Shimano has revealed Dura-Ace R9100, the latest incarnation of its top-level road groupset that includes Synchronized Shifting – allowing you to control both derailleurs with one shift lever – a power meter and hydraulic braking, among other innovations.
The Japanese component giant is calling Dura-Ace R9100, “The most advanced system of road cycling components in Shimano’s 95-year history.” Well, it would, wouldn't it?
Let’s go through the various elements of the design in turn. You might want to grab yourself a coffee, there’s a lot of detail here.
Bear in mind that although we’ve seen new Dura-Ace R9100 at a presentation in France today, we’ve not had the chance to use it yet, so nearly all of the information we are able to give you comes from Shimano without too much of a road.cc filter, if you know what I mean.
You'll also notice that we don't have photos of all components. Mr David Arthur is shooting more as I write and we'll put those in a separate story.
Also note that Shimano includes both the mechanical and electronic components under the R9100 umbrella title although the electronic components are actually named R9150.
Chainset
The 2 x 11 Hollowtech II chainset has a new look, larger crank arms that are asymmetric and, according to Shimano, an improved shifting performance. It’s also lighter than before, albeit by just 7g. Well, it all adds up, doesn't it?
Although it could be mistaken for carbon-fibre in the pictures and people have speculated about a change of material, the chainset is still aluminium. You can see in the picture below that the crankarm isn't symmetrical. Like the placement of the spider arms, it's designed to put the strength where it's most needed for the transfer of power.
Five variations on the chainset are available – 50-34T, 52-36T, 53-39T, 54-42T and 55-42T – and there are seven crank arm lengths ranging from 165mm to 180mm.
Shimano claims a weight of 609g for the 50-34T version, 621g for the 53-39T model.
Power measurement
Dura-Ace R9100 features Shimano’s first integrated power meter as an option – the FC-R9100-P – offering real time data as you ride.
“The power meter allows integration and easy installation (pairing) with third party display units to enable the most sophisticated and accurate level of performance measurement and anatomic analysis available today,” says Shimano.
“Not only can the pure output of watts be measured, left and right legs can be measured separately, as well as cadence, giving you the truest measure of performance, isolated from external factors such as gradient, road surface and wind.”
The FC-R9100-P uses technology from bikefitting.com, a Shimano-owned company that specialises in bike fitting – you could have worked that out for yourself, right? – and bike measuring instruments.
The power meter’s strain gauges sit inside the crank arms to measure left and right leg power while the clever stuff – the brain, if you like – lives inside the spider. It’s compact and very discreet to the point that it's hardly noticeable.
You can change chainrings without affecting the power meter’s accuracy. The system checking and firmware upload can be operated via a smart phone or tablet PC through a Bluetooth Low Energy connection (E-Tube).
The power meter runs on an integrated battery. This is recharged with a magnetic adapter without the need to remove covers or casings.
As with previous versions, Dura-Ace R9100 offers both mechanical (cable operated) and electronic (Di2) gear shifting. Shimano doesn't seem to think there's any chance of putting Dura-Ace cable shifting out to pasture any time soon – not while it can still make incremental improvements.
Both mechanical and electronic systems can be combined with either hydraulic disc braking or mechanical rim braking, and can be set up on drop bars or time trial bars.
“The introduction of hydraulic road disc brakes in the Dura-Ace lineup (see below) brings more control and confident braking in tough weather conditions,” says Shimano. “The hoods of the hydraulic levers (ST-R9120/70) are designed to incorporate the hydraulic reservoir and provide an ergonomic hand position, similar to the mechanical brake hoods (ST-R9100/50).”
They really are similar, the idea being that a rider can swap from one to the other without really noticing the difference. Although the hoods of the hydraulic levers are larger, there really isn't much in it. You could easily mistake the two different types at a quick glance.
Shimano says that it has engineered more of a click into its Di2 shifters so you can more easily feel through your fingers whether you've pressed the buttons properly.
“Riders choosing Di2 electronic shifting can also customise the option for multi-shift either through an on/off switch on the lever or, for further customisation, through E-Tube software.”
