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Photo ©:
Ben Atkins
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Radical new shape for Team Columbia
By Ben Atkins
The slender top tube intersects
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Huge amounts of carbon
around the bottom bracket
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The seat tube closely profiles
the rear disc wheel
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The rear end of the prototype
frame
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Straight aero seat stays
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Kirchen's down tube is
deep but slender
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The huge head tube area
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Team Columbia's Kim Kirchen came to this year's Tour de France as a
genuine podium contender after finishing seventh in last year's event
and capturing a difficult mountain win (he was awarded victory in stage
15 from Foix to Loudenvielle-Le Louron after Alexandre Vinokourov was
disqualified). The Luxembourger has made another good showing so far
this year: he captured the maillot jaune after stage 6 and held
it for the next four days but fell back to seventh overall after stage
10's difficult finish atop Hautacam.
Kirchen currently lies in eleventh place in the general classification
but is almost certain to crack back into the top-ten after Saturday's
53km-long race against the clock with the help of a slippery new time
trial bike from team sponsor Giant. According to the Taiwanese company,
the radical-looking - and as yet unnamed - machine is "the fastest UCI-approved
TT bike ever in the history of competitive cycling." A bold statement
indeed, but one that Kirchen's superb second-place performance in stage
4's 29.5km time trial adds some weight to.
Giant collaborated with UK design consultancy firm Velo Science to
create the new shape which utilizes a number of innovative aero features.
Even so, much of the frame actually resembles Cervélo's P3 benchmark
with its deep aero-section down tube and vertically oriented seat tube
that closely shadows the rear wheel. Likewise, almost rectangular section
chain stays hug the rear tyre before flaring out slightly to envelop
the hub and contrastingly slender aero section seat stays perform a
similar task further up.
It is the front end of the bike though that really catches the eye
and sets this out from every other one out there. The bladed composite
fork and the hugely aerofoiled head tube that it fits into are not in
themselves particularly unusual but the stem and bar system attached
and integrated into them certainly are.
The stem top fits snugly to the fork and its lines flow almost seamlessly
into the top tube which has been raised significantly so that they are
positioned inline with each other. Down below the stem, a huge wedge
shape - much like the bow of a ship - extends down to the fork crown
and completely hides the front of the head tube from view.
This wedge is Giant's take on cleaning up the lines on the front of
the bike, a place where exposed gear and brake cables can apparently
lay waste to a lot of wind tunnel development. Cables pass internally
through the base bars and extensions then enter the bow-shaped wedge.
They then pass through the fork and under the brake caliper - between
it and the front tyre - before disappearing into the underside of the
down tube. The cables are then passed internally before emerging once
more close to the point where they are needed.
Kirchen's bar set up is also made in-house by Giant, and is part of
the same project. These take the form of huge, flat, wing-shaped outer
sections with round section outer grips. Surprisingly, Giant has not
included integrated brake levers here - perhaps these will come later
in the project - but instead Columbia is using minimalist bar end levers
from Vision. PRO, who supplies Columbia with its regular handlebars
and stems, also provides the extensions and elbow pads.
The result of all of this extensive shaping and wind tunnel testing
is, at least according to Giant and Velo Science, "one of the lowest
drag coefficients in the world".
As a rider on a Shimano sponsored team, Kirchen's groupset - besides
the custom scissor-style brake calipers (made by Prime Aero in Taiwan)
and Vision levers - is entirely Dura-Ace although all of the team's
time trial bikes are built up with the established 7800 version. Kirchen's
bike was also set up with a Zipp Sub9 rear disc and 404 front wheel
(both with 22mm-wide Schwalbe Ultremo tubulars) when we caught up with
it although we'll have to wait until Saturday to see what he ultimately
decides to run that day. .
Finishing things off is a Selle Italia SLR saddle, which - as is usual
these days - has had its nose chopped in order to keep within the UCI's
regulations regarding its position in relation to the bottom bracket.
Kirchen's time - as well as positive feedback from Team Columbia's
women's arm while racing at the Giro d'Italia Femminile - would suggest
that Giant has successfully created a very fast bike. Saturday's deciding
time trial will provide one more real-world test in this year's Tour
de France but come next month, Kirchen will hope that the frame will
carry him to Olympic success, too.
Photography
For a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here
Images by
Ben Atkins/Cyclingnews.com
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