Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

BUYER'S GUIDE

12 of 2021’s hottest disc brake race bikes - find yourself a super quick bike with real stopping power

Starring Specialized, Vitus, Trek, Giant, BMC and more

After a faltering start, it's clear that disc brake race bikes now dominate bike manufacturers' ranges, even if the 2020 Tour de France was won on bikes with rim brakes. Here are the 2021 disc-braked race bikes that have got us most excited.

  • If you can control your speed better, you can go faster, which can make disc brakes a racing advantage

  • Separating braking from rim integrity means you can carry on riding with some forms of rim damage

  • The weight disadvantage comes down every year as manufacturers slim down disc calipers and mounts

  • Bike makers also claim they're solving any aerodynamic issues disc brakes pose

Why would you want disc brakes on a road race bike at all? The promised benefits are greater modulation and more power, especially in wet conditions, no fade on long descents, rims that don’t wear out, less maintenance and longer lasting brake pads.

On the other hand, disc brakes are currently heavier than rim brakes and there are some concerns about their impact on aerodynamics, although Giant, for example, claims that its Propel Disc has less drag than its rim brake predecessor.

12 of the hottest disc-braked road bikes for 2021

Toward the end of June 2018, the UCI (cycle sport’s world governing body) announced that disc brakes would be allowed in road races, after a lengthy trial period that was marked by occasionally acrimonious debate about the safety of discs.

The UCI first introduced a trial period for using disc brake race bikes in the pro peloton at the end of the 2015 season, but suspended it following injuries to riders in the 2016 Paris-Roubaix that were alleged to have resulted from disc rotors.

Read our story from last year: Have disc brakes really led to injuries in peloton?

The trial was later resumed with slight modifications to disc rotors demanded, and riders such as sprinter Marcel Kittel competed on disc brake race bikes throughout the 2017 season.

Check out Marcel Kittel’s Tour de France stage winning Specialized S-Works Venge ViAS Disc.

Since then it's been open slather. Some teams have switched entirely to discs, some have stayed with rim brakes. Pro racing, though, is notoriously conservative: it took a while for indexed gearing and clipless pedals to completely take over the pro peloton even when regular riders were fully on board.

But almost all mid-to-high-end road race bikes now sport discs, and improving the weight, aerodynamics and ride feel of disc-braked bikes has been the main focus of every large bike maker's development effort for the last couple of years.

The hottest 2021 model disc brake race bikes

Orro Venturi STC Ultegra Di2 2021 — £4,399

2021 Orro Venturi STC Ultegra Di2

Orro's Venturi STC is an evolution of the brand's well-liked Venturi, now with an integrated bar and stem that routes all the cables directly into the frame. The 'STC' stands for spread-tow carbon, which Orro says allow a much larger number of fibres in a smaller space, reducing weight while maintaining stiffness and comfort.

Tester Stu loved the 2020 version of this bike, writing in his review: "Orro has quite simply nailed it with the Venturi Ultegra Di2 Wind 400. Comfort, speed, handling, feedback and stiffness – you can have it all. And the icing on the cake? It's a looker too!

"I've ridden a lot of bikes over the last 20 years, especially in the 10 that I've been with road.cc (41 in 2019 alone), and while a lot of them have been very good, there are probably ten or so that really stand out as brilliant – and the Venturi is one of those.

"I like a stiff bike. I want that feeling of performance, and if that sacrifices comfort, I can deal with it. I like a frame that feels alive, a bit on the edge, I want to feel everything that is going on from that tiny rubber footprint on the ground, and if I need to take a little bit of a battering to get that then so be it.

"The Venturi delivers that in spades, but the carbon lay-up used means it manages to do that while being very comfortable too, without taking anything away."

Read our review of the Orro Venturi Ultegra Di2 Wind 400
Find an Orro dealer

Vitus Vitesse EVO CRX eTap AXS 2021 — £4,799.99

2021 Vitus Vitesse EVO CRX eTap AXS

The Vitus Vitesse Evo Disc offers a helluva lot for your money. It’s a carbon fibre, disc brake-equipped road bike built around a race-focused geometry. Previous versions have offered superb performance and it seems a safe bet this latest incarnation will too. Vitus says the new Vitesse Evo is "lighter, stiffer, more aerodynamic and more comfortable" than the 2020 version. It boasts on-trend dropped seatstays, a new carbon lay-up and increased tyre clearances.

