Cervelo R vs S series (help me decide based on my specifics!)

I know all about the differences in the bikes. I even sat through a 2 hour presentation put on by a Cervelo rep so know the differences. I still feel I could use some guidance in deciding which would be best for me.

I have only raced Tri’s at this point but definitely plan to race some road events next year. Crits intrigue me, but road races seem more my style. I ride with groups 2-3x/week on my current road bike and solo on my tri bike 1-2x/week.

Climbing is my strength. My Watts/KG FTP is 4.1. During my competitive rides I excel on the climbs, hold my own on most flat situations, but occasionally lose wheel during an intense sprint. This initially led me to lean more towards the S series so I could improve upon my weaknesses with bike choice. Then I got to thinking about what I enjoy doing, and that is climbing. If I already have a tri bike for fast solo efforts and enjoy climbing, I may enjoy the R series more… Tough call.

Which would you go with in my shoes? Which is a more enjoyable ride? Would I feel or perform slower on climbs with the S series? Which would be best for road races? Anyone ridden both for extended periods of time? I guess it’s also important to point out that the S series is sexier and sometimes being excited by how good your bike looks goes a long way with motivation… for me at least.

The difference between an S series and an R series on a climb is a couple hundred grams of mass on the S series, and less aero drag on the S series. There is still aero drag on a climb!

Depending on how many watts you are going up the climb, the point at which the S series becomes slower than an R series up hill is between 6% and 12% (or more! especially if they are short climbs being attacked hard in a race)

Also important to remember both frame weight and frame aerodyanmics will rarely make the difference in your bike races. Aero will tend to make a difference more often than weight, but both are not a huge deal in and of themselves.

But making a lot of smart aero choices can add up, and if you have to have a bike under you, it might as well be aero.

I know all about the differences in the bikes. I even sat through a 2 hour presentation put on by a Cervelo rep so know the differences. I still feel I could use some guidance in deciding which would be best for me.

I have only raced Tri’s at this point but definitely plan to race some road events next year. Crits intrigue me, but road races seem more my style. I ride with groups 2-3x/week on my current road bike and solo on my tri bike 1-2x/week.

Climbing is my strength. My Watts/KG FTP is 4.1. During my competitive rides I excel on the climbs, hold my own on most flat situations, but occasionally lose wheel during an intense sprint. This initially led me to lean more towards the S series so I could improve upon my weaknesses with bike choice. Then I got to thinking about what I enjoy doing, and that is climbing. If I already have a tri bike for fast solo efforts and enjoy climbing, I may enjoy the R series more… Tough call.

Which would you go with in my shoes? Which is a more enjoyable ride? Would I feel or perform slower on climbs with the S series? Which would be best for road races? Anyone ridden both for extended periods of time? I guess it’s also important to point out that the S series is sexier and sometimes being excited by how good your bike looks goes a long way with motivation… for me at least.

If i had any inclination to race, I’d go S series, which you do. If I didn’t have any race inclinations, I’d go with whatever my gut liked more but probably err toward the r series.

The current s series bikes are getting great ride reviews and are not that much heavier than the r series.

The determining factor for me was tire clearance. I think you’re limited to 23mm with the S5. I ride dirt roads and terrible pavement all the time, so prefer a wider tire.

The determining factor for me was tire clearance. I think you’re limited to 23mm with the S5. I ride dirt roads and terrible pavement all the time, so prefer a wider tire.

The new S5 just released can do 25 just like the S2/S3

Oh, and to the OP - pro tip - The S2 is just as aerodynamic as the S3, so it is a nice buy.

Darn it, I should have waited.

Just kidding. I love my R3, but then I’m not worried about racing on it.

I’d encourage you to ride both the bikes you’re considering from each line. We can argue all day on ST about the perception of ride comfort, but this is an individual choice. I’ve got a lot of miles on riding my S5 on decent roads and crappy roads. I don’t like the ride. With the first generation you are stuck with using a 23c tire on the rear so no way to go to bigger volume and smooth the ride a bit. If you go with an S series I’d recommend getting a model that allows for larger tire sizes.

