Chris Froome Chats ...
 

[Closed] Chris Froome Chats about his new bike

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and is not 100% enthused by discs (2.30) or his bars

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 9:21 pm
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Has anyone told him it's the wrong size yet?

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 9:23 pm
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Cue lots of consternation as disc brake fan-bois try to explain why multi-TDF winner Chris Froome is WRONG 😁

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:13 pm
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The proportions are fugly, like most new carbon bikes.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:28 pm
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Cue lots of consternation as disc brake fan-bois try to explain why multi-TDF winner Chris Froome is WRONG 😁

🙃

TBF, I am wondering why his disc brakes are "rubbing all the time" do road discs do that?

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:31 pm
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Really fascinating hearing him on disc brakes from a pro perspective. Lots of things he says about them don't matter for regular riders of course, but these guys are obviously super picky about stet up.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:34 pm
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It's a bit "dissy" of his new employer's gear, isn't it ?

I wonder if it's part of a marketing strategy - new dura-ace comes out, Froome says "wow - this is it ! All my reservations have been answered, and I've never ridden a stiffer bar than the 150% improved one"

makes you think

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:36 pm
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He should have stayed at Ineos then where he could ride a heavy rim-braked bike that is prone to cracking and incapable of avoiding walls.

Isn't this just a repeat of the myths that were doing the rounds 2-3 years ago when all the other teams went onto disc brakes?

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:41 pm
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[ video]

]

If i could get embedding to work from youtube, this from Peak Torque is an interesting take on it

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:42 pm
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 I am wondering why his disc brakes are “rubbing all the time” do road discs do that?

Mine don't, but maybe that's because I'm not warping the discs. I'm happy that they always work, always slow me down dry or wet.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:43 pm
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My brakes don't rub yet, 3 months in.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:44 pm
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I wondered about his disk comments too. Never really seen many comments on here about Shimano xtr/xt brakes rubbing or warping. You’d think that dura ace/ultegra road brakes are designed with similar tech.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:47 pm
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Maybe if I was as fast & powerful at him then my frame would flex enough for the pads to rub 🤷‍♂️

Overheating & warped discs don't happen in any other sport & disc brakes are nothing new. So, perhaps his sponsors are a little behind in disc technology.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:55 pm
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Cue lots of consternation as disc brake fan-bois try to explain why multi-TDF winner Chris Froome is WRONG

It's not saying they're bad, he was quite open minded about it - he said he's not sold on them. He reported issues, which is fair enough - what's not clear is if it's just those brakes/rotors or if it's just that particular set. We know as MTBers that you can have issues. He does use rotors that most of us probably don't, to be fair.

They certainly work for me, I'm not going back. And of course it's not because of anything the pros do, it's cos I'm an MTBer and the idea of going back to rim brakes seems absurd!

You’d think that dura ace/ultegra road brakes are designed with similar tech.

As above they aren't Shimano, they're Swiss Stop. That said, they aren't some super light thing, they look pretty robust.

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 10:59 pm
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Posted : 08/02/2021 11:03 pm
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Ah hadn’t clocked the callipers and disks were Swiss stop. The odd occasion I get rubbing disks it drives me mad. Imagine you’re a pro monitoring every decimal place of a watt!!

 
Posted : 08/02/2021 11:07 pm
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the calipers aren't SwissStop. Not on that bike next to him anyway (see 2:36).

Sounds like a setup issue, or maybe the SwissStop rotors don't play nicely with the DA calipers??

More interesting to me is reverting back to round rings. As an oval user if I go back to round they feel awful. I almost feel this isn't true, and he's just saying it to sell some Factor bikes...

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 9:57 am
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I've had discs warp and develop rubs during rides, maybe Froome and I have the same (bad?) braking habits? (at last! something in common with a pro rider 😀 ).

In fact, I've had discs fresh out the box develop wibbles just after bedding in, e.g. twenty hard almost-stops on a steep hill but never coming to a complete halt.

