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ZIPP 30 COURSE TUBULAR DISC-BRAKE FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 30 COURSE TUBULAR DISC-BRAKE FRONT WHEEL

Zipp’s carbon-rimmed disc brake wheels have been crushing it at the elite level. Not only has Jeremy Powers taken them to the top of the domestic heap, but the Cannondale cyclocross team has been using them to nip at Powers’ heels and leave the rest of the cyclocross competition behind. The Zipp 30 Corse Tubular Disc-Brake Wheel is their first aluminum-rimmed disc-brake tubular, and it is for anyone who wants sew-ups but isn’t ready for the cost of carbon. This wheel works on road bikes, adventure bikes, cyclocross bikes, and even 29ers. Anywhere you have disc brakes and want a strong, light, aero, reliable, aluminum tubular rim to hold up and shape your tires. The rim possesses a bead shape that makes the wheel tubeless-ready. The shape, with a 25mm exterior width and 26mm depth takes its shape cues from Zipp’s 202 Firecrest Carbon Clincher. The depth is paired with the width for increased air volume inside the tire, which means you can run lower pressure for greater comfort and still net out lower rolling resistance. When the rim cuts through the wind, it does so with very little effort, and the depth has little effect on crosswind stability. The hub set found here, called 77/177D, are already found on Zipp 202 and 303 Firecrest disc-brake wheels. The hubs are designed to be versatile. They have six-bolt mounting for rotors. They come with a disc-brake specific quick release, but the skewer and the hub end caps can easily be pulled by hand and swapped for thru-axle endcaps. Thus you can run either 12x100mm or 15x100mm in front and either 12x135mm or 12x142mm in the back. The axle itself has a 17mm diameter. Because of these needs, Zipp eliminated bearing pre-load and also improved the bearing shielding. These hubs take less work to maintain and roll just fine after your epic muddy cx race. All the same, the spokes are Sapim’s CX-Ray, which are the most aero spokes around, and will save you time every second of the ride. The wheels are sold separately. Each wheels comes with quick release hub end caps, thru-axle hub end caps, and Zipp skewer. When you buy the rear wheel version, it comes with either a Campagnolo-compatible 9/10/11-speed cassette body or a Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body with a 1.85mm spacer to run nine- or ten-speed cassettes. These can be swapped without re-dishing the wheel, and both can be pulled in favor of a SRAM XD driver body for even wider range of gearing. The 30 Course Tubular Disc-Brake is Zipp’s do-it-all tubular wheelset....

Bicycle Wheel Frame Zipp 

213 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

02/08/2021
Nouveau

ZIPP 30 COURSE CLINCHER DISC-BRAKE FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 30 COURSE CLINCHER DISC-BRAKE FRONT WHEEL

Zipp has been building disc-brake-specific wheels for years. Some of the earliest versions were built for the Cannondale cyclocross team and Jeremy Powers. These elite test mules helped identify strengths and weaknesses of initial designs and rode the way for the Zipp 30 Course Disc-Brake clincher. This wheel works on road bikes, adventure bikes, cyclocross bikes, and even 29ers. Anywhere you have disc brakes and want a strong, light, aero, reliable, aluminum rim to hold up and shape your tires. The rim possesses a bead shape that makes the wheel tubeless-ready. The shape, with a 25mm exterior width, 21mm internal width and 26mm depth takes its shape cues from Zipp’s 202 Firecrest Carbon Clincher. The depth is paired with the width for increased air volume inside the tire, which means you can run lower pressure for greater comfort and still net out lower rolling resistance. When the rim cuts through the wind, it does so with very little effort, and the depth has little effect on crosswind stability. The hub set found here, called 77/177D, are already found on Zipp 202 and 303 Firecrest disc-brake wheels. The hubs are designed to be versatile. They feature six-bolt mounting for rotors. They come with a disc-brake specific quick release, but the skewer and the hub end caps can easily be pulled by hand and swapped for thru-axle endcaps. Thus you can run either 12x100mm or 15x100mm in front and either 12x135mm or 12x142mm in the back. The axle itself has a 17mm diameter. Because of these needs, Zipp eliminated bearing pre-load and also improved the bearing shielding. These hubs take less work to maintain and roll just fine after your epic muddy cx race. They’re laced with Sapim’s aero CX-Ray spokes for road speed. The wheels are sold separately. Each wheels comes with quick release hub end caps, thru-axle hub end caps, Zipp skewer, Zipp rim tape, and Zipp tubeless valve. When you buy the rear wheel version, it comes with either a Campagnolo-compatible 9/10/11-speed cassette body or a Shimano/SRAM-compatible cassette body with a 1.85mm spacer to run nine- or ten-speed cassettes. These can be swapped without re-dishing the wheel, and both can be pulled in favor of a SRAM XD driver body for even wider range of gearing. The 30 Course Clincher Disc-Brake is Zipp’s do-it-all clincher wheelset for the rotor crowd....

