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Why are TdF riders racing a time trial on road bikes?

Equipment choices for stage 18's uphill time trial

Today’s 17km mountain time trial from Sallanches to Megève provides an interesting bike and equipment challenge for the Tour de France GC contenders. 

Normally for a time trial, a rider will switch from the road bike to a time trial bike with deep section wheels and go full aero. The first time trial of the Tour was run on mostly flat roads and maintaining a very high average speed was the key task, so a time trial bike was an easy choice. 

Stage 18 presents an uphill profile with some very steep sections, as much as 14% in places, and 765 metres of vertical gain altogether. With that much climbing on the agenda, factors like weight and ride position become as important as all-out aerodynamics. 

martin tt bars.JPG

As we’ve seen at previous hilly time trials, it looks like the popular choice is a regular road bike with a set of clip-on tri bars, combined with a skinsuit and aero helmet. It provides a lighter setup for the steeper gradients, the extensions a more aero position when the road suits it, and a position that is more familiar for the non-time trial specialists.

Why a road bike with extensions? Weight will be the key factor for most. Modern time trial bikes still carry a substantial weight penalty over a road bike. The Canyon Speedmax I tested last year with a full Dura-Ace groupset weighed in at 8.1kg, a 1.3kg weight penalty. Lighter wheels will help to bring that weight down a bit, so swapping the usual disc rear wheel and deep section front wheel for some climbing wheels could be one option. 

Climbing on a time trial bike isn’t easy unless you practice.  Holding a tucked position is tough on the flat, let alone on a climb, and some riders will prefer to ride a climb out of the saddle, not something you can do on a time trial bike. To make a time trial bike choice work, the rider will need to be able to ride in the aero position. Which won’t be easy on the steeper sections.

Watching the Tour now, we’re seeing a variety of equipment choices. It’s clear lower placed riders are just riding their regular road bikes and focusing on just getting up the climb without any excessive strain on tired bodies. Higher up the GC though, and the choices get a bit more interesting. 

It looks like Dan Martin, a natural climber rather than a time trial specialist, is going with a road bike with clip-on tri bars.

Tom Dumoulin, winner of the first time trial in the Tour, is a possible stage winner, though the climbing might not suit him, and is riding a Giant time trial bike with shallow section wheels, an interesting combination. It shows he wants the advantage of the aerodynamic bike and the position it provides but has made a sought to reduce the overall weight with the shallower rims.

Another interesting setup is Sylvain Chavanel. He's riding a regular road bike with clip-on tri bars but a disc rear wheel combined with a shallow section front wheel.  Pictured below is Wilco Kelderman, who has opted for his road bike with clip-on bars.

We wait to see what Chris Froome will be riding. We know his teammates are riding the regular Dogma F8 road bike with clip-on tri bars, but curiously, Chris Froome tweeted a photo of himself riding his time trial bike on the rest day. Could it be he was prepping it for today's stage? If anyone can maintain the position and power output to get the benefits of the time trial bike on such a stage, it's Froome.

Did you know, only 17 time trials in the history of the race (from 206 individual time trails) have been uphill - the first one was up the Mont Ventoux on 13 July 1958. Ouch!

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

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4 comments

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Cyclespeed Tours | 7 years ago
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Some riders even opted for their Tarmacs over their Venge Vias which is kind of odd, but I guess that feel, handling and weight still count over aero when this much climbing is involved.

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bendertherobot | 7 years ago
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Yeah, I was reading up on yaw earlier. Then I stopped as, well, science.

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PaulBox | 7 years ago
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Related question... How big a benefit does a disc wheel provide?

I've never ridden one, but seeing nearly every rider using one in such windy conditions for the first TT I figured that the benefit must be pretty huge.

Personally I sometimes struggle with my 60mm rims in windy conditions.

Avatar
joules1975 replied to PaulBox | 7 years ago
1 like
PaulBox wrote:

Related question... How big a benefit does a disc wheel provide?

I've never ridden one, but seeing nearly every rider using one in such windy conditions for the first TT I figured that the benefit must be pretty huge.

Personally I sometimes struggle with my 60mm rims in windy conditions.

but most ran a shallow front wheel. Wing has much less impact on Disc or very deep rear wheel, and bizarrely in certain wind directions can actually provide forward assistance.

next time it's windy, try running your 60mm rear with your shallow front. Might look weird but will provide some decent benefit.

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