Shimano says that a pair of mechanical shift levers (ST-R9100) with rim brake levers weigh 365g, and a pair of mechanical shift disc brake levers (ST-R9120) weigh 505g.
Electronic rim brake shift levers (ST-9150) weigh 230g, and electronic hydraulic shift levers (ST-9170) weigh 360g.
Synchronized Shift
Shimano Synchronized Shift is a new feature in electronic road groupsets, imported over from the world of mountain biking. It is “designed to simplify gear choice and reduce decision making in racing situations.”
“Shimano Synchronized Shift is designed to choose the next biggest or lowest gear ratio irrespective of whether a gear change needs to be made by the front or rear derailleur,” says Shimano.
Shimano says:
Two Shimano Synchronized Shift modes will be available:
• Full Shimano Synchronized Shift: the front derailleur reacts based on the rear derailleur’s shift action. This essentially means that, when activated, there is no need for two separate shifters to control front and rear derailleurs, the two buttons on one shifter will control both derailleurs.
• Semi Shimano Synchronized Shift mode: the rear derailleur reacts based on the front derailleur’s shift action, shifting to the next most appropriate rear gear when the rider makes a front shift.
Get that?
Shimano sees this as being particularly beneficial in time trials and triathlons where you can have just one shift button per bar end shifter or base bar brake lever. One hand moves you to a harder gear, the other hand moves you to an easier gear. Easy peasy, even for simple people like wot I is. You don't need to decide whether or not to move the front derailleur, the system will do that automatically if required.
“Reducing the number of buttons simplifies decision making stress for riders and allows lever dimensions to be slimmed down by 28% (from 40mm wide to 29mm) and lever weight to be reduced by 22% (from 128g to 100g),” says Shimano. “Satellite shifters also incorporate this new one button feature.”
The front derailleur (104g, according to Shimano) and rear derailleur (204g) allow these new functions.
“Both electronic derailleurs are compact and designed to protect the shifting operation in the event of a crash,” says Shimano. “The low profile of the rear derailleur also comes with Shimano Shadow Rd technology, positioning the derailleur further below the functioning sprocket.”
This video from a couple of years ago shows how the XTR (mountain bike) version of Shimano Synchronized Shift works.
The Di2 derailleurs are connected via Shimano’s new EW-WU111 wireless unit that allows for an ANT Private connection between Dura-Ace R9100 and third party devices (hence the 'Wireless' element of the name; it's connected to the rest of the Di2 system on your bike via cables).
That new junction box is very, very neat, replacing the quite a large junction box of the previous generation. A frame manufacturer can devise a port within the frame to hold it while leaving the adjustment button and recharging port accessible.
Even neater, the unit will fit into the end of a handlebar in place of a standard bar plug. The cable can run inside the handlebar and exit via a hole in the drop section or even via a hole in the centre of the handlebar and then take a route through the stem. That does sound like a mechanical headache but it would keep everything clean.
Shimano's sub-brand Pro has made up handlebars with the relevant holes that will presumably become available to buy at some stage.
“These components can be connected to Shimano’s E-Tube software, which supports the programmable aspects of the Di2 electronic gear shifting system,” says Shimano. “Additionally, via Bluetooth technology, this is accessible on smart phones and tablets.”
The latest version of E-Tube (2.11.1) allows individual rider profiles to be saved and downloaded to the bike, avoiding the need to re-program the system from scratch for each ride or race.
Mechanical shifting
The new front derailleur (above) doesn't have the long arm of the previous version. Shimano found this aspect of the design to be incompatible with wider tyres (28mm) on some bikes, so it has produced a more compact front derailleur that, it says, works just as smoothly. It also features a hex bolt that allows you to fine tune the shifting without the need for a barrel adjuster somewhere along the cable. It looks like another neat little update.
The direct mount low profile Shimano Shadow Rd rear derailleur (below, another import from mountain biking) is designed to be less exposed than the previous version in the event of a stack. A single cage length is compatible with all chainset/cassette combos (see below).
The front derailleur is a claimed 69g while the rear derailleur is a claimed 158g.
Previously, the largest sprocket size available on a Dura-Ace cassette was 28-tooth. Shimano has now introduced an 11-30 option (above) for an increased gear range. It remains an 11-speed system.