Bicycle Wheel Frame Zipp 

213 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

02/08/2021
Nouveau

ZIPP 202 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL
ZIPP 202 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER REAR WHEEL

When you’re looking for an ultra-light, aero, climbing disc-brake wheel, the one you’ll turn to is the Zipp 202 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher. This is shallow, wide rim, that is best for those times when gravitational resistance is highest, and still has the aero advantages that will increase your speed when gravitational resistance is lowest, and all other times as well. Zipp, when they decided to focus on building disc brake-specific wheels, looked at not only what they could do for the rim, but what they could do with the bikes the wheels go in. For the first part, they knew that without the need for a brake track, they could extend their dimpling all the way to the end of the rim, as they did. For the second, they realized that most road bikes with disc brakes come with enough clearance for 28mm tires, so they designed with those in mind. With the dimpling they molded their SawTooth pattern into the exterior walls. As you should know by now, SawTooth is a design of indents molded into the outside rim walls that is comprised of twelve nodes. These are designed to start working for you at speeds of 20mph and then work better when faster. They essentially change the behavior of the wind around the rim to minimize side wind pressure on the rim in crosswinds, thus making the wheel more stable at high speeds. They also tweaked the rim shape, keeping the 32mm depth the 202 is known for, but increasing the max width of the rim to 28.9mm. The result is that the tire width that is most aerodynamic is 28mm. You can go wider for rough- and off-road adventures, but probably won’t want to go narrower than 25mm. The interior of the rim has been changed as well. the internal width is 21mm, and the side walls have ridges that help hold the tire in place when pressure is low. This is to improve the interface with tubeless tire beads. No burps when running wide tires at low pressures. Factory-applied tubeless rim tape finishes the rim package. You can run these wheels with tubed tires; you’ll just need to remove the valve stem from the rim. Thanks to the need to make the rim sidewalls strong enough to handle the pressure of clincher tires, these carbon rims are super-strong. Stronger than aluminum rims, so worry not about their durability. They are race light, but training wheel tough. Sapim CX-Ray J-Bend spokes are used both front and rear to lace the rim to the hub. These spokes are light, aero, and stiff. 24 spokes, two-cross, both front and rear. These NSW wheels utilize Zipp’s Cognition hubs. The front features scalloped flanges for the spoke beds. J-bend spokes resist the twisting forces disc-braking can put on spokes. This results in less pressure on the spokes, increasing lateral stiffness and durability. The rear has a pawl design with an Axial Clutch, which reduces pawl drag by 50% when coasting, and with a 36-tooth engagement, you’re driving the wheel the moment you start pedaling. The disc-mounting method is Centerlock only. Lock ring not included. The hubs come with Zipp’s Tangente quick release skewers as well as hand-removable end caps to fit 100x12mm and 100x15mm thru-axles in front and 142x12mm rear thru-axles. The wheels weigh in at 1475g per set, 695g in front, 780g in back. The wheels, sold separately as front and rear, also come with a wheel bag, a Zipp tubeless valve factory-installed, valve core removal tool, Zipp Cognition Oil, and a freehub body spacer to take the 11-speed hub down to 10-speed if you need. The single wheel bags can be secured together if you have a pair. A SRAM/Shimano 11-speed cassette body is standard, though a SRAM XD-R driver can be swapped in. The Zipp 202 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher is the climbing wheel that will help your disc brake bike soar like an eagle both going up and down the mountain....

