Challange; to lighten my bike 1kg

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Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

I dont really care cosmetic.. I don't know what mods you are thinking of that look ugly..
I would like a more snappy, fast accelerating bike.. The special "light" bike feel :) ( FIY, i get that feeling at anything under 8kgs..)

Causidicus
Posts: 320
Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2012 11:20 am

by Causidicus

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Last edited by Causidicus on Tue Jun 17, 2014 10:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

by Weenie


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clxcolnago
Posts: 27
Joined: Fri Mar 16, 2012 5:58 pm

by clxcolnago

I like things dat are cheap n useful

Groupset ultegra mechanical 2441 grams

wheelset easton ea90slx 1398 grams

Handle bar n stem easton ec90 series

Speedplay stainless pedals

Watch ebay for used fizik carbon rail saddle 169 grams

That shud get you 1 kilo reduction without killing contents of wallet.

Seatpost....no comment

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

The first im changing is the cranks, they are abit worn.
The rear wheel have big grooves on the braking surface.
The stem needs to be abit shorter.

So that's the stuff i want to change first.

Current weight as pictured is 8660grams
The cranks weigh 820 grams withouth bearing, with chanrings.. What is reasonable priced and weigh less?

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

Some parts have been ordered.

Sram RED crankset. Will save around 150 grams
Ebay brake calipers. Save around 100grams claimed
Tubular 38mm carbon wheels. Will save around 500 claimed.
UNO ASA105 Ultra Light Weight Alloy Stem ordered. Should save around 40 grams claimed.

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mellowJohnny
Posts: 492
Joined: Thu Aug 16, 2012 12:56 am
Location: YYZ

by mellowJohnny

Good start - keep us up to date with pics and progress

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

Image

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The steerer tube is fully carbon, and it originally has this sleeve for reinforcement. Do you guys think its safe to use this normal topcap?

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The bike after the weight weening have started :lol:

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

Image

Image

Sanded down the fork and removed the PREMIUM logo and re-coated it. Looks nice!

Tried a friends Scott Foil today.. I'm missing soo much out with having a too large bike.. I might buy a Chinarello or something.

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

The chinese gravity must be weaker.. because i got my stem and brakes today!
10grams more than claimed on each part.
Total savings of 140grams though. :)

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

New bottom bracket aswell.. saved 40 grams there :)
The bike is now 8300grams with pedals.

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roadieboy
Posts: 66
Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2012 2:19 am

by roadieboy

Nice bike, I like what you did with the fork. I read your 'what frame should I get' thread in the road section. You said you're new to road riding, so maybe you don't have the 'feel' for the road position yet. You're supposed to be 'stretched out' to a certain extent on a road bike, and at 6ft, a 58cm wouldn't be out of the question for you (though this depends on other factors too) Lance is 5' 10" and rides a 58... Another way you could shorten the reach is with some compact handlebars, I like Deda bars.

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mellowJohnny
Posts: 492
Joined: Thu Aug 16, 2012 12:56 am
Location: YYZ

by mellowJohnny

Skorp wrote:Image

Image

The steerer tube is fully carbon, and it originally has this sleeve for reinforcement. Do you guys think its safe to use this normal topcap?


Not OK to use the star nut in a carbon steerer tube. I see it in your picture - did you use it?

bobqzzi
Posts: 54
Joined: Mon Feb 04, 2013 10:04 pm

by bobqzzi

prendrefeu wrote:Tubular will save about 100g-200g (per wheelset) compared to clincher in carbon. There is often some additional savings in a tubular tire vs. tire + tube.


No, because you have to carry a spare tire

Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

I was thinking stans fluid, a pump and some superglue.
Anyways, as you now, rotating weight is the important stuff.. So if i have a little tools box it doesn't matter as much.
My normal trip (50km) is anyways around a water and a mountain. The highway goes inbetween the mountain and the water. Call a friend, and 10 minutes later i have my tyre or get picked up. On longer trips, my tools bag will be carried with me.


roadieboy wrote:Nice bike, I like what you did with the fork. I read your 'what frame should I get' thread in the road section. You said you're new to road riding, so maybe you don't have the 'feel' for the road position yet. You're supposed to be 'stretched out' to a certain extent on a road bike, and at 6ft, a 58cm wouldn't be out of the question for you (though this depends on other factors too) Lance is 5' 10" and rides a 58... Another way you could shorten the reach is with some compact handlebars, I like Deda bars.


Thanks! yeah that's probably true.
I'm used to a all mountain bike with pretty tall front end. So it felt really strange sitting on a road bike.. Not relaly WW worthy bike but it's loads of fun.

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I have been experimenting some with positioning on the road bike, and now i have it the way i want it atleast and i'm happy with how the bike rides. My pedaling feels more powerfull, and i can ride faster for longer.
I might change my frame anyways.
I have a veteran car for sale, i have a good bid on it now.. If i sell it for that bid, i will have extra money for some fun. Possibly a new road bike!

mellowJohnny wrote:Not OK to use the star nut in a carbon steerer tube. I see it in your picture - did you use it?


There are some threads in the steerertube originally. I only keep my starnut together with my topcap and topcap bolt. So i dont lose any of them :D

by Weenie


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Skorp
Shop Wrench
Posts: 90
Joined: Thu May 30, 2013 12:54 am

by Skorp

Bike is now 8260grams. Chopped steerer, removed FSA "spacer" and one carbon spacer, some small mods on the seatpost and new bartape :)

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