The nearest experience I could relate to would be coming off a very steep and braking heavy descent (the road beside Bracklin falls, steep twisty tarmac with loose gravelly marbles on top, you basically never want to build up any speed). The disc developed a wibble and/or a piston didn't retract fully, and I spent the next 20km time-trialling along the road with a constant audible tsk-tsk-tsk as I was riding. For me it was just an irritation but imagine you were an actual pro soloing away from the group and you had that little psychological water torture going on, imagining each 'tsk' as shaving another 1/2 watt or something.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:07 am
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Think I saw him saying somewhere that he was looking forward to trying his wonky rings with the ceramic speed jockey wheels etc.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:08 am
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That physics video is all well and good, but it's not fair to say that "discs don't work that well on a road bike". They do, for me - there's no question. And Froome also says that the stopping power is great in wet and dry so there's clearly an element of 'working well' happening here.

Of course I'm not doing alpine descents, but I do have steep fast hills, so I'm going to try and see if I can get my cheapo discs to start rubbing.

I'm also quite curious as to what sort of difference the Shimano cooling fins and vanes make. There's obviously a lot more heat being generated so such things would seem to make much more of a difference. TBH if I were on Alpine descents regularly I'd want fins and vanes on my bike. The SwissStop discs and presumably pads have neither of those things.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:10 am
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I’d imagine if you’re doing 5-6 mile alpine descents going the sorts of speeds these guys go, on 140/160mm discs, they’re probs going to warp occasionally

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:39 am
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As above they aren’t Shimano, they’re Swiss Stop. That said, they aren’t some super light thing, they look pretty robust.

Ah hadn’t clocked the callipers and disks were Swiss stop

Pause it at 2:38 - the calliper is labelled Dura-Ace.

I’m also quite curious as to what sort of difference the Shimano cooling fins and vanes make

I reckon a fair bit - I suspect the shimano system has been carefully designed with thermal management in mind and if you take one component out of the equation it's likely to not work as well.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:52 am
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The longest descent I've done on a disk-braked road bike would be the one to Applecross. I had fully loaded panniers etc too. There's a fair bit of braking involved as it's singletrack, narrow, twisty and there's oncoming traffic too. I doubt I set any speed records but, OTOH, my rotors were fine 😊

Surely all these pro roadies weigh so little that the brakes don't have much to do? Perhaps we'll see the introduction of aero drag braking systems.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:53 am
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aero drag braking systems.

Maybe they will introduce a wing suit, just fold your arms in to go fast, out to slow down. No need for brakes at all 🤣

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 10:57 am
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He says the rotors and discs are Swiss Stop. I'm assuming he got a bit confused and meant rotors and pads.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:11 am
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There’s a fair bit of braking involved as it’s singletrack, narrow, twisty and there’s oncoming traffic too. I doubt I set any speed records but, OTOH, my rotors were fine

If it's singletrack you probably weren't going very fast so the instantaneous thermal load on your brakes would have been less than someone having to go from 70kph to 30kph in a few seconds.

I've got a right turn half way down an 80kph bit of road on my local loop. The problem is I know it's coming up, so I haven't the balls to leave it really late and slam on. But however late I leave it, there's always bags of power in reserve and I could have left it later. But of course my brakes are cold going into it, it's not the 15th such stop in a row on a 35C day.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:12 am
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Is that bike his retirement present? 😉

I’ve had discs warp and develop rubs during rides, maybe Froome and I have the same (bad?) braking habits? (at last! something in common with a pro rider 😀

I thought you were banned from talking about disc brakes? 😉🤣😂

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:21 am
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I thought you were banned from talking about disc brakes?

Haha, that was just a new year's resolution, they're meant to be broken 😉

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:33 am
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Maybe they will stop him bitching and moaning about other people descending faster than him now?

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:36 am
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Maybe they will stop him bitching and moaning about other people descending faster than him now?

Froome is one of the better descenders from what I've seen, he's not pretty and flowing in a Cancellara way but he's certainly not slow and I've not seen him lose time on the downhill sections unlike Richie Porte for instance.

That they're using aftermarket pads seems odd, the fins are clearly there on the Shimano pads for a reason, I wonder if we'll see him moving to stock pads in the future.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:40 am
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suspect the shimano system has been carefully designed with thermal management marketing and profit in mind

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:47 am
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How embarrassing that they spelt his name wrong too. Must feel like he plays for a Sunday league football team where everyone has a y added to their surname.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:59 am
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Froome is one of the better descenders from what I’ve seen, he’s not pretty and flowing in a Cancellara way but he’s certainly not slow and I’ve not seen him lose time on the downhill sections unlike Richie Porte for instance.