And it might be the cheapest bike you can buy with SRAM's 12-speed wireless Red eTap AXS shifting, though we're not claiming a bike that costs the thick end of five grand is cheap. It rolls on Reynolds AR29 DB Carbon wheels and Schwalbe ONE Performance tyres.

Read more: New Vitus Vitesse Evo gets complete redesign to go lighter, stiffer, faster

Canyon Aeroad CFR Disc EPS 2021 — £9,749.00

2021 Canyon Aeroad CFR Disc EPS

It was a bit like the moment in Mike Oldfield's first album where Vivian Stanshall breathes "Plus … tubular bells!" Canyon finally released a new version of the Aeroad in late 2020 after a period of anticipation so intense some Canyon fans resorted to stickering-up generic aero frames as the 'new' Aeroad.

It was worth the wait, according to road.cc technical editor Mat Brett who says "this aero road bike is an absolute belter whether you’re flat-out sprinting, haring down your favourite descent or tackling the steepest climb in your area, and you can’t say that about every bike of this kind."

The top model has Canyon's new Aeroad 065 frame, of course, plus a full Campagnolo Super Record EPS groupset and Campagnolo Bora One wheels, but that's not all. Canyon has introduced a width-adjustable handlebar for the top models of the new Aeroad that also allows the bar to fold for easier packing into a flight case. Clever stuff.

Read more: Canyon Aeroad CFR Di2 first ride review

Specialized S-Works Aethos Dura-Ace Di2 Disc 2021 — £11,750

2021 Specialized S-Work Aethos Dure Ace Di2 Disc.jpg

Specialized's stunning new Aethos is an apparent contradiction: it's a race bike that, in its lightest version, you can't actually race because it comes in under the UCI's minimum weight limit of 6.8kg. Of course that's nothing you can't fix with a few carefully deployed weights.

With a 588g frame (56cm version), Specialized says the S-Works Aethos is the most technologically advanced model it has ever made, with an aim of improving ride quality rather than weight — that it barely troubles the scales is apparently just a nice side effect.

Read more: Specialized releases Aethos: "the lightest disc brake road bike ever"
Read more: Specialized Aethos First Ride Review - How does the world’s lightest disc-brake road bike ride?

Trek Emonda SL 6 Pro 2021 — £3,700

2021 Trek Emonda SL 6 Pro.jpg

The latest iteration of the Trek Émonda focuses on aerodynamics more than ever before, which makes this SL6 Pro one very quick and efficient road bike. The stiff frameset offers a firm yet fun ride, while the component choice keeps the weight down to exploit that stiffness on the climbs. It's a very good all-round package.

For 2021 the Emonda has morphed from being a platform focused solely on low weight to having some aerodynamic impvements in the mix too, the aim being to make the fastest bike up the legendary Tour de France climb of l'Alpe d'Huez.

The Emonda SL 6 Pro takes Trek's learnings from the high-zoot Émonda SLR and brings them to a more sensible price with a Shimano Ultegra groupset and Bontrager Aeolus Elite 35 carbon wheels.

Read our full review of the Trek Emonda SL 6 Pro
Read more: All-new Émonda gets aero to become "Trek’s fastest climbing bike ever"
Find a Trek dealer

Giant TCR Advanced SL 0 Disc 2021 — £9,699.00

2021 Giant TCR Advanced SL 0 Disc.jpg

Giant was one of the first bike makers out of the blocks with 2021 models, announcing the new version of the TCR Advanced in April 2020, getting us all excited about a bike with a claimed 140g weight reduction in the frame thanks to new materials, new layup and even a reduction in the weight of the paint. Tube shapes have been tweaked for improved aerodynamics too, Giant says, though the TCR remains the range's weight-focused platform and the Propel the true aero bike.

Road.cc technical editor Mat Brett is impressed by the results. "The Giant TCR Advanced SL 0 Disc's understated looks disguise a stunningly good performance," he says. "This lightweight bike is hugely responsive and handles precisely. Add in aero features and excellent components and it's a real winner."