Shimano says that the stroke of the mechanical shift levers is shorter than previously and that the operation is lighter.
Shimano is also introducing a new lighter weight Dura-Ace pedal. They've kept the platform as wide as before while shaving off the grams.
Braking systems
Shimano has now incorporated hydraulic disc brakes into the Dura-Ace lineup for the first time. They were non-series (they didn’t belong to any groupset) previously.
Shimano says that these aren't simply existing brakes rebadged with a Dura-Ace logo. It says that the current road bike disc brakes out there are essentially repurposed mountain bike brakes and the new Dura-Ace design is its first real road bike disc brake.
“New dedicated Dura-Ace rotors bring better heat management properties to provide stability in brake performance,” says Shimano. “With an increased adaptor size, heat transfer through the rotor is decreased and more heat can dissipate through the air. This results in a 30°c reduction in rotor temperature over Shimano’s ICE Technologies Freeza rotors.”
Rim brakes are available in dual-pivot (above) or direct mount options and they're now designed to take tyres up to 28mm wide. Shimano says that it has slimmed down the callipers – it's a very small amount, by the look of things – and added a booster between the pivots.
“[The] new… C60 and C40 (above) rim platforms bring a stiffer wheel to enhance forward and side-to-side (lateral) power transfer and, with ultra-light carbon rim heights of 50mm and 37mm, are also designed to reduce air resistance,” says Shimano. “This allows Dura-Ace R9100 C60 wheels, in a real world scenario, to save 16W over Shimano’s current Dura-Ace 9000 C50 wheelset.”
Shimano doesn’t give any more information than that on its claim other than to say that this figure is based on all factors, not just aerodynamics. You don't gain 16W through aero efficiency but lose a proportion of that through increased weight, say.
The C50 wheelset referred to has a rim that’s 50mm deep and 24mm wide.
C24 wheels (above) – already in the Dura-Ace range – complete the lineup.
Selected wheels are available as clincher, tubular or tubeless versions with Shimano quick release hubs and the option of road E-thru axles (12mm).
Buying details
How much will new Dura-Ace R9100 cost? Prices have yet to be released.
When will it be available? Not for a while yet. Shimano has told us both "autumn 2016" and “early 2017”. Either way, it's a few months off.
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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. 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.
Shimano have confirmed that you can use the rear mech with current 11 speed group sets. So if you want lighter shifting and or a 11 30 cassette fill your boots!
Most of the improved performance with the new mechanical 9100 will come from the MTB style rear mech. Removing a large part of the cable loop will give shifting a lighter more direct feel to shifts and as there is less friction in the system it will stay that way for longer. The good news is unless Shimano has changed its cable pull ratio which I doubt you can fit this Mech to all current shimano 11 speed group sets and get the bump in shift performance. Obviously check compatibility first.
I think the shadow technology in this new mech requires a new cable pull ratio - it did on mountain bikes when it was introduced.
Nope, no change in cable pull ratio. BikeRadar confirm it here.
In Shimano MTB-speak, Shadow technology just refers to the (direct) mounting system of the rear derailleur itself. You may have confused it with Dyna-Sys, which was the technology that altered the cable pull ratios - and effectively ended cross-compatibility of road and MTB shifters and derailleurs once in 10-speed territory and up.
Dyna-Sys is also the reason why you see STI levers being paired with 9-speed MTB rear derailleurs on bikes whose riders want much more gearing range than the 30T limit of the 10-speed road gruppos from 2011 or so. That got remedied (slightly) with Ultegra 6800, 105 5800 and Tiagra 4700 eventually offering official capacity for 32 and 34T largest cogs.
Shame they could not go the cable less route as sram perhaps because of sram patents ? rather than the press release saying people arn't interested in cable less mech. changing because they really like threading wires down tubes and stopping batteries rattling .
A rare case of Shimano copying Campag with that rear mech design - the offset pivots are reminiscent of the latest Chorus/Record/SR rear mechs with "embrace technology" (yuk).
I'd agree that the rear mech has been slapped with the ugly stick... A bit too mechanical for my liking.