He does seem to have improved in recent years. I was referring to the tour a few years (2013?) back where he criticised Contador et al for attacking him on a descent. Its what put me off him a rider.... your either racing or not.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 11:59 am
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That they’re using aftermarket pads seems odd, the fins are clearly there on the Shimano pads for a reason, I wonder if we’ll see him moving to stock pads in the future.

Fins are there for marketing. Fins wont dissipate heat instantaneously.

Because of the weight weenie obsession and prolific shit engineering that goes on, the brakes will fade, unless the discs are thicker (see ebike rotors) and larger, along with a bigger braking surface, then the issue wont go away.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:07 pm
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I’d imagine if you’re doing 5-6 mile alpine descents going the sorts of speeds these guys go, on 140/160mm discs, they’re probs going to warp occasionally

Whereas with rim brakes it's just the tyres that fall off occasionally.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:10 pm
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My Ultegra discs rub like crazy in the wet. One trip through a big puddle results in 30 seconds of horrendous racket. I tend to agree with him in that there’s not enough clearance ‘twixt pad and rotor - I thought Shimano’s Servo-Wave thingummy was supposed to allow a bigger clearance by using a cam to get the piston through the gap with minimal lever throw?

Anyway, I’d rather take my chances with an overheated rotor than repeat the experience of a front wheel blow out on an alpine descent due to an overheated wheel rim.
That was a new shorts job.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:12 pm
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It's part of the Roadies philosophy, to completely disregard any technological advancememt that hasen't been developed from within the UCI regulations and road bike world.

Like he says, give it a few years and he'll forget he ever complained about it.

Personally, given the UCI weight limit on bikes, any bike having discs is an advantage over those that don't. If the UCI reduce the weight limit It'll be interesting to see who moves back to rim brakes.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:13 pm
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Because of the weight weenie obsession

it's kinda of understandable really no one wants to pay more for a heavier bike no matter how well it stops.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:16 pm
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no one wants to pay more for a heavier bike no matter how well it stops

Apart from most of the general public?

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:19 pm
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eh? what have ebikes got to do with it ?

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:21 pm
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How embarrassing that they spelt his name wrong too.

They did the same with that Bradle chap.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:25 pm
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That was a refreshing change for a product endorsement.

You can watch mtb videos all day long and the person will say its the best bike ever.

A new bike for him and:

Its too heavy

Too flexy

Brakes are crap

The new computer is erm 'interesting'

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:27 pm
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no one wants to pay more for a heavier bike no matter how well it stops

First time I tried disk brakes, that's exactly what I wanted to do. Same with dropper posts.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:27 pm
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That was a refreshing change for a product endorsement.

It's called "getting your excuses in early".

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:29 pm
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Personally, given the UCI weight limit on bikes, any bike having discs is an advantage over those that don’t. If the UCI reduce the weight limit It’ll be interesting to see who moves back to rim brakes.

You're right. JV and UAE both struggled in the last TDF.

Disc brakes don't work for the peloton for reasons that just aren't relevant to leisure riders (including british racers).

1. We don't have any long descents to create a thermal management issue.

2. Tiny amounts of rubbing, losing us <5W are unlikely to impact daily riding as nobody outside of the CTT clubs are really anywhere near the peak of marginal gains.

3. Weight is less important if you aren't racing up long climbs above 5%. Even less when you're 90kg rather than 58kg.

4. Shitty weather means carbon rim braking surfaces are disposable items. Professionals don't pay for new rims.

5. We don't have a car following us with spare wheels. So we ride clinchers not tubs, which means there is a risk of thermal rupture of tubes causing accidents.

As a result, fat dentists and account managers want discs. These people pay Shimano's wages. They want to feel important by association, so it's easier to make pros ride discs than it is to sell the argument that 'You aren't Pogacar, you don't need rim brakes'

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 12:36 pm
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it's not 'long descents' per se that create heat. It's dragging your brakes a lot, which requires lots of corners one after the other in short succession (or just bad technique).

Most alpine descents are mainly freewheeling (or even pedaling) on straights then braking into hairpins. You only brake into the hairpins, then you're off the brakes for all the straights.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 1:05 pm
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(or just bad technique).

Also something relevant to dentists but not to Julian Alaphillipe.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 1:13 pm
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He should have stayed at Ineos then where he could ride a heavy rim-braked bike that is prone to cracking and incapable of avoiding walls

But then again the best offer on the table / the only team that would pay his no doubt ridiculous wage demands was ISN, with their shit "heavy", "flexy" disc braked monstrosity of a road bike 😀

Also something relevant to dentists but not to Julian Alaphillipe.

