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Photo ©:
Ben Atkins
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Is this the bike that will win the Tour?
By Ben Atkins in La Toussuire, France
The head on the integrated
seatpost
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Like the other top Ridley
frames
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The Helium weighs a claimed
900g for the medium size
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The top tube joins the
seat tube
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The triangular section
down tube
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… but a pair of FSA jockey
wheels
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Campagnolo's C10 Record
chain
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Evans has a steel and titanium
Record cassette
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With last year's winner and third-placed rider Alberto Contador and
Levi Leipheimer (Astana) both forced out of this year's Tour de France,
2007 runner-up Cadel Evans now finds himself the overall favourite as
the riders depart from Brest on July 5.
Evans' team, Silence-Lotto, is somewhat of a rarity in that it aims
to win on all fronts: from the high-octane sprinting in the spring classics
all the way through to overall victory in the Grand Tours. As such,
team bike sponsor Ridley needs to supply the team with a wide variety
of machines to suit each rider's individual aims and characteristics.
Where the sprinters and classics riders like fellow Australian Robbie
McEwen and Belgian Leif Hoste typically ride the company's powerhouse
Noah frame, all-rounder Evans prefers the lighter weight Helium as the
road heads skywards.
Ridley launched a redesigned Helium at the end of last season, just
in time for Evans' overall ProTour victory. Much of the bulk around
last year's bottom bracket has been shaved away and the new head tube
is full-carbon, right down to the headset bearing races. Even though
the new frame is lighter than the previous incarnation, Ridley claims
it's also more rigid thanks to more efficient use of the remaining material
and more careful selection of carbon fibre types.
The Helium's more rounded tubes look far different from the deep aero
tubes of the recently overhauled Noah but the two frames share a number
of features nonetheless. Both use a fully integrated seatpost for modestly
lighter weight and a firmer pedaling platform as well as a tapered-and-oversized
1 1/8"-to-1 1/2" front end for more precise handling. According to Evans,
the slightly curved forks were personally selected by both himself and
McEwen over Ridley's more commonly used straight-bladed models and so
those were the ones that the company ultimately decided to spec as standard.
Despite weighing a claimed 900g for the medium size with an uncut mast
(Evans' small-sized frame is even lighter), Ridley claims that its tests
show that the Helium is "the most durable lightweight carbon bike on
the market". Not surprisingly, Evans appreciates the reliability, saying
that it's no good building something 200g lighter and then having to
change it halfway up the mountain because it's broken.
Having said that, the Australian's bike tipped the Cyclingnews
scales at a barely-legal 6.81kg (15.01lb) without the benefit of weight-weenie
extras. The full 10-speed Campagnolo Record groupset is only interrupted
by a pair of smoother-spinning (and slightly lighter) FSA jockey wheels
with ceramic bearings. Standard 53- and 39-toothed chainrings on the
Record Ultra Torque chainset and a fairly wide-ranged 11-25T cassette
provide Evans with a good descending and sprinting gear at one end of
the range and a comfortable climbing one at the other.
Like most Campagnolo-sponsored riders in the peloton, Evans has a pair
of Record Ergopower levers with those distinctive red graphics that
show they have a slightly stiffer action than standard. With the recent
launch of Campagnolo's new
11-speed groupsets, this will presumably be the last season we'll
see this current-generation lever shape among the top pros (although
a number of holdouts lingered after the last shape change several years
ago). It may even be possible that some will be riding the upcoming
Tour de France with the new components but we'll have to wait and see.
Campagnolo also supplies Silence-Lotto with wheels, and its Hyperon
Ultras are some of the lightest available. With carbon-bodied hubs and
full-carbon rims they are a claimed 1120g per pair for the tubular version
that Evans uses. The team uses 21mm-wide Vredestein Fortezza Pro Tricomp
tubular tyres, which at 270g each compare favourably with most of the
other brands out there in terms of weight.
Team bars and stems are provided by Oval Concepts, a company better
known for its time trial and triathlon cockpit components and unique
Jetstream forks. Evans' bits are slightly unusual in that the handlebar
clamp diameter is 26.0mm rather than the oversized 31.8mm that has fast
become the norm industry-wide. The larger diameter isn't necessary according
to Oval's Morgan Nicol, who insists it came about mostly because other
companies had difficulties making a bar that was strong and light enough
with the standard size. Regardless, the smaller diameter components
are slightly lighter and so the entire Silence-Lotto team (as well as
the Slipstream-Chipotle boys) is outfitted as such.
This Ridley Helium carried Evans to second place in last month's Dauphiné
Libéré, just 39 seconds behind winner Alejandro Valverde (Caisse
d'Epargne). Come the Tour's finish at the end of July, the ProTour champion
will be hoping that his greater consistency and experience over the
more grueling three weeks will help to reverse that result in Paris.
If all goes according to plan, Evans will not only move up a step on
the podium but will also go down as the first Aussie ever to win.
PhotographyFor a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here
Images by
Ben Atkins/Cyclingnews.com
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