The colour-matching design company Pantone announced on Friday that an orange shade named Tangerine Tango will be Colour of the Year in 2012 a fact that we could have told them when we posted from Eurobike in September and speculated about what would follow the current on-trend green.
Anyway, mentioning orange only elicited a Pavlovian reaction from us; two bikes. One of which, the Team Rabobank Giant TCRs we'd already covered on Wednesday, in at no.2 in our cut-out-and-keep guide to the bikes of the forthcoming 2012 WorldTour, leaving Euskaltel-Euskadi and their Orbea team bikes as a long-running orange themed sponsorship and design tie-in.
Orbea is an interesting one and just as interesting as the set-up of the Euskaltel-Euskadi team itself which is partly state-funded by the Spanish Basque region or some would say separate country as an exercise in national pride and partly by the local telecoms provider. One of the Euskadi rules is that team riders have to be Basque natives and it's no surprise therefore that Orbea is also a local company. What is novel is that it must surely be the only substantially-sized bike manufacturing company in the world that is formally constituted as a co-operative. In other words, it is owned mutually by its workers.
Orbea makes all its own frames from utilitarian urban hybrids all the way up via an enormous and comprehensive range to the Orca carbon road frame which in its latest guise is as light and up-to-the-minute as any in the peloton at the Vuelta a España. High-grade carbon-fibre, tapered headtube, a BB30-grounded fuselage and forks and stays fettled within an inch of their life to balance the contradictory demands of speed and comfort.
What we love about Orbeas in general and the Orca in particular are the exquisite little details; things like the dropouts and the seatclamp. Yes, that Deco-style seatpost clamp is definitely our favourite detail on any bike anywhere. Gratuitously stylish yet perfectly strong and functional; any Orbea dealer will tell you that clamp never slips or snaps which is more than can be said for a great many with their simply enormous torque-setting stickers thereon.
A fairly straightforward build for Orbea; it's Shimano Dura-Ace electronic Di2 top to bottom. They just want their bikes to be light because the Euskaltel-Euskadi riders are used to being dangerous in the Pyrenean mountains where they come from. Maybe 2012 really will be a big year for Orange?
Help us to fund our site
We’ve noticed you’re using an ad blocker. If you like road.cc, but you don’t like ads, please consider subscribing to the site to support us directly. As a subscriber you can read road.cc ad-free, from as little as £1.99.
If you don’t want to subscribe, please turn your ad blocker off. The revenue from adverts helps to fund our site.
If you’ve enjoyed this article, then please consider subscribing to road.cc from as little as £1.99. Our mission is to bring you all the news that’s relevant to you as a cyclist, independent reviews, impartial buying advice and more. Your subscription will help us to do more.
I have to say, I bought the 515 about 18 months ago and like others have said, easily the best thing I have bought in relation to cycling. I'm...
🎼 But don't look back you w**ker i heard them say... 🎶🎵
I love a good internal gear hub. Grokking them? Me neither; I lost it before the Nexus / Alfine. However there are some folks doing their best...
Karma is a bitch.
Ffs!...
That's a polished, gilded and vazzled turd of a bike. They were never any good and this is for rich plonkers who don't actually like bikes......
I'm assuming that your invention of the paramedic having a Phd in biomechanical impact assessments is deep irony.
Secretary-General António Guterres has failed to provide such a proposal, instead telling the committee that “any upgrade to existing...
My thoughts...
That's not my experience. I know multiple small towns and villages which are now far more pleasant as a result of a bypass....