I’d encourage you to ride both the bikes you’re considering from each line. We can argue all day on ST about the perception of ride comfort, but this is an individual choice. I’ve got a lot of miles on riding my S5 on decent roads and crappy roads. I don’t like the ride. With the first generation you are stuck with using a 23c tire on the rear so no way to go to bigger volume and smooth the ride a bit. If you go with an S series I’d recommend getting a model that allows for larger tire sizes.

24C Specialized Turbo Cottons on Bontager Aura 5 fits in the rear of my S5 just fine.

Try letting out some air, and/or switching to latex tubes if you’re looking for more “comfort” with the S5.

Choose the bike for racing that helps your weaknesses, not your strengths :wink:

Edit: BTW, this article elaborates on this idea nicely…it’s in regards to MTBs, but it’s still appropriate for road racing.

The difference between an S series and an R series on a climb is a couple hundred grams of mass on the S series, and less aero drag on the S series. There is still aero drag on a climb!

Depending on how many watts you are going up the climb, the point at which the S series becomes slower than an R series up hill is between 6% and 12% (or more! especially if they are short climbs being attacked hard in a race)

Also important to remember both frame weight and frame aerodyanmics will rarely make the difference in your bike races. Aero will tend to make a difference more often than weight, but both are not a huge deal in and of themselves.

But making a lot of smart aero choices can add up, and if you have to have a bike under you, it might as well be aero.

I know all about the differences in the bikes. I even sat through a 2 hour presentation put on by a Cervelo rep so know the differences. I still feel I could use some guidance in deciding which would be best for me.

I have only raced Tri’s at this point but definitely plan to race some road events next year. Crits intrigue me, but road races seem more my style. I ride with groups 2-3x/week on my current road bike and solo on my tri bike 1-2x/week.

Climbing is my strength. My Watts/KG FTP is 4.1. During my competitive rides I excel on the climbs, hold my own on most flat situations, but occasionally lose wheel during an intense sprint. This initially led me to lean more towards the S series so I could improve upon my weaknesses with bike choice. Then I got to thinking about what I enjoy doing, and that is climbing. If I already have a tri bike for fast solo efforts and enjoy climbing, I may enjoy the R series more… Tough call.

Which would you go with in my shoes? Which is a more enjoyable ride? Would I feel or perform slower on climbs with the S series? Which would be best for road races? Anyone ridden both for extended periods of time? I guess it’s also important to point out that the S series is sexier and sometimes being excited by how good your bike looks goes a long way with motivation… for me at least.

To add to what Jack is saying…aero benefit is ALWAYS there…every single moment the bike is moving, aero means less watts. Weight benefit only kicks in when you are accelerating or going up a hill. If/when I buy another road bike, I will only get an aero road bike…and I don’t even bike race. I have no clue why Pro Tour cyclists mess around with non aero road bikes aside from purpose built bikes for the likes of Paris Roubaix etc…why is my browser opening the Cervelo S3 web page?

Lol. I could guess you’d be the first to comment. I’m not going to bother debating the S5 ride quality with you. I find it harsh. You like it. That’s the way it’s going to be. This same topic comes up with you here on ST over and over, ad nauseam.

You typically demand testing to resolve answers on aero, Crr, etc. if you have non-anecdotal tests on ride quality, post 'em. Otherwise, your perception of ride quality has no more validity than anyone else’s on ST.

I bought a top end road bike after owning other top end road bikes. I’m disappointed in the ride quality. I ride the same wheelsets and the same tires, at the same pressures as I did on my last road bike and my current tri bike. I already ride latex tubes. I’m not going to run a Specialized tire. Just making a tire clear doesn’t mean it won’t rub on bumpy roads or sand the frame when the road is gritty or wet and gritty. This aspect of the first gen frame design was a compromise that has evidently been addressed in the second gen frame.

The bike is fast. The bike handles good. The bike rides harsh and it gets tiring.

The OP asked for some firsthand experiences with the Cervelos. I provided my experience. I wasn’t asking for your’s.

I always find it humorous that someone proclaims wheels felt “fast” and “came alive” but can’t detect ride quality between two different frames. Not to mention always questioning pros who probably ride more in July than he does all winter, but their perception is wrong.

Get an S3 unless you can wait for a new S5- and also ride the S5 to see if you like how it rides.
Old S5 was not so special in either weight or ride quality.