Bicycle Wheel Frame Zipp 

864 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

02/08/2021
Nouveau

ZIPP 202 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 202 NSW DISC TUBELESS CLINCHER FRONT WHEEL

When you’re looking for an ultra-light, aero, climbing disc-brake wheel, the one you’ll turn to is the Zipp 202 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher. This is shallow, wide rim, that is best for those times when gravitational resistance is highest, and still has the aero advantages that will increase your speed when gravitational resistance is lowest, and all other times as well. Zipp, when they decided to focus on building disc brake-specific wheels, looked at not only what they could do for the rim, but what they could do with the bikes the wheels go in. For the first part, they knew that without the need for a brake track, they could extend their dimpling all the way to the end of the rim, as they did. For the second, they realized that most road bikes with disc brakes come with enough clearance for 28mm tires, so they designed with those in mind. With the dimpling they molded their SawTooth pattern into the exterior walls. As you should know by now, SawTooth is a design of indents molded into the outside rim walls that is comprised of twelve nodes. These are designed to start working for you at speeds of 20mph and then work better when faster. They essentially change the behavior of the wind around the rim to minimize side wind pressure on the rim in crosswinds, thus making the wheel more stable at high speeds. They also tweaked the rim shape, keeping the 32mm depth the 202 is known for, but increasing the max width of the rim to 28.9mm. The result is that the tire width that is most aerodynamic is 28mm. You can go wider for rough- and off-road adventures, but probably won’t want to go narrower than 25mm. The interior of the rim has been changed as well. the internal width is 21mm, and the side walls have ridges that help hold the tire in place when pressure is low. This is to improve the interface with tubeless tire beads. No burps when running wide tires at low pressures. Factory-applied tubeless rim tape finishes the rim package. You can run these wheels with tubed tires; you’ll just need to remove the valve stem from the rim. Thanks to the need to make the rim sidewalls strong enough to handle the pressure of clincher tires, these carbon rims are super-strong. Stronger than aluminum rims, so worry not about their durability. They are race light, but training wheel tough. Sapim CX-Ray J-Bend spokes are used both front and rear to lace the rim to the hub. These spokes are light, aero, and stiff. 24 spokes, two-cross, both front and rear. These NSW wheels utilize Zipp’s Cognition hubs. The front features scalloped flanges for the spoke beds. J-bend spokes resist the twisting forces disc-braking can put on spokes. This results in less pressure on the spokes, increasing lateral stiffness and durability. The rear has a pawl design with an Axial Clutch, which reduces pawl drag by 50% when coasting, and with a 36-tooth engagement, you’re driving the wheel the moment you start pedaling. The disc-mounting method is Centerlock only. Lock ring not included. The hubs come with Zipp’s Tangente quick release skewers as well as hand-removable end caps to fit 100x12mm and 100x15mm thru-axles in front and 142x12mm rear thru-axles. The wheels weigh in at 1475g per set, 695g in front, 780g in back. The wheels, sold separately as front and rear, also come with a wheel bag, a Zipp tubeless valve factory-installed, valve core removal tool, Zipp Cognition Oil, and a freehub body spacer to take the 11-speed hub down to 10-speed if you need. The single wheel bags can be secured together if you have a pair. A SRAM/Shimano 11-speed cassette body is standard, though a SRAM XD-R driver can be swapped in. The Zipp 202 NSW Disc Tubeless Clincher is the climbing wheel that will help your disc brake bike soar like an eagle both going up and down the mountain....

