Time trial bike
bigricky
Posts: 92
Hi All,
i am thinking of buying a basic time trial bike, mainly just for club 10s and some other distances ie 25s 50s and sporting rides. should i go for one or stick with my Madone 4.5 with clip on aero bars? is it worth buying one?will i see a big difference in times?
i am thinking of buying a basic time trial bike, mainly just for club 10s and some other distances ie 25s 50s and sporting rides. should i go for one or stick with my Madone 4.5 with clip on aero bars? is it worth buying one?will i see a big difference in times?
0
Comments
-
you will see a big difference going to clip ons or a dedicated TT bike in my experience. Knocked off a minute over a 10 by going to clip ons, then another 2 mins going to a proper TT bike (disc wheel and 40mm front as well), mind you the bike I was coming from was a cheap 170 quid bike that flexed like anything!
I wuld say if you already are set on TTs and like them go get a TT bike.
If your not sure, get some clip ons (what I did) and ride till you decide you want to get a TT bike. Would suggest a adjustable stem if your going to get clip ons, so may disagree but the rational I follow is this. If you want to get low for TT bars, you mayhave to remove the spacers or flip the stem, however this may then not be a good position for normal road riding and would be a pain switching all the time. With an adjustable stem, you can quickly change it.
Not sure what you mean by sporting rides? Sportiffs? if so don't think they are allowed but I may misunderstand or be wrong!0 -
by sporting i mean hilly time trials, plenty of hills here in the Isle Of Man !!0
-
If the tts are very hilly stick with the road bike. However the biggest difference with a tt bike is that you can get much lower. I've got a Planet X and its great. Its pretty heavy (no disc) but I would still use it for most tt courses.0