Well I decided that bike number two was going to be purposely built for climbing. After a year of riding Pedal Force No. 1 I had to change a few things to make it work the way I wanted it to. Just as a review, No. 1 is full Dura-Ace built on a 1050 gram carbon frame Pedal Force RS. I have many light weight parts on it but the key factor was reliability. That bike comes in at just about 15.9 pounds. When I built it up originally it was just over 15 pounds but I did have to replace the fork and stem, also a change in wheels brought the weight up.
Now on to bike No. 2. This is the same Pedal Force RS frame as No. 1. This time I wanted to build it lighter with reliability as the second criteria. So I am starting with a full SRAM Red group with compact 50/34T crank set. The fork will be an Alpha Q GS-30, the stem will be a 110mm Ritchey WCS 4-Axis and the bars will likely be Syntace Racelite2 Carbon. I will most likely swap seat posts between the two bikes, they are both Thomson‘s with a Masterpiece currently on No. 1 and an Elite on bike No. 2. I will stay with the Selle Italia SLR on No. 2.
With a few tweaks and my light tubulars I should just come in under 15 pounds. As I swap the few remaining parts I plan on riding it and reporting how well my choices have worked out.
I am doing this in lieu of purchasing a new frame this year. There is simply nothing out there that I am so impressed with that I just have to have. I will look later in the year for a new frame, or maybe a Time Trial frame, since I now have a full Ultegra group with both a standard road double (53/39T) and compact (50/34T) crank set sitting in a box. I also have some Dura-Ace 10 speed bar end shift levers as well as time trial bars in the same box. I am just missing a frame. We shall see.
Tags: Pedal Force, Red, Shimano, SRAM
-
Where did you get your pedal force frame? And do you know anything about the Bottecchia Road Bike carbon frames that sell on ebay for around $500, claiming to be the same frames used for some highend bikes?


2 comments
Comments feed for this article
Trackback link: http://www.incidentalcyclist.com/2008/03/25/bike-no-2/trackback/