However, as with previous D.Ace incarnations, the looks tend to grow on you, and this could be something we see as the bench mark of bicycle component design in a very short space of time.
My overall thoughts however is that this is more about polishing teh edges than coming up with anything revolutionary. Which I think is testiment to how good the 9000 group is/was more than any lack of imagination or effort from Shimano.
I've never been a Shimano fan but I like how they've really slimmed down the Di2 mechs. Shame about that crankset though, the previous model was a thing of beauty.
Could just get that to pose with and forget the rest
For mechanical users, doesn't look like there's much to get wet about. Not like the jump from 7900 to 9000. 9000 mechanical is pretty well refined I guess.. Could be wrong though, looking forward to the reviews.
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18 comments
Shimano have confirmed that you can use the rear mech with current 11 speed group sets. So if you want lighter shifting and or a 11 30 cassette fill your boots!
I'm surprised they have not changed the cassette. From what I have heard the carbon fibre parts are a weakness.
Power meter in the crank is great, unfortunately it looks ugly and the Limits system is more appealing to me at least.
I actually quite like that rear mech.
Not a fan of the new crankset though.
Interesting to see the integrated power meter, if that takes off and begins to trickle down it could leave Stages etc in a bit of trouble.
Are the rotors 140 or 160mm?
Really like Shimano's denial for CF parts
Most of the improved performance with the new mechanical 9100 will come from the MTB style rear mech. Removing a large part of the cable loop will give shifting a lighter more direct feel to shifts and as there is less friction in the system it will stay that way for longer. The good news is unless Shimano has changed its cable pull ratio which I doubt you can fit this Mech to all current shimano 11 speed group sets and get the bump in shift performance. Obviously check compatibility first.
I think the shadow technology in this new mech requires a new cable pull ratio - it did on mountain bikes when it was introduced.
Nope, no change in cable pull ratio. BikeRadar confirm it here.
In Shimano MTB-speak, Shadow technology just refers to the (direct) mounting system of the rear derailleur itself. You may have confused it with Dyna-Sys, which was the technology that altered the cable pull ratios - and effectively ended cross-compatibility of road and MTB shifters and derailleurs once in 10-speed territory and up.
Dyna-Sys is also the reason why you see STI levers being paired with 9-speed MTB rear derailleurs on bikes whose riders want much more gearing range than the 30T limit of the 10-speed road gruppos from 2011 or so. That got remedied (slightly) with Ultegra 6800, 105 5800 and Tiagra 4700 eventually offering official capacity for 32 and 34T largest cogs.
Shame they could not go the cable less route as sram perhaps because of sram patents ? rather than the press release saying people arn't interested in cable less mech. changing because they really like threading wires down tubes and stopping batteries rattling .
"it's connected to the rest of the Di2 system on your bike via cables"
Old school...
New crankset hideous. As Rapha N says, current one is lovely; hopefully they will be going cheap at the usual online suspects in due course...
Black, black and more black. Are Shimano owned by Henry Ford? What happened to lovely shiny silver components?
A rare case of Shimano copying Campag with that rear mech design - the offset pivots are reminiscent of the latest Chorus/Record/SR rear mechs with "embrace technology" (yuk).
Still looks bloody ugly compared to Campag though
Looks like an old XT rear mech to me.
I'd agree that the rear mech has been slapped with the ugly stick... A bit too mechanical for my liking.
However, as with previous D.Ace incarnations, the looks tend to grow on you, and this could be something we see as the bench mark of bicycle component design in a very short space of time.
My overall thoughts however is that this is more about polishing teh edges than coming up with anything revolutionary. Which I think is testiment to how good the 9000 group is/was more than any lack of imagination or effort from Shimano.
I've never been a Shimano fan but I like how they've really slimmed down the Di2 mechs. Shame about that crankset though, the previous model was a thing of beauty.
That shadow + rear mech is horrid looking!
Chainset compatible with Dura Ace 9000?
Could just get that to pose with and forget the rest
For mechanical users, doesn't look like there's much to get wet about. Not like the jump from 7900 to 9000. 9000 mechanical is pretty well refined I guess.. Could be wrong though, looking forward to the reviews.