Who rides a Spesh Tarmac SL7 with discs and is one of the best descenders in the Pro peleton.

Weight is less important if you aren’t racing up long climbs above 5%. Even less when you’re 90kg rather than 58kg.

If you take a look at this video, the weight thing isn't even an issue as for example Ritchie Porte's Trek Madone with discs is near as damn it the same weight as Adam Hansen's rim braked Ridley

GCN's 2019 bike weighing video

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 2:00 pm
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Fins wont dissipate heat instantaneously.

Obviously not, but the system will run cooler after a few seconds of braking, which is likely to be significant. The fins on the pad will help keep the calliper cool (although not the braking surface), and the fins on the disc will help it cool down a lot quicker between braking efforts.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 2:39 pm
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Most alpine descents are mainly freewheeling (or even pedaling) on straights then braking into hairpins. You only brake into the hairpins, then you’re off the brakes for all the straights.

Descending AdH many years ago, I noted several riders repairing punctures caused, I assume, by blowouts from dragging their caliper brakes and overheating the rims.

I had quite significant brake fade on my front disc brake (Hope RX4) recently, caused I think because I was following a bus down a long descent and was dragging my brakes on the straights. Obviously this didn't pose any risk of a blowout though.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:11 pm
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Who rides a Spesh Tarmac SL7 with discs and is one of the best descenders in the Pro peleton.

Seem to recall his brakes locking up completely in a race last year.

You aren’t Pogacar

I am Fatej Podgacar

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:14 pm
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it’s not ‘long descents’ per se that create heat. It’s dragging your brakes a lot, which requires lots of corners one after the other in short succession (or just bad technique).

I suspect that pro riders racing down road descents is a different game to amateurs out having a bit of fun off road. Their speeds on descents are frightening, they'll be bleeding off serious speed into hairpins. Braking from 40 mph to 20 will generate three times the heat as braking from 20 to zero. DH and enduro MTBs run huge rotors and bigger calipers because a few hundred grams is worth the reliability of heavier brakes. Pro roadies have to build their bikes down to the weight limit and will also be concerned over aero, so they want the smallest, most aerodynamic brakes possible.

As far as technique goes, I agree as far as people dragging their back brake because they are too scared to use the front goes, but pro racers expect to be able to race their gear hard and have it work. If they find that dragging their brakes makes them faster, the team needs to give them brakes that can deal with that.

This reminds me of touring car racing in the 1980s, when old style production cars like the V12 Jaguars were superceded by homologation specials like the BMW M3 and Sierra Cosworth. The old Jags were heavy, but they couldn't fit bigger brakes because they couldn't fit bigger wheels and tyres. I remember seeing Tom Walkinshaw or Win Percy or someone pitting and the brakes were on fire. It took the mechanics a couple of minutes to get it all cooled down and fit new rotors and pads. The TV commentator asked the team why they didn't drive the car within the limits of the brakes, and the response was that the drivers just expected the engineers to build a car that they could drive flat out for the whole race.

Same goes for pro racers on mountain descents. The team needs to give them brakes that they can abuse and not have to worry about overheating.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:15 pm
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Descending AdH many years ago, I noted several riders repairing punctures caused, I assume, by blowouts from dragging their caliper brakes and overheating the rims.

On one of the descents in the Etape du Tour, there were people popping tyres all over the place. I wondered what it was initially - thought someone might have put tacks on the road - but it was just an insanely hot day, a very steep descent and a definite mix of skill levels.

I was on aluminium Mavics (the Exalith coating) so thankfully less of an issue for me but I was wishing for discs that day.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:17 pm
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He's perhaps less concerned about the power and more just the irritation of the noise or the fact that it works when setup and then doesn't or doesn't in certain circumstances.

My commuter has an annoying habit of un-sorting itself out WRT to discs. All setup perfectly, first ride fine, second ride (wet) now not fine. Not rubbing enough to really slow the wheel, but there's a ching, ching, ching, noise. Why? What's now different?

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:20 pm
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Not rubbing enough to really slow the wheel, but there’s a ching, ching, ching, noise. Why? What’s now different?

