Courtesy of Tom Demerly - Bikesport
- Gary.
so when are people going to start bashing HED for missing the boat for making a true tri frame ? I’ve read why they went with slack geometery, but basically this bike seems closer to say the Trek TTT which often catches criticizism from this crowd . . .
If you have that in stock in a 56-58 I will take it.
There was a built up red one outside Nytro in Encinitas yesterday…looked pretty sweet.
Scott
If you have that in stock in a 56-58 I will take it.
Without a proper fitting ??? oh, and what length DA cranks do you want???
If you have that in stock in a 56-58 I will take it.
Without a proper fitting ??? oh, and what length DA cranks do you want???
I will take the special 0mm DA cranks…the new DA cranks are MUCH to stiff for my weak legs…
I don’t think anyone will bash anyone. HED said the bike is a TT bike. Maybe if the TT bike is well received (I can’t imagine it won’t be- it is fairly priced and very nice)they may consider a tri-geometry (78 degree) bike.
Also, the HED bike is a viable fit tool for anyone who needs a more relaxed seat angle, and this may include some triathletes.
I don;t know if this analogy applies, but Ferrari doesn;t make pick-up trucks for a reason.
Happy New Year guys!
I don’t think anyone will bash anyone. HED said the bike is a TT bike. Maybe if the TT bike is well received (I can’t imagine it won’t be- it is fairly priced and very nice)they may consider a tri-geometry (78 degree) bike.
Also, the HED bike is a viable fit tool for anyone who needs a more relaxed seat angle, and this may include some triathletes.
I don;t know if this analogy applies, but Ferrari doesn’t make … trucks for a reason.
Happy New Year guys!
Damn. Well, anyway, I said PICK-up trucks…
Silly man.
Damn. Well, anyway, I said PICK-up trucks…
Silly man.
it’s good they don’t, and Porsche should’nt either!!
leave trucks to Dodge, Ford and GMC
and Ford, well, I guess they want a piece of Ferarri:
computers now, too:
I don’t think anyone will bash anyone. HED said the bike is a TT bike. Maybe if the TT bike is well received (I can’t imagine it won’t be- it is fairly priced and very nice)they may consider a tri-geometry (78 degree) bike.
nah, they will just make a reversible seatpost . . . and if there is no bashin’ it is only because there is too much ass kissin’
Thanks for the pics Tom/Gary. Any ideas why Anne is not funneling these frames to the US first instead of the UK?
Ask anybody in the industry my friend. These lips do not touch ass.
I live in a glass house so don’t assume I was throwing rocks in a specific direction . . .
Very well Sir, and my genuine apologies.
My Best for your New Year.
Thanks for the pics Tom/Gary. Any ideas why Anne is not funneling these frames to the US first instead of the UK?
probably because TT racing is 10 times more popular in the UK
how come no one is talking about the bike?
the workmanship looks top notch, and I’m surprised that it’s not priced higher. Looking at the pics, it looks like the fork has an Al crown, which kinda surprises me from the masters of carbon.
I like the way they handled the seatpost integration. I hope the cervelo P4 does away with the seat clamp collar. it just looks cleaner.
I’m mixed on the headtube, having the guides route through is cool, but looks like they had to bulge the tube to do it. not sure that’s worth it.
but the thing that surprises me the most is that it really doesn’t look to be an especially aero frame. given the name, and Hed’s reputation for publishing aero data, I’m a bit surprised by this. Granted I know next to nothing about aerodynamics, but the trailing edge on the tubes doesn’t come to much of a point and the headtube looks very fat. built up pics don’t show the wheel tucking into the cutout very well. And not sure I understand the purpose of the old-Blade like top tube.
it looks like a nice frame for a good price, but I’d be surprised if it was designed by the same people that designed the Hed aerobar. it just doesn’t have the same minimalist feel to it.
Be carefull when you talk about workmanship looking great. A friend of mine works in a bike shop and they recieved their Cervelo shipment this week. They spent two hours filing a sloppy welding job just to get the seat post in the tube on a new Dual. In the past it has been runs in the paint and frames not even welded closed in spots.
it’s unfortunate but hand built often means human error especially when trying to fill huge orders on hiped up bikes.
Some of the best workmanships comes from the large companies with frames built in Taiwan.
“They spent two hours filing a sloppy welding job just to get the seat post in the tube on a new Dual”
“Some of the best workmanships comes from the large companies with frames built in Taiwan.”
I’m not certain, but I’m pretty sure that Cervelo’s frames are welded in Taiwan, and if so, it is likely by a large company. I checked over their website and the country of origin is not listed. Their QC is typically quite strict. I’ve heard of entire batches of their frames being rejected for QC issues.