Read the full review of the Giant TCR Advanced SL 0 Disc 2021
Find a Giant dealer
Read more: Giant launch 2021 TCR Advanced – the “fastest TCR ever”

Cervelo Caledonia 2021 — £3,190 - £11,059

2021 cervelo caledonia 5 ultegra di2

Cervelo's new Caledonia platform straddles the divide between pure race bike and endurance bike — and there's a very good reason for that. This is a bike aimed squarely at racing, but one race in particular: Paris-Roubaix. The cobbles of Northern France make very different demands of a bike and rider from the slopes of the Alps or Pyrenees. Compared to bikes tailored for the mountains, Cervelo says the Caledonia has longer chainstays, a lower bottom bracket and increased trail, all changes that improve stability.

Cervélo puts the Caledonia into a category that it calls 'modern road', meaning that it's intended to tackle tarmac, broken surfaces, potholes and dirt roads.

There are actually two different platforms: Caledonia and Caledonia-5. They're both carbon fibre and disc brake-specific, and they share the same geometry and levels of stiffness but the Caledonia-5 is lighter and has completely internal cable/hose routing on models with electronic shifting, whereas the Caledonia's cables/hoses are external between the handlebar and the frame/fork.

The range starts with the Caledonia 105 at £2,700 and peaks at £9,699 with the Caledonia-5 Dura-Ace Di2.

Read more: Cervélo launches Caledonia all-road bike range

Merida Reacto 2021 — £2,250 - £9,000

2021 Merida Reacto team McLaren

Merida’s updated Reacto aero road bike is available in both disc brake and rim brake models.

Merida has slimmed down the Reacto’s tubes to improve aero efficiency, introduced a lower seatstay connection with the seat tube and added a one piece cockpit.

Merida also says that it has improved comfort through the redesigned seatstays and given its S-Flex seatpost a slimmer cross section and a bigger ‘window’ – the notch that’s cutaway to add more downward movement.

The disc brake Reactos come with cooler technology like Merida uses on its Sculturas. There’s a forged aluminium component between the brake and the frame/fork that’s designed to allow heat to dissipate through CNC-milled cooling fins. The idea is that this reduces the amount of heat that gets transferred to the carbon-fibre on long descents.

The CF4 version of the disc brake frame uses the RAT (Rapid Axle Technology) first introduced by Focus for quick wheel changes in race situations, while the CF2 version has threaded 12mm thru axles.

Read our review of the Merida Reacto Disc Team-E

BMC Teammachine SLR01 ONE 2021 — £10,250

BMC Teammachine SLR01 ONE

BMC claims a weight of just 820g for the latest version of the Teammachine's carbon fibre disc brake frame, but while that's actually 5g up on the previous model, the fork and seatpost have shed 50g and 10g respectively. A new version of the ICS integrated bar and stem also shaves weight and improves aerodynamics.

This latest Teammachine looks quite similar to previous models, but you wouldn't expect BMC to just abandon the distinctive visuals they've spent a decade tweaking. Nevertheless, BMC says every part of the new Teammachine SLR01 has been improved or refined, from tube shapes and bottom bracket junction to cabling — there are even integrated bottle cages to smooth the airflow.

Scott Foil Disc 2021 — £3,599-£8,099

2021 Scott Foil 10

Scott’s Foil Disc has a very similar frame to the existing rim brake model but the fork has been completely redesigned to manage the asymmetrical forces of disc brakes and to control the airflow around the front brake. Most notably, the lower sections of the fork come with aero tabs to smooth airflow over the calliper.

That fork comes with internal cable routing and enough clearance for 30mm wide tyres.

The Foil Disc uses 12mm thru axles front and rear. The front axle’s head is 25mm in diameter, the idea being that this larger than normal contact surface between the fork and axle is better able to handle the load coming from the front brake.

Cannondale CAAD 13 Disc 2021 — £1,899.99-£4,799.99

2021 Cannondale CAAD13 Disc 105

The CAAD13 is the latest in a long series of well-received aluminium bikes from Cannondale, with a more refined ride than the CAAD12 and available with or without disc brakes.