Probably, the wet conditions lubed the piston seals (with water). The pistons reset themselves with very minimal clearance to the disk. That's how disk brakes auto adjust. A "ching, ching, ching" noise without dragging means they are perfectly adjusted.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:29 pm
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On one of the descents in the Etape du Tour, there were people popping tyres all over the place. I wondered what it was initially – thought someone might have put tacks on the road – but it was just an insanely hot day, a very steep descent and a definite mix of skill levels.

I was on aluminium Mavics (the Exalith coating) so thankfully less of an issue for me but I was wishing for discs that day.

In my case, it was about 6am on the way down to the start of La Marmotte, so it was still cold. I guess you generate some serious heat, which perhaps combined with poor technique and carbon rims only has one result.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 3:36 pm
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I know from comparing my brakes to a friends that ice tech rotors make a big difference in rotor temperature and that is for mtb rotors without the extra vanes and fins.

As previously mentioned the issues associated with dragging brakes won't affect pro riders, yes they're braking hard but they have time between those hard stops with no braking and high airflow to allow brakes to cool sufficiently. They would also have the option of running larger discs on alpine stages if they felt it necessary.

I find the argument between rim and disc funny in that I'm still on rim brakes that are around 8 years old having never changed the pads as I barely brake riding locally so discs seem a pointless upgrade, if I were riding big hills frequently then I'd definitely want the added power of discs.

 
Posted : 09/02/2021 5:21 pm
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TBF, I am wondering why his disc brakes are “rubbing all the time” do road discs do that?

Most road disc brakes aren't put through what Froome will put them through.

 
Posted : 10/02/2021 8:52 pm
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Surprised he’s not looking into how stiff the stem is for a few more watts! 🤔

 
Posted : 10/02/2021 10:14 pm
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Shimano GRX 810's are servo wave which gives you the bigger pad clearance and more power.

Will the new Dura race have servo wave?

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 2:44 am
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I guess you generate some serious heat

An 80 kg rider/bike on a 130 m vertical descent will generate about 100 kJ of heat that needs to be dissipated. That's enough energy to heat 1 kg of steel by about 250 degrees C. A pair of 6" rotors weighs roughly 250 g, so those would reach over 1000 degrees if they didn't have airflow to cool them. Steel melts at about 1 500 degrees, so riding down the Alps generates enough heat to literally melt steel rotors if the heat isn't dissipated.

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 3:06 am
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I honestly call BS on the whole thing. He sounds like someone stuck in a mindset and needing to vent. Because high end bikes can come in way under the 6.4kgs weight is never going to be an issue and in terms of aero in the real world ie not wind tunnel the width of your rims and body habitus makes the effect of 160mm or even 140 mm discs just about irrelevant. He's understandably going to take a while to get used to a new setup but I believe he will likely be faster on this bike overall than without discs. Maybe he just can't get over the move from an F12 to what the advertising gurus would want us to believe is simply less of an F1 car?

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 6:57 am
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I just think it's funny how nobody is willing to accept that one of the fastest road racers in the world maybe just doesn't need or particularly like disc brakes, it's like some sort of weird cult where someone has finally publicly said that they're just not that keen on kool-aid 😎

I believe he will likely be faster on this bike overall than without discs

How will they make him faster overall? You're going to say something about late braking into corners aren't you...

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 8:55 am
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I just think it’s funny how nobody is willing to accept that one of the fastest road racers in the world maybe just doesn’t need or particularly like disc brakes,

This reminds me of Alex Zanardi in F1. He just couldn't get on with carbon brakes so the Williams team tried to run steel brakes for him, which didn't seem to help. F1 teams use carbon brakes because they are better overall, drivers have to adapt to that. Froome's problems with disks seem to be that they are unfamiliar and he wants to stay with what he's used to. Disks have more consistent performance when its wet and can dissipate heat better than rim brakes. The weight penalty is irrelevant and the other issues seem to come down to hiring a mechanic who can set them up properly.

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 9:36 am
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Been riding ultegra disks for the best part of 4 years on my road bike. I've experienced a lot less rubbing on that than on my mtbs.

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 9:42 am
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I like discs on road bikes. Some people don't.

I like angel delight. Some people don't.

