What frame to get (direct mount brakes)
Moderator: robbosmans
Good evening fellows. Been lurking for years now and finally decited to creat an account and ask for some help.
I am on a look out for a frameset that has directmount brakes, reach of no more then 385mm with stack height of aproximetly 550mm. Also would love if it was under 2500 EUR. For now I am thinking of Colnago V2R as the most probable one. With those requirements there are Orbea Orca Aero and Canyon Aeroad. I do like Orbea but it seems to be much heavier then Colnago. Also do not like Canyon's 1 1/4" steerer tube. It does not have to be full aero frame, would actually prefer something that climbs well but with some aero optimization at the same time.
Any sugestions beside mentioned frames?
I am on a look out for a frameset that has directmount brakes, reach of no more then 385mm with stack height of aproximetly 550mm. Also would love if it was under 2500 EUR. For now I am thinking of Colnago V2R as the most probable one. With those requirements there are Orbea Orca Aero and Canyon Aeroad. I do like Orbea but it seems to be much heavier then Colnago. Also do not like Canyon's 1 1/4" steerer tube. It does not have to be full aero frame, would actually prefer something that climbs well but with some aero optimization at the same time.
Any sugestions beside mentioned frames?
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+1 to the Domane SLR as well. Best bike I've ridden/owned, though the geometry is a bit more relaxed that what OP prefers.
Are you planning to run wide tires? If yes then the V2R is a very poor choice. Colnago likes to make their forks with a very short crown to axle distances. This has the effect of lowering the brakes and limiting tire clearance. I’ve seen a V2R (first gen) and the tire clearance is horrible. The Domane, on the other hand, has loads of tire clearance. It will clear a 30mm measured tire with room to spare. I don’t own a Domane but I have a Domane fork on my custom bike. Also aero frames with a tight rear tire to seatstsy will limit your tire choices as well. Wide tires tend to me tall tires as well. DM brakes are designed to have great tire clearance. But if you put a DM brake on a V2R fork then you are screwed.
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I've been on an Aeroad CF SLX and I'm now on a Tarmac S-Works SL6. The SL6 is obviously more comfy. I ran/run ENVE SES 4.5 on both with, for me, no clearance issues. The front rim inner width is 18.5mm and 27mm outer. The Aeroad clears ~28mm true tyre width on the rear but probably not more due to the cutout. It all depends on the tyre as some grow in height more than others. I'm pretty sure I could run 30mm true tyre width on the SL6 as there's more room in the rear. The calipers were not an issue.
As far as Direct-Mount brakes go. They're absolutely amazing and one of the reasons I didn't want to switch to discs on my road bike. The terrain where I live is flat with some hills. I have other bikes with disc brakes and they're great but Direct-Mount brakes are on another level compared to standard single bolt brakes. People keep talking about the modulation of disc brakes but the modulation on DM is also very good. They are easier to adjust and do maintenance on. Disc brakes can be a bit fiddly to set up without any rub.
As far as Direct-Mount brakes go. They're absolutely amazing and one of the reasons I didn't want to switch to discs on my road bike. The terrain where I live is flat with some hills. I have other bikes with disc brakes and they're great but Direct-Mount brakes are on another level compared to standard single bolt brakes. People keep talking about the modulation of disc brakes but the modulation on DM is also very good. They are easier to adjust and do maintenance on. Disc brakes can be a bit fiddly to set up without any rub.
2023 Wilier Rave SLR
2022 Wilier Filante SLR
2021 Cannondale Scalpel Carbon 2
2022 Wilier Filante SLR
2021 Cannondale Scalpel Carbon 2
The Specialized Tarmac SL6 would match your criteria, but it's either too long or too low.
The Émonda SLR 54cm would fit in H2 and be the lightest choice - but with worst aerodynamics (the strongly sloped top tube causes a larger "frontal area").
What brakes do you want to use? I like the Dura Ace but I am a SRAM Red guy and the non series DM brake is 320g... So there would be eeBrake and Bontrager Pro, but both have the charm of a scaffold.
If you skip direct mount brakes there are also Cannondale SuperSix Evo II 54cm, Rose X-lite Four and Six 55cm and Orbea Orca OMR 53cm...
The Émonda SLR 54cm would fit in H2 and be the lightest choice - but with worst aerodynamics (the strongly sloped top tube causes a larger "frontal area").
What brakes do you want to use? I like the Dura Ace but I am a SRAM Red guy and the non series DM brake is 320g... So there would be eeBrake and Bontrager Pro, but both have the charm of a scaffold.
If you skip direct mount brakes there are also Cannondale SuperSix Evo II 54cm, Rose X-lite Four and Six 55cm and Orbea Orca OMR 53cm...
I think the current gen regular brakes are just as good as direct mount, which is another useless standard in my opinion.
Kuota Kougar: https://www.kuota.be/nl/fietsen/race/kuota-kougar
If he realizes that he wants something he doesn't really need, it might.
Tour Mag. also proclaimed the latest Shimano brakes (which are really "fat", one has to admit) to be as good as their direct mount counterparts...
Tour Mag. also proclaimed the latest Shimano brakes (which are really "fat", one has to admit) to be as good as their direct mount counterparts...
M too low, L to long...bruno2000 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 2:02 pmKuota Kougar: https://www.kuota.be/nl/fietsen/race/kuota-kougar
The Emonda SLR is on special offer in Europe direct from Trek for 2400. Yes, not aero...but super light.
The Bontrager Speed Pro brakes are light, powerful and have great modulation - eeBrakes are still the best though
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The Bontrager Speed Pro brakes are light, powerful and have great modulation - eeBrakes are still the best though
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2019 Trek Emonda SLR, SRAM eTap groupset, eeBrakes G4, Berk Lupina Saddle, TUNE Schwarzbrenner 60mm wheelset - 6.4 kg
Why is the 2019 model on offer and not the 2018 model?
I concur, Direct Mount R9100 is the bees knees!calleking wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 9:30 amI've been on an Aeroad CF SLX and I'm now on a Tarmac S-Works SL6. The SL6 is obviously more comfy. I ran/run ENVE SES 4.5 on both with, for me, no clearance issues. The front rim inner width is 18.5mm and 27mm outer. The Aeroad clears ~28mm true tyre width on the rear but probably not more due to the cutout. It all depends on the tyre as some grow in height more than others. I'm pretty sure I could run 30mm true tyre width on the SL6 as there's more room in the rear. The calipers were not an issue.
As far as Direct-Mount brakes go. They're absolutely amazing and one of the reasons I didn't want to switch to discs on my road bike. The terrain where I live is flat with some hills. I have other bikes with disc brakes and they're great but Direct-Mount brakes are on another level compared to standard single bolt brakes. People keep talking about the modulation of disc brakes but the modulation on DM is also very good. They are easier to adjust and do maintenance on. Disc brakes can be a bit fiddly to set up without any rub.
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