Ask most cyclists about aluminium and they’ll probably tell you it’s stiff, and if they’re being really unfair they’ll say it’s harsh. But advances made by companies still willing to invest in aluminium like Cannondale have produced aluminium bikes that are anything but, and instead offer genuinely smooth and compliant rides.

The new CAAD13 is on another level though. Our one criticism of the CAAD12 Disc was that the front-end felt too firm. There was too much feedback coming through the handlebars and it wasn’t matching the smoothness present at the back of the bike. Cannondale has remedied that criticism and in the CAAD13 produced a bike that is wonderfully smooth all-round.

Read our first ride of the 2020 Cannondale CAAD13

Bianchi Specialissima Disc 2021 — £5,515 - £11,999

2021 Bianchi Specialissima Disc

As we expected, Bianchi unveiled a disc brake version of the Specialissima toward the end of 2020. Bianchi claims a frame weight of a feathery 750g, the same as the rim brake version, and aero improvements carried over from its Oltre aero road bikes, including internal cable routing, an integrated seat clamp, and tubing that’s shaped to reduce drag.

As well as the inevitable celeste blue and black the new Specialissima is available in a rather lovely greenish blue option that Bianchi describes as “greenish blue”. Straightforward, those Italians.

Read our review of the Bianchi Aria Disc

Explore the complete archive of reviews of road bikes on road.cc

About road.cc Buyer's Guides

The aim of road.cc buyer's guides is to give you the most, authoritative, objective and up-to-date buying advice. We continuously update and republish our guides, checking prices, availability and looking for the best deals.

Our guides include links to websites where you can buy the featured products. Like most sites we make a small amount of money if you buy something after clicking on one of those links. We want you to be happy with what you buy, so we only include a product if we think it's one of the best of its kind.

As far as possible that means recommending equipment that we have actually reviewed, but we also include products that are popular, highly-regarded benchmarks in their categories.

Here's some more information on how road.cc makes money.

You can also find further guides on our sister sites off.road.cc and ebiketips.

road.cc buyer's guides are maintained by the road.cc tech team. Email us with comments, corrections or queries.

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

Add new comment

26 comments

Avatar
risoto | 3 years ago
1 like

"A bike with real stopping power"! Really`What nonsense.

As if bikes with rim brakes cannot stop your bike properly and you're such a left behind fool if you've been stupid enouth not to change to disc brakes. 

Funny how the pro peloton does just fine with rim brakes except where sponsors force them to use disc brakes. I wonder if the riders must wear hearing protection from all the noisy disc brakes? 

Avatar
pablo replied to risoto | 3 years ago
2 likes

Don't really see your point just sound like someone who won't move on.
Disc brakes are just better but it doesn't mean rim brakes aren't good. I have both and personally prefer rim brake due the the simpler maintanance they can basically be done with an Allen key. Disc brakes are a maintenance pain but they are still better performing than rim.
I think manufacturers are chasing this for 2 reasons a) it gives them something to sell b) carbon wheels.
Carbon wheels are here to stay and manufacturers want to sell them as value add low investment but high return Carbon Rims has a problem in wet conditions and heat buildup (problem with alu rims also). They want to sell new 10k bikes to idiot noobs because that's where the profit is but sending someone out with no skill or knowledge on a bike which could be described as faulty is a risk and everyone wants those carbon rims. If I'm riding in the mountains I will swap my carbon rims out for Ali because I recognize I don't have the skill/balls not to drag brakes on a big decent.
Basically it's the future and rim will be reserved for low cost entry models and at the high end probably bespoke builders building for customers holding on

Avatar
Judge dreadful replied to pablo | 3 years ago
0 likes
pablo wrote:

Don't really see your point just sound like someone who won't move on. Disc brakes are just better but it doesn't mean rim brakes aren't good. I have both and personally prefer rim brake due the the simpler maintanance they can basically be done with an Allen key. Disc brakes are a maintenance pain but they are still better performing than rim. I think manufacturers are chasing this for 2 reasons a) it gives them something to sell b) carbon wheels. Carbon wheels are here to stay and manufacturers want to sell them as value add low investment but high return Carbon Rims has a problem in wet conditions and heat buildup (problem with alu rims also). They want to sell new 10k bikes to idiot noobs because that's where the profit is but sending someone out with no skill or knowledge on a bike which could be described as faulty is a risk and everyone wants those carbon rims. If I'm riding in the mountains I will swap my carbon rims out for Ali because I recognize I don't have the skill/balls not to drag brakes on a big decent. Basically it's the future and rim will be reserved for low cost entry models and at the high end probably bespoke builders building for customers holding on

