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TECH NEWS

Lapierre to launch Pulsium endurance bike

An elastomer ring in the top tube is designed to absorb vibration

Lapierre is launching a new endurance bike called the Pulsium that uses an elastomer in the top tube designed to improve comfort. The bike saw its first real racing at the Grand Prix E3 Harelbeke last weekend with FDJ.fr riders putting it to the test on the streets of Belgium.

Many brands have an endurance road bike in the lineup these days, designed to be more comfortable than a standard road bike. Specialized has the Roubaix, for instance, Trek has the Domane, Merida has the Ride, and so on. Sponsored pro teams use these bikes, or have the option of using them, for the Classics, particularly those that take in cobbled roads.

The most noticeable feature of the Pulsium is the elastomer ring in the lower of the two joints between the top tube and the seat tube. Lapierre says that it acts as a shock absorber to dampen vibration from the road.

“Thanks to the elastomer ring, the new construction with specific carbon layup and the endurance geometry, the Pulsium is a frame that cannot be beaten at absorbing uneven terrain and preserving its rider’s energy,” says Lapierre.

Although the shock absorbing feature is in a similar place, the design is very different from that of the Trek Domane. There, the seatpost is able to move independently of the top tube and seatstays. With the Pulsium, the different elements are still connected, just with the addition of that elastomer.

You know how much we love a performance statistic here at road.cc and Lapierre doesn’t disappoint on this front. The French brand says that the Pulsium offers 27% more vertical flex than the existing Sensium. It claims that this results in more grip and stability on rough roads and less physical stress for the rider.

Lapierre says that the curved top tube flexes more easily than a straight one while the curved and narrow seatstays act like leaf springs for better impact and vibration absorption at the back end.

Up front, the carbon layup of the fork is designed to increase the flex capability and the absorption of vibration. A larger than normal offset (50mm) is, again, intended to dampen vibration from the road.

Lapierre says that all the carbon fibre that it has used in this frame is 40 ton tensile modulus or below, with 24 ton and 30 ton fibres being used for better resistance to impacts and increased vibration absorption (there it is again!).

In terms of geometry, the Pulsium has a head tube that’s 15mm longer than that of the Xelius EFI race bike and 5mm longer than that of the Sensium, the idea being to offer a more comfortable ride position for long days in the saddle

The chainstays are 4mm longer than those of the Xelius EFI and the same as the Sensium’s. Lapierre say that this provides stability and shock absorption.

The rear brake comes with an adaptor so you can run either short or long reach calipers. Go for long and you can use tyres up to 32c.

The seatpost clamp is integrated into the frame. The seat tube bulges out behind the seatpost to accommodate a wedge system, the idea being to provide a more aero solution.

Lapierre says that it has integrated its Power Box technology into the Pulsium. In short, that means the lower elements of the frame – the head tube, down tube, bottom bracket and chainstays – are designed for stiffness while the upper elements – the seat tube, top tube and seatstays – are designed for comfort. In terms of lateral stiffness, Lapierre says that the Pulsium is equal to the Xelius EFI.

“It offers incredible vertical flexibility while keeping the lateral rigidity that’s indispensable for a race bike destined for the UCI World Tour,” according to the brand.

The Pulsium will be in the shops from July but Lapierre is not releasing details on builds or prices yet.

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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6 comments

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ridein | 9 years ago
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Essentially they have made a rigid Pulsium frame and just put on an elastomer part just to say it has suspension. The frame is made complete with no degrees of freedom or pivot point.

Avatar
andyp | 9 years ago
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Ah, good old elastomers. This sounds like the evil love child of a Girvin Flexstem and a Raleigh Activator.

Avatar
BBB | 9 years ago
0 likes

Dunlop has already worked out how to make a bicycle comfortable...

It would be nice to see more performance bikes with clearance for wider tyres and a good selection of fast tubeless tyres up to 28-32mm that can be run at sensible pressure.

Avatar
surly_by_name | 9 years ago
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Ugly. Except the fork. That seat tube to top tube bridge is pointless.

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RobD | 9 years ago
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Or flipped the seat tube junction from a bmc upside down either?
I quite like it though, nice that they've made it possible to run decent sized tyres too

Avatar
Yennings | 9 years ago
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Well they clearly haven't 'borrowed' that idea from Trek, then. That's good...

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