Bicycle Wheel Frame Zipp 

672 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

02/08/2021
Nouveau

ZIPP 808 FIRECREST TRACK TUBULAR REAR WHEEL
ZIPP 808 FIRECREST TRACK TUBULAR REAR WHEEL

Zipp 808 Firecrest Track Tubulars are probably the fastest practical choice for the banked oval. Double discs on the track might be faster, but they’re harder to control, and much heavier. The 808 Firecrest Tubular rim you see here is the same as you’ll find on the road. The great thing about the 808s is they handle like much shallower wheels. The Firecrest shape is the secret. The blunt end and flattish profile not only reduce low pressure zones on the leeward side of the wheels, but through smart tuning, Zipp was able to move the focal point back, so that steering would be easier-which means less attention needs to be paid to riding fast and less arm strength needs to be used to hold the wheels in the direction you want them to go. The rim depth is 82mm deep with a max width of 27.5mm. The cross-section looks very much like a super-long U, with a blunt edge on the spoke side. And, with a tire installed, the leading and trailing edges seem nearly identical. This overall shape, and further enhanced by the ABLC dimple pattern means that even though the wheel appears very deep when slicing through a pure headwind (zero yaw), it appears relatively shallow when getting hit by a crosswind (higher yaw angles), which happens twice a lap on a tack. The result is that the wind almost sees the 808’s as disc wheels when you’re going straight, and sees 404’s or shallower when you go through the turns. Not only does this mean added speed overall, but it also means less arm strength and less focus to pilot the bike exactly where you want it to go. And accelerating wheels that weigh only 1805g per set is easier, all things being equal, than most of the commercially-available track hoops. Cool note: The exposed spoke nipples, which are liked because you can true the wheel without special tools and with the tire still glued on, are totally hidden from the wind when the tire is the leading edge. Those spokes are the fastest available, Sapim CX-Ray, which are thin blades capable of holding high spoke tension. Twenty radial spokes in front and 24 two-cross in back. The spokes are J-bends are laced to Zipp’s 333 track hub. The name is for a standard track length. The shells are made of 7075 aluminum alloy and feature solid flanges for stiffness and strength. Axles are 15mm in diameter and made from stainless steel. The axles run on sealed cartridge bearings, which are easy to service thanks to the wide wrench flats. Likewise, the axle nuts are tightened by a 6mm Allen key The rear hub has a larger drive-side flange. This allows Zipp to achieve equal tension on both the drive- and non-drive-side spokes, making the wheel stronger and stiffer. Weights are low, with the front weighing in at 215g and the rear 270g. The wheel is delivered with a Zipp valve extender designed to thread into valve stems that are at least 37mm long and feature a removable valve core. The Zipp 808 improves any bike its on. It can be paired with an 808, or with a shallower wheel in the front or a deeper wheel in the back, depending on your strengths, how you ride, and the conditions you ride in. There’s a slight chance that the 808 rear won’t fit between super-narrow chainstays found on some pursuit bikes. Check first. The Zipp 808 Firecrest Track Tubular is like having climbing wheels that outperform discs....

Bicycle Frame Wheel 

662 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

19/07/2021
Nouveau

ZIPP 808 FIRECREST TRACK TUBULAR FRONT WHEEL
ZIPP 808 FIRECREST TRACK TUBULAR FRONT WHEEL

Zipp 808 Firecrest Track Tubulars are probably the fastest practical choice for the banked oval. Double discs on the track might be faster, but they’re harder to control, and much heavier. The 808 Firecrest Tubular rim you see here is the same as you’ll find on the road. The great thing about the 808s is they handle like much shallower wheels. The Firecrest shape is the secret. The blunt end and flattish profile not only reduce low pressure zones on the leeward side of the wheels, but through smart tuning, Zipp was able to move the focal point back, so that steering would be easier-which means less attention needs to be paid to riding fast and less arm strength needs to be used to hold the wheels in the direction you want them to go. The rim depth is 82mm deep with a max width of 27.5mm. The cross-section looks very much like a super-long U, with a blunt edge on the spoke side. And, with a tire installed, the leading and trailing edges seem nearly identical. This overall shape, and further enhanced by the ABLC dimple pattern means that even though the wheel appears very deep when slicing through a pure headwind (zero yaw), it appears relatively shallow when getting hit by a crosswind (higher yaw angles), which happens twice a lap on a tack. The result is that the wind almost sees the 808’s as disc wheels when you’re going straight, and sees 404’s or shallower when you go through the turns. Not only does this mean added speed overall, but it also means less arm strength and less focus to pilot the bike exactly where you want it to go. And accelerating wheels that weigh only 1805g per set is easier, all things being equal, than most of the commercially-available track hoops. Cool note: The exposed spoke nipples, which are liked because you can true the wheel without special tools and with the tire still glued on, are totally hidden from the wind when the tire is the leading edge. Those spokes are the fastest available, Sapim CX-Ray, which are thin blades capable of holding high spoke tension. Twenty radial spokes in front and 24 two-cross in back. The spokes are J-bends are laced to Zipp’s 333 track hub. The name is for a standard track length. The shells are made of 7075 aluminum alloy and feature solid flanges for stiffness and strength. Axles are 15mm in diameter and made from stainless steel. The axles run on sealed cartridge bearings, which are easy to service thanks to the wide wrench flats. Likewise, the axle nuts are tightened by a 6mm Allen key The rear hub has a larger drive-side flange. This allows Zipp to achieve equal tension on both the drive- and non-drive-side spokes, making the wheel stronger and stiffer. Weights are low, with the front weighing in at 215g and the rear 270g. The wheel is delivered with a Zipp valve extender designed to thread into valve stems that are at least 37mm long and feature a removable valve core. The Zipp 808 improves any bike its on. It can be paired with an 808, or with a shallower wheel in the front or a deeper wheel in the back, depending on your strengths, how you ride, and the conditions you ride in. There’s a slight chance that the 808 rear won’t fit between super-narrow chainstays found on some pursuit bikes. Check first. The Zipp 808 Firecrest Track Tubular is like having climbing wheels that outperform discs....

