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James Huang/Cyclingnews.com
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The Chicken soars in France
By James Huang
The Era Composite uses
a full carbon fiber base.
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The rear rim includes an
offset spoke bed.
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The rear hub includes a
titanium freehub body.
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The Extreme-C foregoes
the C50's four-lobed
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…in favor of lighter round
tubes for the main triangle.
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Colnago's Star Carbon fork
graces the front end
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The bottom bracket shell
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Integrated handlebars are
not everyone's preference
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Danish Rabobank rider Michael Rasmussen is having what is perhaps the
best Tour de France of his career. After breaking away early in Stage
8, the two-time maillot à pois rouges winner shed his companions with
18km remaining and rode alone into the finish at Tignes to take the
victory for the day as well as his first maillot jaune.
'The Chicken from Tølløse' had previously won two mountain stages,
first in Mulhouse two years ago, and then at La Toussuire in 2006. As
one of the ProTour's most renowned climbing specialists, Rasmussen is
likely more aware than most of the key to victory in the big mountains:
maximizing power-to-weight ratio. Rasmussen certainly pays plenty of
attention to the first half of that equation but is decidedly better
known for his passionate fervor about the second half. Rasmussen himself
stands 1.75m tall (5'9") but weighs just 60kg (132lb).
The former mountain bike world champion is equally driven to shave
every allowable gram from his climbing machines and the Colnago Extreme-C
he has used thus far adheres tightly to that edict. Framebuilding legend
Ernesto Colnago first developed the Extreme-C specifically for the Rabobank
team for the 2004 TdF as a purpose-built tool for the l'Alpe D'Huez
time trial, but Rasmussen was so taken by its overall abilities that
he has used it ever since.
The Extreme-C is a full-carbon tube-and-lug frame like Colnago's more
all-purpose C50 but substitutes that model's trademark four-lobed main
tubes and unique HP chain stays for more conventional (and lighter)
round tubes and oversized rear stays. Frame weights are claimed to be
sub-1kg for a "medium sloping size", but Rasmussen's larger non-sloping
frame is likely to be just slightly heavier.
Note earlier that we mentioned that Rasmussen shaves every allowable
gram from his bike, not every possible gram. While his complete Extreme-C
could easily be lighter, Rasmussen is unfortunately limited to the 6.8kg
minimum set by the UCI which is now rather easily attained. Gone are
the days of fitting titanium hardware kits, but Rasmussen definitely
makes sure that his bike pegs that figure just so when the race heads
skywards.
Much of his equipment and componentry is decidedly standard, including
the stock Shimano Dura-Ace group, but there are still a few standouts.
Rabobank claims that Rasmussen's Extreme-C is a standard Colnago frame,
but notably absent is a second water bottle mount (Rasmussen is never
seen with more than one bottle; two would be too heavy!). Naturally,
the Chicken apparently relies on his team radio to supply distance and
speed information as he runs without a computer of any sort.
His Extreme-C is also fitted with a prototype carbon fiber integrated
handlebar and stem from team sponsor PRO, a now-discontinued (and ultralight)
Selle San Marco Era composite saddle, and a pair of custom wheels built
with standard Dura-Ace hubs and relatively shallow Shimano carbon fiber
tubular rims. As seen here, Rasmussen's bike is actually just a hair
'heavy' at 6.9kg, but Rabobank mechanics had yet to fit the Dane's special
climbing wheels, which are also built using Shimano components but 100g
lighter to bring the total weight to "exactly 6.8kg." Somewhat surprisingly,
Rasmussen makes no other equipment changes for the key mountain stages.
Rasmussen may be limited to what he can do weight-wise (much to his
dismay, no doubt), but he at least makes sure that he rolls as quickly
and efficiently as possible. The front and rear hubs, bottom bracket,
derailleur pulleys, and even pedal spindles are fully equipped with
state-of-the-art SiN ceramic ball bearings supplied by CeramicSpeed.
So far, Rasmussen has comfortably held the general classification lead
through Stage 11 but if last year was any indication, the upcoming 54km
individual time trial on Saturday is likely to shake things up a bit.
Either way, this year's TdF is shaping up nicely for Rasmussen so far,
and it will certainly be exciting to see just how long he can hang on.
Photos
For a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here
Images by
James Huang/Cyclingnews.com
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