The only reason I went for disc brakes on my new road bike, is to reduce any wear on the rims. The disc brakes do have advantages over rim brakes in a few ways, but I prefer rim brakes normally. The disc brakes do look fugly, but I'll take that, if it means ( most probably) extending my rim's life. It's horses for courses.

 

Image: 
Avatar
Sriracha | 3 years ago
0 likes

The disks on my bike get just as hot, why is it not listed?

Avatar
Pilot Pete | 4 years ago
1 like

Whoops!

Avatar
oceansoul | 4 years ago
3 likes

and disk brake bikes are still ugly, those huge hydro brake hoods will ruin any bike

Avatar
Pilot Pete replied to oceansoul | 4 years ago
3 likes
oceansoul wrote:

and disk brake bikes are still ugly, those huge hydro brake hoods will ruin any bike

Yeah, awful. Take this one for example, so big and butt ugly compared to the rim brake version...

PP

Avatar
dreamlx10 | 5 years ago
0 likes

Hot and discs are not two words that go together

Avatar
un bicicleta replied to dreamlx10 | 4 years ago
1 like
dreamlx10 wrote:

Hot and discs are not two words that go together

 

I prefer disc brake looks. But understand that it's subjective; what isn't though, is the performance of them

Avatar
JMil | 5 years ago
1 like

I'll never run a rim brake bike again. There, I said it. I built an Argon 18 Gallium Disc at the start of the year and it's an unbelievable bike... don't know why it didn't make the list. Stops on a sixpence, especially on carbon wheels and in the wet vs rim brakes. Better braking and more parts for the brands to sell you makes me convinced that in 5yrs rim brake bikes will be confined to ebay... 

Avatar
srchar | 6 years ago
2 likes

This article would be much improved if it would highlight which of the bikes will take full mudguards, given how great discs are purported to be in foul weather.

Avatar
Huw Watkins replied to srchar | 5 years ago
1 like
srchar wrote:

This article would be much improved if it would highlight which of the bikes will take full mudguards, given how great discs are purported to be in foul weather.

 

14 of 2018’s hottest disc brake-equipped RACE bikes

 

 

Avatar
srchar replied to Huw Watkins | 5 years ago
2 likes
Huw Watkins wrote:

14 of 2018’s hottest disc brake-equipped RACE bikes

Ah yes, I hadn't spotted that - so none of these bikes actually need discs at all then  1

Avatar
jimbo2112 | 6 years ago
6 likes

After sailing through a few junctions in the Lake District on my old rim braked Moda, coming down 20% plus hills hard on the brakes in pouring rain and hands so numb they hurt from gripping the levers so hard, I love the discs on my new Roubaix and look forward to getting 32mm tyres for winter for even more grip. 

We often buy our bikes for a bit of vanity, and why not? Some people buy art and put it on the wall and it does nada. Some of those bikes with race frames and slammed aero stems look awesome, but, for me, having something that stops me in awful weather is a beautiful thing!

Avatar
Micwich | 6 years ago
0 likes

rix
What sprint shifters are those on your trp brakes??

Avatar
rix replied to Micwich | 6 years ago
0 likes
Micwich wrote:

rix What sprint shifters are those on your trp brakes??

Shimano sprinter switch soldered on instead of eTap blips, because it has a very nice click and easy to operate even with thick gloves on. 

Switch is positioned so that you can easily reach it with your fingers from any position on bars or hoods or drops. 

//www.wigglestatic.com/product-media/5360073052/shimano-sprinter-switches.jpg)

Avatar
rix | 6 years ago
2 likes

I am a huge fan of disc brakes! 

