhist Monk robe. Plus with this being a former Garmin-Sharp bike, it's got more street cred than you could ever imagine, although not enough to let you get by with wearing a pro team replica kit. #JustSayNo
But for real, you would be VERY hard pressed to build a bike this fast for this price. I built this up for TT and stage racing this past season but we're balls deep in the renovation of a house (dumb, don't do it) and its quickly eating all my free time plus I think I've come to the conclusion I like piecing together rad bikes. There are some signs of use and wear, but nothing major or concerning; a few marks on the frame, a little shoe rub on the crank, and some clearcoat peeling on the brake levers are the biggest things. The fork is cut for 5mm of spacers above and below the stem so it's a pretty aggressive fit. You can run a 3T Brezza riser kit ont eh Ventus aerobars if you need more arm pad stack.
Build is as follows:
2009 Cervelo P4
-51cm
-Arundel Aero Bottle (UCI legal)
Cockpit:
-3T Ventus II LTD integrated bar/stem
-Dash Tri.7 saddle (used, black, blue logo, red rails)
Groupset:
-SRAM Force CX1 Rear Derailleur (new)
-SRAM SL-1190 R2C shifters (new, includes front and rear)
-SRAM Force 11-32 Cassette (new)
-SRAM Xsync 50t 1x ring (new)
-SRAM Red 22 chain (new)
-SRAM S-990 brake levers (used)
-TriRig Omega X front brake (used)
-Shimano CX70 crank -170mm, 110bcd (used)
Wheels:
-Zipp 808 Firecrest Carbon Clincher Front (black logo, used, in excellent shape)
-Zipp Super9 Carbon Clincher Rear (black logo, used, no brake track wear but two small dings thanks to TSA)
-Continental SuperSonic 23c front tire with latex tube
-Specialized Sworks Turbo Cotton 24c rear tire with latex tube
-Zipp Evo Platinum brake pads
-ViewSpeed S4 skewers
Extras:
-Front derailleur mount
-Arundel Chrono aero bottle and cage
-P4 OEM bottle but no cage (new)
Asking $2750 for everything; $2250 less the disc; $1650 with no wheels; buyer covers PP fees