New Shiv TT on Specialized website
That sure is a lot of space between the seat tube and rear tire.
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New Shiv TT on Specialized website
That sure is a lot of space between the seat tube and rear tire.
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Disc brakes are now a necessity in TTs with variable weather, tight corners, and rough surfaces. Not only do they let you late-brake into corners and shift on the bars, but they also create a more stable chassis in corners and when accelerating. And don’t worry, they don’t lend themselves to any additional drag
Ready… Set… Fight!
“less” ugly than I would have guessed.
Still ugly though, and probably very ugly outside of “S-Works” black paint scheme.
I knew it, global warming is the cause of disc brakes!
Looked at the Geometry chart…Pad X has an adjustable range of just under 30mm… was hoping for more.
Disc brakes are now a necessity in TTs with variable weather, tight corners, and rough surfaces. Not only do they let you late-brake into corners and shift on the bars, but they also create a more stable chassis in corners and when accelerating. And don’t worry, they don’t lend themselves to any additional drag
That massive gap between the seat tube and the tire…yikes. I would imagine Specialized knows what they are doing, but this seems to be the opposite of what every other manufacturer has done in the past 10-15 trying to hide the wheel/tire…
It looks like the bolts front detailer hanger is placed between the tire and seat tube. Interesting choice. Looks nice when you are running 1x, but I imagine this was one of the reasons they couldn’t close that gap a little.
What… what’s… leans in and squints What’s going on behind the seat tube??? There are two bosses there as well for… something. I’m not going to delve into the whole disc thing but saying this is the “most adjustable TT bike ever” is a bold (and false) claim.
The other thing that jumped out at me is the seat tube angle. Pretty shallow (though the same it looks like compared to the previous Shiv TT). But I guess comparing a TT bike to tri bike can be apples to oranges given UTI rules about how far back the saddle needs to be.
Specialized designed the tt bike for wider tire clearance just in case the owner wants to use it as a gravel bike.
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Specialized designed the tt bike for wider tire clearance just in case the owner wants to use it as a gravel bike.
i lol’d. thank you!
I was going to say the same thing! Need clearance for those monster tires, because bigger is always better…
I was hoping for more and better photos to see more of the details. So weird. The UCI deemed that tucking the rear wheel into the seat tube was so good they made a rule against it. Will they now restrict how big the gap can be… ?
Looks like the same design team who brought us the Shiv Tri, which has some questionable elements IMO. I’ll reserve judgement until I see good windtunnel testing.
Meh…
What a bunch of marketing gobblety gook justifying disc brakes, and I am not even against discs. Interesting that the bike profile in the geometry section has that huge gap behind the seat tube filled. Maybe that’s where the ebike motor is fitted. Also different rotors, 2x crankset, extensions.
Disc brakes are now a necessity in TTs with variable weather, tight corners, and rough surfaces. Not only do they let you late-brake into corners and shift on the bars, but they also create a more stable chassis in corners and when accelerating. And don’t worry, they don’t lend themselves to any additional drag
Ready… Set… Fight!
So, not only can I late-brake, but the disc brakes let me shift on the bars, too! Holy crap, what a game changer; wonder why nobody ever thought of that?
Okay, first off I love the look of this tt bike with cyclocross tires.
An interesting marketing position. I also would love to see wind tunnel numbers. Seems like they are trying to hit the weight weenie tt crowd. But with all the proven advantages of aero over weight… especially at pro speeds… one wonders if this is more hype than science.
An interesting marketing position. I also would love to see wind tunnel numbers. Seems like they are trying to hit the weight weenie tt crowd. But with all the proven advantages of aero over weight… especially at pro speeds… one wonders if this is more hype than science.
I bet there are certain mountain TT stages that this will excel at. And I wouldn’t be surprised if this is what the pro tour riders asked for.
The other thing that jumped out at me is the seat tube angle. Pretty shallow (though the same it looks like compared to the previous Shiv TT). But I guess comparing a TT bike to tri bike can be apples to oranges given UTI rules about how far back the saddle needs to be.
Urinary Tract Infection?
Specialized designed the tt bike for wider tire clearance just in case the owner wants to use it as a gravel bike.
As crappy as the roads are around here, especially this time of year when they’re putting down fresh “chunk-seal” (kinda like chip seal, but with bigger, coarser aggregate), a TT/tri bike that could fit 650b x 42s for training would be great.
The other thing that jumped out at me is the seat tube angle. Pretty shallow (though the same it looks like compared to the previous Shiv TT). But I guess comparing a TT bike to tri bike can be apples to oranges given UTI rules about how far back the saddle needs to be.
Urinary Tract Infection?
Ha. Autocorrect got me on that one. Not the first time I’ve inserted a medical term by accident
The other thing that jumped out at me is the seat tube angle. Pretty shallow (though the same it looks like compared to the previous Shiv TT). But I guess comparing a TT bike to tri bike can be apples to oranges given UTI rules about how far back the saddle needs to be.
Urinary Tract Infection?
Ha. Autocorrect got me on that one. Not the first time I’ve inserted a medical term by accident
Not altogether inappropriate, though.