Osiris
Zen MBB Master
Back in 2011 I decided to get back into cycling after a thirty year absence. The bike I ended up buying was the Trek Madone, which weighed a feathery 16 lbs. I had expected something more like my 1975 Fuji 12 speed, which tipped the scales at 25 lbs, so I was amazed at how far technology had come. After that, Trek introduced the Emonda, which in it's lightest iteration was something close to 10 lbs. I was well aware by then that riders were spending hundreds if not thousands of dollars to shave off every extra gram of weight from their bikes, so the emergence of an ultra-light bike like the Emonda didn't come as much of a surprise.
But last week I was once again at the same Trek store, just to have a look around. On the floor was the latest Madone, now fully equipped with the latest carbon frame technology, disk brakes, and electronic shifting. Beside it was the Domane, a more user friendly model that I test rode a number of years ago when it first came out. I lifted it off the ground, expecting it to feel even lighter than the old model, but instead it felt like it was made of lead! I asked one of the salesmen, and was told, "It's around 20 lbs"(!) That's almost the weight of my mountain bike. How did this thing gain so much extra flab? The 2020 Madone also felt heavier than my 2011 model, and the salesman refused my request to put it on the scale. My guess is that the culprit is those disk brakes and electronic shifters. No doubt the forks and chain stays have had to be beefed up as well in order to withstand the bending forces put on them by the disk brakes. Other than that, I can't see what else would account for it. One wonders how they advertise these new bikes, given that manufacturers have spent years telling us that lighter is better, only to now be producing bikes substantially heavier than the ones that came out a decade ago. No thanks.
But last week I was once again at the same Trek store, just to have a look around. On the floor was the latest Madone, now fully equipped with the latest carbon frame technology, disk brakes, and electronic shifting. Beside it was the Domane, a more user friendly model that I test rode a number of years ago when it first came out. I lifted it off the ground, expecting it to feel even lighter than the old model, but instead it felt like it was made of lead! I asked one of the salesmen, and was told, "It's around 20 lbs"(!) That's almost the weight of my mountain bike. How did this thing gain so much extra flab? The 2020 Madone also felt heavier than my 2011 model, and the salesman refused my request to put it on the scale. My guess is that the culprit is those disk brakes and electronic shifters. No doubt the forks and chain stays have had to be beefed up as well in order to withstand the bending forces put on them by the disk brakes. Other than that, I can't see what else would account for it. One wonders how they advertise these new bikes, given that manufacturers have spent years telling us that lighter is better, only to now be producing bikes substantially heavier than the ones that came out a decade ago. No thanks.