Specialized has just revealed that it's new Allez Sprint X1 road bike, an aerodynamic aluminium road bike, is coming to the UK in 2016.
Earlier this year we reported on the brand new Specialized Allez Sprint, the company’s aluminium bike that had been completely updated with aerodynamic features borrowed from the Venge. Unfortunately, Specialized UK confirmed to us that it didn’t have any plans to bring this bike into the UK.
It’s clearly had a change of heart, maybe as a reaction to the interest, this bike generated, and will be adding it to the 2016 line-up. It won't be cheap though, with a price tag of £4,000. Yes, you can buy a carbon bike for that sort of money, but that's missing the point of the Allez Sprint. It's good to see another manufacturer pushing aluminium as a serious alternative to carbon at the top-end.
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Specialized says the new Allez is the most “advanced alloy road bikes we've ever made” and it’s been designed, as the name suggests, for crit racing. Yes, it’s unashamedly a very focused bike, but one that taps into the popularity of choosing aluminium over carbon fibre for a stiff, durable and affordable race bike.
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The new bike combines the unique D'Aluisio Smart Weld (DSW) Technology that has been a feature of top-end Allez models for the past couple of years and introduces aerodynamically shaped tube profiles and a few geometry changes to make it a better race bike.
Specialized has lopped some length off the chainstays to create a very stiff rear triangle, and shortening the wheelbase will keep the handling sharp for negotiating tight corners at high speed, typical of a crit circuit like Crystal Palace or Odd Down.
The tubes have been shaped to reduce drag. Mimicking the Venge is the teardrop shaped seat tube hugging the curve of the rear wheel and using an aero seatpost. The seatstays have been dropped, a move we say commonly on aero road bikes. The down tube meanwhile has been shaped to sit closer to the front wheel to improve aerodynamics.
The US company has obviously put its own wind tunnel to good use. “The down tube, seat tube, and seatstays have all been aerodynamically optimized to reduce drag, without sacrificing any of the explosive responsiveness that crit racing and sprinting demands. The result is a bike that saves 1.3 meters in a sprint compared to a traditional Allez,” it says.
The frame uses the carbon fibre fork from the Tarmac and the bike, and it uses the same size-specific approach first introduced with its latest Tarmac. That means that the Allez uses six head tubes and three different forks across the size range.
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Specialized has been pushing the development of cutting-edge aluminium frames. Several years ago it introduced Smartweld on the Allez model, a construction process used at the head tube and bottom bracket that is claimed to improve the stiffness and strength of the frame.
Smartweld uses hydroformed main tubes paired with a specially forged head tube.
“The headtube, toptube, and downtube have been hydroformed with a curved, dome-like edge that, when butted together, creates a seamless valley that is filled with weld material,” says Specialized.
The bottom bracket is made with two stamped halves and a central sleeve that are then welded together, which moves the welds away from the traditional joint positions and allows the main tubes to be oversized. Stiffness is apparently comparable to the carbon fibre Tarmac, an impressive feat indeed.
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Fitted to the new bike will be SRAM’s Force 1x11 drivetrain, which ditches the front mech in favour of a single ring and wide-range cassette. While we’ve seen quite a few manufacturers speccing SRAM’s single ring drivetrain on cyclocross and gravel bikes for 2016, we’ve not seen many road bikes with it.
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Sticking with the speed theme is the Roval CL64 carbon fibre wheelset and Specialized’s own carbon aero handlebar.
The Allez Sprint X1 will cost £4,000 and we believe coming into the UK in limited numbers. More at www.specialized.com/gb/gb/news/rider-first
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9 comments
Marketing dictates take or create market share.Positive endorsement and advertising
are both far easier and cheaper to achieve than genuine product R&D.
The ingenuity of the marketing people to segment, existing segments and target the 'long tail'
is fascinating! Perhaps they should do a Starwars version, I'd be happy to pay extra to cover the royalty payments !!
pretty bike
Wat is "niche" at the moment may become a norm in a few years time.
Plenty of people would be served perfectly fine by a single ring but run double because they got used to it. We don't all live in the mountains or tend to climb a single hill for several minutes...
Having run 44T 11-25T for a while, I understand where Festina is coming from. Once you get rid of one chainring and a front mech, you start realising it was just dead weight.
Exactly - Its geometry is focused on being good in crits and will be bought by crit riders wanting an edge or wannabees thinking it will buy them an edge in such races. Everyone thinking a more generic relaxed geometry road bike with a front mech would be better in a crit where you only ever use 3 or 4 gears and never touch the small ring, even off the start line want their head looking at! Clearly much of that £4K in this model is the carbon wheels, groupset and additional labour required for the naked finish. Drop back to painted 'Sprint X1 Comp' model and the same frame built up with Rival is $2,000.
The only thing I would change is offer the option to buy with a 52/53 x 11-23 option for those actually racing on it. 52/53 x 11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18-19 is all you need. The 22 & 23 for pottering back to the HQ lol!
I don't get why people get so upset about "niche" bikes, especially when the same manufacturers are still actively promoting "do it all" bikes. No-one is forcing you to buy a "niche" bike
I like it. I'm not usually into major brand stuff but that bike has something about it. Fairly minimal logos and purposeful looking. It's niche for sure but I'm sure it would be great for the intended purpose.
Holy sh!t. Just had a look at the specialized site and this 'cheap crit bike' is £4K. Not the kind of thing you'd be happy writing off in a crit race. You'd get a good carbon race bike at half the price, or a CAAD12, so where is the market for this?
I like it, I just don't £4K like it. I don't even £2K like it.
Not at all, I think it's a brilliant race bike. Admittedly I wouldn't use it on a 100 mile hilly road race but for a crit race, that would be perfect. Cheap(ish), dead simple, stiff as hell. How often in a crit race do you end up using the granny ring? Never! So remove it, remove the mech and the extra weight and pointlessness, stick with a close ratio cassette and you're sorted. I often go one further in crit races and do it on my singlespeed. Never once been dropped but it does compromise sprint finishes once they get above about 35mph.
Even in a road race you could probably get away with it provided you'd chosen your chainring and cassette carefully although I appreciate that it'd be a fairly particular sort of rider who had a pile of cassettes and chainrings to choose from and spec the bike with for each individual race!
(That said, CXers do exactly that with tyres and gears so that type of rider certainly exists).
I like it, looks very smart.
it is a lovely bike lost for a front mech.
Anyone who races or meets a headwind or ever been on a drag...loves the joy of a close ratio cassette.
sticking one chainring and a 3 sprocket jump between each gear leave this for the recycling bin.
fecking daft yankies losing the run of themselves.