Fuji SL/1

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Thanks for the suggestion!

A bit of confusion, however... I meant the clamp at the seat, not the seatpost clamp. See, for example, the thread on Thomson tuning. Very tempting. But how hard a whack on the seat will it take to crack the thing?

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Revision: I added a Becker saddle (64 g, thus over claimed, but I'm not complaining) to occasionally replace the SL/1, which takes it down to 11.36 lb (5.153 kg).

The Becker/Tune is surprisingly comfortable as long as the road isn't too rough. I thought it would be hillclimb-only, but I've taken it on some long rides and it does very nicely. I still prefer the SLR for rough roads, however.

by Weenie


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samtheclip
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by samtheclip

Hey Dan! Nice job on the bike. I'm currently building up an SL1 as well. Right now I'm hovering around 11lbs. I have a few goodies on the way and those will really help shave grams. My ultimate goal is to get mine to a safe/rideable sub 10lbs and ride it at the triple ironman this October. I haven't cabled mine up yet but, once I do I'll start to post some pictures and stat's. Best of luck with yours!

-Sam
Buffalo, NY

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Thanks! Honestly for a triple ironman I'd bias things more towards the reliability end of the spectrum than low weight. I weenie my bike down to it's low of 11.35 lb only for hillclimbs. For road races, for example, I prefer the more all-around Reynolds MV-32T wheels to my Mt Washingtons, adding around a pound, and for self-supported events, I prefer clinchers which add a lot more weight.

BTW, I set my PR up Old La Honda, a local climb, on Tue with this bike: 16:49 = VAM 1402. I was quite pleased with this result. Analysis shows with my old 16 lb bike I'd used in 2002 I would have been maybe 4 seconds over the 17:03 I'd gotten in 2002. Breaking 17 finally up OLH finally validated a lot of weenieism: it was a major goal of mine.

donald
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by donald

Dan, A great looking bike, and overall a really good build of reliable yet light parts. I really like the SL/1 frame and I'm happy yours fits you so well. But then again, you are very knowledgeable when it comes to all aspects of fit, physics, engineering, road experience and just knowing and feeling for what works best for you. I feel that really makes the ride experience so much more enjoyable. I changed saddles about a year ago to a Becker and it fits me very well, I'm really happy with it. Mine weighs 43 grams, after I modified it a little, stock it was 52 grams. Also, congrats on your new PR up Old La Honda. It's always nice to climb with a lighter bike.

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Thanks, Donald! Tuning a Tune: that's hard-core :). I agree, though, it's a comfortable saddle. I rode it in the Diamond Valley Road Race this past weekend with no more issue than I typically experience with an SL/R, which is to say I had to stand occasionally but never more than a few seconds at a time. Basically normal.

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Image
Changes:
  • Extralite stem: saves 22 grams versus Performance Forte. I got a deal on one I simply couldn't turn down. There's not a lot of demand these days for 26 mm high-end stems.
  • A thinner top cap for my head tube. This ended up not being needed when I went from the 7 degree Performance stem to the 8 degree Extralite. But it may be slightly lighter.
  • Switched from Red cables and Gore Ride-On cables to Alligator iLinks and PowerCordz. Super-thanks to Kevin at Bike Nüt for setting me up. This was a job I wouldn't trust to most shops. Bike Nüt really has an appreciation for this sort of stuff. From estimates of length of housings and cables with weighting the per-length mass of the remaining sections, I figure these saved an impressive 185 grams.
  • Random Taiwanese bottle cage saved 6.9 grams.
  • I had to change a tire due to a puncture, and the replacement Veloflex Record was 9.6 grams heavier. Also I added glue. I use plenty of glue.

Total mass = 11.08 lb = 5.025 kg

This is 9 grams over my individual part list, so I'm fairly close.

Were I to want to shave the extra 25 grams, the seatpost or handlebars would be obvious targets. The handlebars (Ritchey Pro, 231.1 grams) are particularly beefy. Schmolke would knock a tidy 100 grams off in one, albeit very expensive stroke. But carbon bars would violate my $3.50 gram target for mass savings (although I violated that on the stem: the blings gotta be worth something). And I like the Thomson post.

I could probably trim a bit from the Thomson clamp, but that sort of thing is always a bit risky.

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djconnel
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by djconnel

A bug in here somewhere... 30 grams disagreement is a lot:

Code: Select all

installed component            weighed notes                    apparatus
frame                          860     Fuji SL/1                ultimate
seat clamp                     20      standard                 ultimate
cage bolts                     10      standard Al              ultimate
fork (uncut)                   380     standard                 ultimate
fork (removed section)         -36.5   standard                 Stanford
expander plug + cap            13.7    headset (extralight)     Scout
headset bearings (2)           43.5    headset                  Stanford
upper cover                    17.4    headset                  Stanford
compression ring               5.3     headset                  Stanford
SRAM Red front deralleur       69.9    Stanford
SRAM Red rear derailleur       145.4   Scout
Recon 11-23 cassette w/ spacer 96.5    Scout
quick releases                 45.7    KCNC                     Scout
pedals                         131.5   Speedplay X/1            Scout
Lightning Crank + BB           580.8   170mm, 110mm BCD         Scout
handlebars                     231.1   Ritchey Pro 38 cm        Scout
handlebar tape                 38      Cateye cotton            Scout
handlebar plugs                5.1     misc                     Scout
stem                           91      Extralite                Scout
KMC-10 chain (112 links)       241.1   KMC SL                   Scout

shifter (front)                157     SRAM Red                 Scout
shifter (rear)                 160     SRAM Red                 Scout
saddle                         62      Becker                   Scout
cables + housings              85.0    Alligator iLink + iLinks Scout


brakes                         197     Zero Gravity             weight weenies
bottle cage                    23      Taiwanese                Scout
Seatpost                       180.6   Thomson Masterpiece, cut Scout
Mt Washington wheels           776     reported by manufacturer
Veloflex Record tire           192.8   Scout
Veloflex Record tire           191.8   Scout
valve extenders                10      estimated
glue                           30      estimated
total (calculated)             5054.7  calculated
total (lbm, calculated)        11.13   calculated
total (measured)               5025    ultimate
total (lbm, measured)          11.08   ultimate

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TheBugMan
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by TheBugMan

Man you really took this bike up a few notches with those changes. That is a big savings on the brake cables/housing, plus seat.
You might as well keep breaking the $3.50 rule and get that bar, it's already the same shape-ish.
CLICK HERE to see my weenie

Click THIS to hear what happens when I see your and my weenie.