Bicycle Frame Wheel 

560 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

19/07/2021
Nouveau

2021 BMC TIMEMACHINE 01 TRI ROAD FRAMESET
2021 BMC TIMEMACHINE 01 TRI ROAD FRAMESET

BMC’s timemachine is such a fast performer, BMC needed four years to find a way to improve it. The new timemachine 01 is faster with no wind, faster in crosswinds, and easier to fit. In addition, if you need to carry stuff on the bike, there’s more room for it with less aerodynamic penalty. And the frame is UCI-legal across their size run. The old timemachine had impressive straight line aerodynamics. The new timemachine improves on straight line aerodynamics, real world aerodynamics, and crosswind aerodynamics. The subA tube shapes have been further refined. Many profiles have been truncated, which doesn’t cost you at all in a headwind, better shrouds water bottles and gear, and is less susceptible to side-forces when riding in crosswinds. Added stability means you spend less time fighting your bike and more time laying out the watts. Shrouding water bottles is no small deal, as you need to carry water, and most wind tunnel tests do not account for this. With cage mounts on the seat tube and three bolts on the downtube, you can choose how you want your hydration. The downtube yields two positions for bottles, the lower is more aero, but if you have trouble reaching low, or want to run two bottles, use the upper position. The tube shaping makes the most dramatic improvements with round bottles, but aero bottles benefit as well. In addition, the integrated bar/stem combo is faster. They actually have two different combinations sitting atop the improved bayonet fork. A raised V-cockpit that comes standard with complete bikes and is better for less flexible riders. And a flat-cockpit, that can come on the frameset, or can be ordered separately for the complete bikes. With the V, the stack spacers have a range of 590-705mm in height. With the flat, the range is 530-670mm. And with the flat setup, the base bar can be flipped over, giving you a range of 40mm below the stem to 40mm above the stem. In both cases, particularly in the raised cockpit setup, the arm supports channel air more cleanly, reducing drag. And there are a set of top tube mounts midway back on the top tube for boxes. This might look unusual, but it worked out to be faster in the wind tunnel, so BMC departed from tradition to give you speed. The fork itself has widely-spaced legs, giving the air an easier time flowing past the legs and wide rims. Both the fork and rear triangle can work with rims up to 28mm wide and tires up to 27mm wide. And the horizontal rear dropouts have adjustable stops, so you can position the wheel as close to the frame as possible regardless of the tire width. The final aero touch is the rear storage box. This is not UCI-legal, but it is for multi-sport riders. It’s big enough to fit a tubular plus tools and inflator. The box mounts behind the seat post when the forward mounting option is employed. To offer the most fit options in their P2P, Position 2 Perform, system, the seat post has a rearward mount and a forward mount. In addition, the saddle clamp has four positions. This yields a huge range of adjustment, going from a virtual 71.5 to a virtual 80.8-degree seat angle, with 124mm of total fore-aft adjustment. To get the maximum speed out of a frame, integration is essential. That’s why the fork has integrated brakes, and the rear brakes hide under the chain stays. But BMC wasn’t satisfied with their earlier efforts on this front. They developed a brake booster system, giving you more power at your fingertips for less effort. They also developed something they call the quick-pad cartridge system. This makes it easy for you to swap pads from your carbon-specific race pads to your aluminum training wheel pads. Pulling and replacing cartridges is as easy as swapping pads on conventional brakes. BMC embraces options. They have Dual Transmission Integration here. You can run electronic or mechanical, even hydraulic shifting. However, the complexity of running mechanical is such that they only offer complete bikes with electronic shifting and recommend it when you’re building up your own steed. Likewise, they utilize the BB86 bottom bracket standard. The BMC timemachine 01 makes it easier to go faster, both for how it allows you to find the perfect position and for how it slices through the air outside....