🤷

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 10:12 am
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I just think it’s funny how nobody is willing to accept that one of the fastest road racers in the world maybe just doesn’t need or particularly like disc brakes, it’s like some sort of weird cult where someone has finally publicly said that they’re just not that keen on kool-aid 😎

I kind of agree here. What gets me is that he doesn’t even say he doesn’t like them - he’s just acknowledging one of the shortcomings in the technology.

 
Posted : 14/02/2021 12:04 pm
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Here's Alex Dowsett a bit more upbeat about his new bike.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 2:29 pm
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I just think it’s funny how nobody is willing to accept that one of the fastest road racers in the world maybe just doesn’t need or particularly like disc brakes

The thing is Chris Froome is without doubt an amazing grand tour rider, but with all due respect, he's not winning races because of his exceptional bike handling and braking skills, is he? Plus he's happy enough to use oval chain rings despite them being more prone to dropping the chain, so he's possibly not the man to turn to for unbiased opinion on bike set-up. What works for him, may not be so good for someone else.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 2:53 pm
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This reminds me of Alex Zanardi in F1. He just couldn’t get on with carbon brakes so the Williams team tried to run steel brakes for him, which didn’t seem to help. F1 teams use carbon brakes because they are better overall, drivers have to adapt to that. Froome’s problems with disks seem to be that they are unfamiliar and he wants to stay with what he’s used to.

This kind of sensible discussion has no place in a debate about road discs! Get out!

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 2:59 pm
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he’s not winning races because of his exceptional bike handling and braking skills, is he

Stage 19 of the 2018 Giro springs to mind. Froome was taking time out of the chasers on every descent after he'd attacked. Roads that were a mix of dry/wet due to snow melt.

Admittedly some of the group behind weren't the best descenders, and they stuck together as a group to give themselves a better chance. But Froome is no mug when it comes to going downhill.

I'm not saying he's the best, but he's far from rubbish.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 3:03 pm
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This kind of sensible discussion has no place in a debate about road discs! Get out!

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 3:36 pm
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I’m not saying he’s the best, but he’s far from rubbish.

I didn't say he was rubbish. My point is what works for him works for him. It doesn't mean what doesn't work for him is rubbish, and it doesn't mean he's an expert on brakes. He's an expert at winning stage races.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 4:59 pm
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Now that it's outlawed to sit on the top tube and pedal, will we see dropper posts on road bikes?

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 5:38 pm
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If we do, I hope they get banned too.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 7:38 pm
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What's going on with the finish of the down tube on Dowsetts bike? In some shots from that video the bit between the "R" and the head tube looks like it's been dragged across the factory floor.

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 7:50 pm
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F1 teams use carbon brakes because they are better overall, drivers have to adapt to that. Froome’s problems with disks seem to be that they are unfamiliar and he wants to stay with what he’s used to.

But a massive proportion of the performance gains/losses in F1 come in the braking phase, not to mention overtakes. I’ll say that again. Overtakes.

If the brakes are quantifiably better but have a different feel then fine, force your drivers adapt. You’ll likely find the most successful ones are pushing for the change and will be eager to make the adaptation.

In cycling the overwhelming proportion of the difference between riders is their climbing (not braking there). Or their aero for breakaways. Or their sprinting. Brakes largely irrelevant for those too.

Yes, there’s a little in it on the descents, yes some riders are better (braver), and froome did a great job on that Giro stage*. But really they’re not really a gain for winning bike races.

But they’re great for losing you bike races. Since the neutral support don’t support disc users, you can be left wanting (like Richie on last years tour, and he was lucky to get back on - mostly because he’s a good bloke and the riders on other teams seem to like him!)

Until you can get a wheel from the neutral support I think they only hurt a rider’s chances.

I should say that I understand they’re a rolling advert, and are paid to ride things. And that I now have discs on all my bikes, and wouldn’t go back. But that I understand that one might not want them on a race bike if you can do more than 6Wpkg.

*biggest issue was the other riders waiting for each other. And not realising that froome was fuelled, motivated and *able* to smash all 80k remaining. I think it’s the best ride in a stage race I’ve ever seen. But that brakes had nothing to do with it!

 
Posted : 19/02/2021 9:17 pm
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I find it quite odd that Froome is not in either Paris Nice or Tirreno Adriatico ISN rosters!

 
Posted : 07/03/2021 5:41 pm
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Posted : 08/04/2021 2:25 am
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^^ Interesting video that.👍

 
Posted : 08/04/2021 4:55 am
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