It does not appear that riding a lot does anything to improve pro’s ability to accurate perceive these kinds of things:
http://forum.slowtwitch.com/cgi-bin/gforum.cgi?post=4945729#4945729

and

http://forum.slowtwitch.com/cgi-bin/gforum.cgi?post=5096793#5096793

I always find it humorous that someone proclaims wheels felt “fast” and “came alive” but can’t detect ride quality between two different frames. Not to mention always questioning pros who probably ride more in July than he does all winter, but their perception is wrong.

Lol. I could guess you’d be the first to comment. I’m not going to bother debating the S5 ride quality with you.

How about with me? I don’t think it is harsh either.
Of course if one knows themselves to be a princess and the pea type of person with bike frames, the S2 would be the one to look at, with the spindly seat stays.

If you don’t know yourself to be that sensitive, ignore the people who are so you don’t end up having that as something in your head that you worry about. Saves you a lot of trouble.

Lol. I could guess you’d be the first to comment. I’m not going to bother debating the S5 ride quality with you.

How about with me? I don’t think it is harsh either.
Of course if one knows themselves to be a princess and the pea type of person with bike frames, the S2 would be the one to look at, with the spindly seat stays.

If you don’t know yourself to be that sensitive, ignore the people who are so you don’t end up having that as something in your head that you worry about. Saves you a lot of trouble.

Jack, does the S5 have the same seat stay as the new P3? Kind of looks like it

Dev, the mystery of why road racers don’t always choose aero is probably something you could take up with them and the learnings would be interesting. I’ve often wondered the same but put it down to them and their mechanics being experts and me not. Also, as Jack noted above - in road racing, weight and aero are not everything. Or something like that.

Many pros I’ve met are keen bike tech geeks, like a lot of us. Many more are not.

Typically, a pro enters cycling by winning their first race. And their second. And so on. Because of that, every year the bike shop (and later sponsored teams) gave them a different bike, and they still won. These guys know what it takes to win: push hard on the pedals! In their experience, that works on “any” bike. That’s a long time learning again and again the bike makes “no” difference.

On the other hand, a loser like me frets every detail - I need all the help I can get!

That sounds like my take on it (although I don’t have first hand experience). Thus, many of the fast dudes are fast in spite of their equipment, or because of it - or neither…It is, mostly not about the bike.

I know a guy who did not cycle until 3 years ago, aged in his late 40s. I lent him a bike as he wanted to join his wife in triathlons. From there he just kept going and he just won the local area B grade champs (goes down to D) having ridden incessantly for the last three years on a variety of bikes. Most ordinary, some nice, none outstanding. Its not about his bike, its the pushing of the pedals for sure.

Which perhaps takes us back to the OP - buy the one you like. Or perhaps, buy the R2 AND the S2 (!).

Many pros I’ve met are keen bike tech geeks, like a lot of us. Many more are not.

Typically, a pro enters cycling by winning their first race. And their second. And so on. Because of that, every year the bike shop (and later sponsored teams) gave them a different bike, and they still won. These guys know what it takes to win: push hard on the pedals! In their experience, that works on “any” bike. That’s a long time learning again and again the bike makes “no” difference.

On the other hand, a loser like me frets every detail - I need all the help I can get!

I was just having this discussion with one of the kids I coached in XC skiing. He’s a local champion and Ontario/OFSAA Podium guy. Anyway, I said, something along the lines of, “Last year, you were bigger and fitter than all the kids and you beat them. This year, you’re not as much bigger, but you’re fitter, and you’re on fast skis this year (last year you were not), so you’re winning. But your technique needs a lot of work. Eventually all the kids are the same size, have the same equipment and everyone’s technique converges. Then if you want to win, you have to squeeze out every miniscule second out of technique, out of fitness, our of wax, out of skis”. See that big baggy hat you wore at OFSAA???..2 seconds from the win…could have just been pushing more air with that hat. Eventually you have to take care of all the detail because everyone has a big engine, they have good equipment, they have good technique and all the champions are pretty well the same body type."

Most XC ski coaches actually don’t even get that. But I digress. Back to the bike thread.

How much further does the Cannibal go on an S5? He did 49.431 on this set up. Jack would have his hooks higher so that his forearms are parallel to the ground and MITaerobike would have him totally shave down.

http://velopress.dk/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/eddy-mercx.jpg