Bicycle2021 Frame Wheel 

2230 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

15/07/2021
Nouveau

2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET
2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET

ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET SPECIFICATIONS Bottom Bracket Type PF86 Required Frame Material TCC 01 Premium Carbon, Angle Compliance Technology Fork Roadmachine 01 Premium Carbon, Integrated Cockpit Headset Integrated Seatpost Roadmachine 01 "D" Premium Carbon, 15mm offset Front Derailleur Type Braze-On Required Stem BMC ICS 01 - Integrated Cockpit Design ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET INFORMATION With the new Roadmachine 01, BMC is redefining what an endurance bike can be. It’s faster than a typical endurance bike, faster than BMC’s own Granfondo, something you see in stiffness and aerodynamics. At the same time, it offers greater comfort than a racing bike. The bike is only offered with disc brakes, making it easy to fit 30mm tires for off-roading. And the geometry reflects the desires of the engineers. It’s racy but stable, and the front end is adaptable, even with the integrated stem. They think of this as the one-bike collection. The stem is not only a looker, but shows how thoroughly BMC rethought the front end. The brake hoses run through the stem and into the frame without seeing daylight. The front brake hose comes out of the fork leg just above the flat mount. The rear hose goes into the downtube and out on the left chainstay. Hydraulic brakes only. If you’re running Shimano Di2, the wire runs internally and the battery in the seatpost. If you’re running mechanical shifting or hydraulic, the cabling goes around the head tube. Different covers are provided. And the stem sits atop what BMC is referring to as a cone. The standard has 2cm of stack and gives you a stack equivalent to their GF bikes. There’s a second low-stack cone, purchase separately, that has zero cm of rise. An extra 10mm spacer comes with the bike and stem, but any 1 1/8” round spacer will work. Stem lengths are 90mm for the 47 & 51, 100mm for the 54, 110mm for the 56, 120mm for the 58 and 61. The stem clamps to a standard round 31.8mm diameter handlebar. And BMC is working on integrated mounts for computers and cameras. As with any endurance bike, comfort and stiffness need to be baked in. Both layup and shaping play important roles. That’s why there’s the beefy 1 1/2” lower end of the tapered steerer and beefy fork crown atop slim fork legs. Likewise, at the back, the angle compliance seat stays attach low on the seat tube. The shaping here results in vertical compliance that is greater than the Teammachine but less than the Gran Fondo. The D-shaped seatpost, designed specifically for the Roadmachine, is carbon, and engineered for compliance as well. 15mm setback, btw. In terms of both bottom bracket stiffness and head tube stiffness, the Roadmachine sits between both bikes as well, stiffer than the GF and not as stiff as the Teammachine. You can see the work with the elongated head tube, the notch for the fork, and the massive bottom bracket juncture as well as chainstays that start off beefy and slim down, similar to the design of the fork blades. The BB standard is PF86, and atop it sits an integrated chain guide, designed to eliminate dropped chain. The geometry furthers the cause of a super-fast endurance bike. The chainstays are shorter than you’ll find on the GF. With the wheel better tucked underneath you, accelerations are easier. There’s 63mm of trail, a bit longer than a racing bike, but helps with stability. The bottom bracket drop is a generous 71mm, meaning you’ve got a low center of gravity, which makes both slow grinding climbs, and speedy descents easier. And with disc brakes, they’ve opened up tire selection. Up to 30mm in diameter will fit. As mentioned earlier, the frame is designed for hydraulic brakes only. You can run 160 or 140mm in front thanks to BMC’s proprietary mount. With the rear, you can mount a 140mm via direct mount and 160mm with flatmount adapter. The hubs roll on 12mm thru-axles, both front (100mm) and rear (142mm). The thru-axle design improves stiffness, drops weight, and makes wheel changes easier. The Roadmachine 01 is high-speed fun for those who want a fleet of one....