Tokyo Drifter
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by Tokyo Drifter

If you want to get it sub 5kg for riding up hills, you could get some control tech bolt on skewers for the hillclimb wheels. :noidea:

Then only other thing I can think of is the front deralluer. Would a braze on w/ a parlee clamp shave some weight or perhaps a DA or a campy FD?

Trim the bars?

Other than that it is an expensive looking 25g. Surely being able to say 'yo! my bike weight less than 5 kilos' is worth something though.

3t Funda and Alpha-Q gs-20 forks are both lighter than what you have and quite aero.

Not really my cup of tea as far as bikes go, but I appreciate the pupose with which it has been built and the crazy attention to detail.

Ypsylon
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by Ypsylon

djconnel wrote:But carbon bars would violate my $3.50 gram target for mass savings


My advice would be to buy a 400g bar for $15 and after you have that mounted you can safely buy the Schmolke bar.

You'll be out of $15, but 400g bars are actually a multi purpose component, you can hang stuff from it, hit attacking cangaroos over the head or mount it to a competitors bike at night.
"Nothing compares to the simple pleasures of a bike ride," said John F. Kennedy, a man who had the pleasure of Marilyn Monroe.

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Ypsylon wrote:
djconnel wrote:But carbon bars would violate my $3.50 gram target for mass savings


My advice would be to buy a 400g bar for $15 and after you have that mounted you can safely buy the Schmolke bar.


That is brilliant :).

Anyway, I just recently did the cables. One step at a time. When people here meet their weight goal, it seems most of the time the bike appears soon after on "for sale". It's good to have goals :).

Actually I could solve the problem simply by getting my hands on an old set of Prima 199 Al bars. They were close to listed weight. Hard to find in 40 cm o-o though.

P.S. the skewers are a really good idea. I can't trim the bars as I like the lower hand position occasionally, and other than the wheels it's my general purpose racing bike.

Pantani
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by Pantani

Great build and a good primer on where weight can be sensibly cut while still maintaining usability.

+1 for the Ritchey Alu bars - I've gone back to alu WCS from WCS carbon for my race bike - way stiffer and more peace of mind.
Not everything that counts can be counted. Not everything that can be counted counts.

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djconnel
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by djconnel

Updates:
  • replaced Thomson cradle, seat clamp, and bolts with KCNC M5 hardware: saved 43.0 grams
  • replaced stock SL1 seatpost clamp (22.1 grams) with lightweight clamp from Toronto Cycles (11.2 grams) : saved 10.8 grams

I adjusted the "weighed" numbers by these numbers. Unfortunately my front Edge rim cracked and had to be replaced, and I'm waiting to get the wheel back: I'll have it soon.

Pictures to follow when I get the light wheel back on.

Code: Select all

installed component            weighed notes                         apparatus
frame                          860     Fuji SL/1                     ultimate
seat clamp                     11.2    Toronto cycles                ultimate
cage bolts                     10      standard Al                   ultimate
fork (uncut)                   380     standard                      ultimate
fork (removed section)         -36.5   standard                      Stanford
expander plug + cap            13.7    headset (extralight)          Scout
headset bearings (2)           43.5    headset                       Stanford
upper cover                    17.4    headset                       Stanford
compression ring               5.3     headset                       Stanford
SRAM Red front deralleur       69.9    -                             Stanford
SRAM Red rear derailleur       145.4   -                             Scout
Recon 11-23 cassette w/ spacer 96.5    -                             Scout
quick releases                 45.7    KCNC                          Scout
pedals                         131.5   Speedplay X/1 w/ Cadenceworks Scout
Lightning Crank + BB           580.8   170mm,110mm BCD               Scout
handlebars                     231.1   Ritchey Pro 38 cm             Scout
handlebar tape                 38      Cateye cotton                 Scout
handlebar plugs                5.1     misc                          Scout
stem                           91      Extralite                     Scout
KMC-10 chain (112 links)       241.1   KMC SL                        Scout
-                              -       -                             -
shifter (front)                157     SRAM Red                      Scout
shifter (rear)                 160     SRAM Red                      Scout
saddle                         62      Becker                        Scout
cables + housings              85.0    Alligator iLink + iLinks      Scout
-                              -       -                             -
-                              -       -                             -
brakes                         197     Zero Gravity                  weight weenies
bottle cage                    23.1    Taiwanese                     Scout
Seatpost                       137.4   Thomson Masterpiece,cut       Scout
Mt Washington wheels           776     -                             reported by manufacturer
Veloflex Record tire           191.8   -                             Scout
Veloflex Record tire           192.8   -                             Scout
valve extenders                10      -                             estimated
glue                           30      -                             estimated
total (calculated)             5002.8  -                             calculated
total (lbm,calculated)         11.02   -                             calculated
total (measured)               4971.1  -                             ultimate,adjusted for seat clamp and seatpost clamp
total (lbm,measured)           10.96   -                             ultimate

by Weenie


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micky
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by micky

Really an impressive work.
Compliments.

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