To be precise, I like the way they work not the way they look. This far, all of them have been unnecessarily ugly, so I had to come up with my own setup which looks OK (I think). TRP + eTap aero

//i.imgur.com/OuJ4IwX.jpg)

Avatar
r.glancy | 6 years ago
0 likes

not a fan of disc road bikes (although I have a cube attain disc for commuting)

 

But that BMC is very very nice!

Avatar
Walo | 6 years ago
1 like

I can understand, that hiding cables on rim brake bikes is somehow a challenge. But, seeing disc bikes still with cables dangling outside a frame, I ask myself whether these guys are joking.

Avatar
paulrattew replied to Walo | 6 years ago
3 likes
Walo wrote:

I can understand, that hiding cables on rim brake bikes is somehow a challenge. But, seeing disc bikes still with cables dangling outside a frame, I ask myself whether these guys are joking.

 

I guess you're not a mechanic then. Internal cable routing is bad enough to deal with, let alone elaborate cable routing that goes through the stem and head tube. When you're having to strip down half a dozen bikes & rebuildthem overnight (completely common for mechanics at races) then you will thank any designer who makes things as easy for you as possible

Avatar
matthewn5 | 6 years ago
0 likes

I've noticed that disc framesets are much more heavily discounted at the end of the year. And remain available in wide range of sizes. Clearly still not so much demand as for rim brake models...

Avatar
paulrattew replied to matthewn5 | 6 years ago
2 likes
matthewn5 wrote:

I've noticed that disc framesets are much more heavily discounted at the end of the year. And remain available in wide range of sizes. Clearly still not so much demand as for rim brake models...

 

Still very much the minority in terms of bikes I see around, but (again anecdotal evidence of my eyes only) they seem to bebecoming more popular. End of season deals last year on rim brake bikes were unusually good so I bet that meant that a lot of people who were looking to replace their bikes then opted for rim brakes to take advantage of the great deals. That probably slowed disc brake sales a bit. The big end of season discounts starting to come up on disc brake bikes will probably tempt more people to replace  their outgoing steeds with disc equiped bikes this time round. Swings and roundabouts, but the net direction of travel seems to be inexorably towards discs.

Avatar
peted76 replied to paulrattew | 6 years ago
1 like
paulrattew wrote:
matthewn5 wrote:

I've noticed that disc framesets are much more heavily discounted at the end of the year. And remain available in wide range of sizes. Clearly still not so much demand as for rim brake models...

Still very much the minority in terms of bikes I see around, but (again anecdotal evidence of my eyes only) they seem to bebecoming more popular. End of season deals last year on rim brake bikes were unusually good so I bet that meant that a lot of people who were looking to replace their bikes then opted for rim brakes to take advantage of the great deals. That probably slowed disc brake sales a bit. The big end of season discounts starting to come up on disc brake bikes will probably tempt more people to replace  their outgoing steeds with disc equiped bikes this time round. Swings and roundabouts, but the net direction of travel seems to be inexorably towards discs.

I've been doing a bit of research on disc of late and the tech is getting a lot lighter and much better looking, I think with Shimano bringing hydro braking into their series products (Ultegra and Dura Ace) it'll help a lot.. once people can order a full groupset with discs people will 'understand it more'.  Also I think with CX almost all using discs now and the trend to gravel and adventure bikes, we'll see discs start to be the 'norm' soon enough...  rim brakes are heading the way of canti's for road bikes I feel.

I'm not a huge fan, but I am considering a disc brake bike myself at the moment... I'm not quite sure why I'm considering it really.. but at the very least I shouldn't have to worry about fiddling with my rim brakes before every other ride (like I do now on my racy bike almost as a matter of course - minimum fuss really).. and I do think disc brakes improve the look of a bike a little.

Avatar
drosco | 6 years ago
3 likes

Second that. What's up with the CAAD12? Looks like a GCSE project.

Avatar
Shamblesuk replied to drosco | 6 years ago
0 likes
drosco wrote:

Second that. What's up with the CAAD12? Looks like a GCSE project.

 

I bought the 2016 CAAD12 Ultegra and although it functions prefectly well, it's dog rough in comparison to my Cervelo R3.

Avatar
steveal50 | 6 years ago
5 likes

Wow! There are some ugly bike out there...

Latest Comments