Bicycle2021 Frame Wheel 

1368 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

15/07/2021
Nouveau

2021 BMC TIMEMACHINE 01 TRI ROAD FRAMESET
2021 BMC TIMEMACHINE 01 TRI ROAD FRAMESET

BMC’s timemachine is such a fast performer, BMC needed four years to find a way to improve it. The new timemachine 01 is faster with no wind, faster in crosswinds, and easier to fit. In addition, if you need to carry stuff on the bike, there’s more room for it with less aerodynamic penalty. And the frame is UCI-legal across their size run. The old timemachine had impressive straight line aerodynamics. The new timemachine improves on straight line aerodynamics, real world aerodynamics, and crosswind aerodynamics. The subA tube shapes have been further refined. Many profiles have been truncated, which doesn’t cost you at all in a headwind, better shrouds water bottles and gear, and is less susceptible to side-forces when riding in crosswinds. Added stability means you spend less time fighting your bike and more time laying out the watts. Shrouding water bottles is no small deal, as you need to carry water, and most wind tunnel tests do not account for this. With cage mounts on the seat tube and three bolts on the downtube, you can choose how you want your hydration. The downtube yields two positions for bottles, the lower is more aero, but if you have trouble reaching low, or want to run two bottles, use the upper position. The tube shaping makes the most dramatic improvements with round bottles, but aero bottles benefit as well. In addition, the integrated bar/stem combo is faster. They actually have two different combinations sitting atop the improved bayonet fork. A raised V-cockpit that comes standard with complete bikes and is better for less flexible riders. And a flat-cockpit, that can come on the frameset, or can be ordered separately for the complete bikes. With the V, the stack spacers have a range of 590-705mm in height. With the flat, the range is 530-670mm. And with the flat setup, the base bar can be flipped over, giving you a range of 40mm below the stem to 40mm above the stem. In both cases, particularly in the raised cockpit setup, the arm supports channel air more cleanly, reducing drag. And there are a set of top tube mounts midway back on the top tube for boxes. This might look unusual, but it worked out to be faster in the wind tunnel, so BMC departed from tradition to give you speed. The fork itself has widely-spaced legs, giving the air an easier time flowing past the legs and wide rims. Both the fork and rear triangle can work with rims up to 28mm wide and tires up to 27mm wide. And the horizontal rear dropouts have adjustable stops, so you can position the wheel as close to the frame as possible regardless of the tire width. The final aero touch is the rear storage box. This is not UCI-legal, but it is for multi-sport riders. It’s big enough to fit a tubular plus tools and inflator. The box mounts behind the seat post when the forward mounting option is employed. To offer the most fit options in their P2P, Position 2 Perform, system, the seat post has a rearward mount and a forward mount. In addition, the saddle clamp has four positions. This yields a huge range of adjustment, going from a virtual 71.5 to a virtual 80.8-degree seat angle, with 124mm of total fore-aft adjustment. To get the maximum speed out of a frame, integration is essential. That’s why the fork has integrated brakes, and the rear brakes hide under the chain stays. But BMC wasn’t satisfied with their earlier efforts on this front. They developed a brake booster system, giving you more power at your fingertips for less effort. They also developed something they call the quick-pad cartridge system. This makes it easy for you to swap pads from your carbon-specific race pads to your aluminum training wheel pads. Pulling and replacing cartridges is as easy as swapping pads on conventional brakes. BMC embraces options. They have Dual Transmission Integration here. You can run electronic or mechanical, even hydraulic shifting. However, the complexity of running mechanical is such that they only offer complete bikes with electronic shifting and recommend it when you’re building up your own steed. Likewise, they utilize the BB86 bottom bracket standard. The BMC timemachine 01 makes it easier to go faster, both for how it allows you to find the perfect position and for how it slices through the air outside....

Bicycle RoadBike MuntainBike Frame 

2227 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

12/07/2021
Nouveau

2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET
2021 BMC ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET

ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET SPECIFICATIONS Bottom Bracket Type PF86 Required Frame Material TCC 01 Premium Carbon, Angle Compliance Technology Fork Roadmachine 01 Premium Carbon, Integrated Cockpit Headset Integrated Seatpost Roadmachine 01 "D" Premium Carbon, 15mm offset Front Derailleur Type Braze-On Required Stem BMC ICS 01 - Integrated Cockpit Design ROADMACHINE 01 FRAMESET INFORMATION With the new Roadmachine 01, BMC is redefining what an endurance bike can be. It’s faster than a typical endurance bike, faster than BMC’s own Granfondo, something you see in stiffness and aerodynamics. At the same time, it offers greater comfort than a racing bike. The bike is only offered with disc brakes, making it easy to fit 30mm tires for off-roading. And the geometry reflects the desires of the engineers. It’s racy but stable, and the front end is adaptable, even with the integrated stem. They think of this as the one-bike collection. The stem is not only a looker, but shows how thoroughly BMC rethought the front end. The brake hoses run through the stem and into the frame without seeing daylight. The front brake hose comes out of the fork leg just above the flat mount. The rear hose goes into the downtube and out on the left chainstay. Hydraulic brakes only. If you’re running Shimano Di2, the wire runs internally and the battery in the seatpost. If you’re running mechanical shifting or hydraulic, the cabling goes around the head tube. Different covers are provided. And the stem sits atop what BMC is referring to as a cone. The standard has 2cm of stack and gives you a stack equivalent to their GF bikes. There’s a second low-stack cone, purchase separately, that has zero cm of rise. An extra 10mm spacer comes with the bike and stem, but any 1 1/8” round spacer will work. Stem lengths are 90mm for the 47 & 51, 100mm for the 54, 110mm for the 56, 120mm for the 58 and 61. The stem clamps to a standard round 31.8mm diameter handlebar. And BMC is working on integrated mounts for computers and cameras. As with any endurance bike, comfort and stiffness need to be baked in. Both layup and shaping play important roles. That’s why there’s the beefy 1 1/2” lower end of the tapered steerer and beefy fork crown atop slim fork legs. Likewise, at the back, the angle compliance seat stays attach low on the seat tube. The shaping here results in vertical compliance that is greater than the Teammachine but less than the Gran Fondo. The D-shaped seatpost, designed specifically for the Roadmachine, is carbon, and engineered for compliance as well. 15mm setback, btw. In terms of both bottom bracket stiffness and head tube stiffness, the Roadmachine sits between both bikes as well, stiffer than the GF and not as stiff as the Teammachine. You can see the work with the elongated head tube, the notch for the fork, and the massive bottom bracket juncture as well as chainstays that start off beefy and slim down, similar to the design of the fork blades. The BB standard is PF86, and atop it sits an integrated chain guide, designed to eliminate dropped chain. The geometry furthers the cause of a super-fast endurance bike. The chainstays are shorter than you’ll find on the GF. With the wheel better tucked underneath you, accelerations are easier. There’s 63mm of trail, a bit longer than a racing bike, but helps with stability. The bottom bracket drop is a generous 71mm, meaning you’ve got a low center of gravity, which makes both slow grinding climbs, and speedy descents easier. And with disc brakes, they’ve opened up tire selection. Up to 30mm in diameter will fit. As mentioned earlier, the frame is designed for hydraulic brakes only. You can run 160 or 140mm in front thanks to BMC’s proprietary mount. With the rear, you can mount a 140mm via direct mount and 160mm with flatmount adapter. The hubs roll on 12mm thru-axles, both front (100mm) and rear (142mm). The thru-axle design improves stiffness, drops weight, and makes wheel changes easier. The Roadmachine 01 is high-speed fun for those who want a fleet of one....

Bicycle RoadBike MuntainBike Frame 

1366 EUR

Nairobi
Kenya

12/07/2021
Nouveau