Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

TECH NEWS

Just in: Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 aero disc bike

Aero disc-equipped road bike with Dura-Ace Di2 zooms into the office for review

The Rose X-Lite CW is an aerodynamic road bike and was introduced by the German bike brand in 2015. It's available in two versions - one with disc brakes or one with direct mount caliper brakes, we've got the former in for test. Before it hits the road, here's an overview of the key details. 

Rose Bikes 2017 road bike range unveiled

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - downtube.jpg

Our model is wearing a full Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 groupset with hydraulic disc brakes. It's a build that will set you back £4,611.83, which is very competitive for a Dura-Ace specced bike. That price also includes DT Swiss Spline C38C db wheels, a carbon fibre clincher rim with a claimed 1,445g weight. The rims have an 18mm inner width and are tubeless-ready, and the hubs use Shimano’s Center Lock for mounting the disc rotors. They do come with a maximum rider weight limit of 110kg, though. You've been warned. 

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - drivetrain.jpg

Our bike is sporting the distinctive Profile Designs Canta Ergo handlebar. It’s shaped to offer optimum comfort, with an ergonomic and contoured top section for cruising comfort, and shallow and short reach drops so you can easily get into the aero tuck. Cables are routed inside the handlebar to maintain the smooth lines and bar tape. It’s clamped to the frame via a sleek Aeria Stem. As its looks suggest, it is designed to reduce drag with a smooth faceplate that hides the bolts from the airflow. 

- The fastest aero road bikes

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - fork.jpg

A pair of Continental Grand Prix 4000S II tyres in a 25mm width - tyre clearance is pretty generous for a racy aero road bike, and 28mm tyres are accommodated in the frame and fork. The rim brake version only takes up to 25mm, so that extra tyre clearance is a clear benefit of going with disc brakes. A Fizik Aliante saddle completes the build details.

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - bars 2.jpg

The frame has clearly been designed to slip through the air cleanly, with truncated aero main tubes, a seat tube that hugs the rear wheel, an integrated 2-bolt seat clamp and an aero seatpost. Rose claims 8% less drag with this new and improved bike. Will the aerodynamic benefits of the new bike be enough to offset the apparent drag caused by disc brakes? We don’t know, and Rose doesn’t offer any aero data like Specialized did at the launch of the new Venge ViAS Disc. Frame weight is 990g which is good for an aero road frame.

It's a smart looking bike and uses all the modern details that we are coming to expect on the latest disc-equipped road bikes. We're talking things like flat mount disc caliper mounts, 12mm thru-axles at both ends and full internal cable routing. 

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - seat tube detail.jpg

There’s full internal routing for the electronic wires for the groupset and the hydraulic hoses are also hidden inside the frame and fork. It’s all very neat and tidy. There are three bottle bosses on the down tube, the standard position or a lower position which is claimed to be more aerodynamic. To appeal to multisport types, the seatpost can be flipped around to steepen the effective seat angle and push the saddle further forward.

Rose X-LITE CW-4100 Di2 - thru axle.jpg

Aero and disc bikes usually come in a fair bit heavier than their regular counterparts, but at 7.46kg (16.44lb) for the size 57cm pictured, it’s narrowing the gap. 

Buying a Rose is a bit different in that you can fully customise the spec of the bike, so if there are components on this bike you don't like, or you want to substitute the Dura-Ace Di2 for a more affordable groupset, you can change any part of it until you hit a satisfactory price or build. More info at www.rosebikes.com

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

Add new comment

7 comments

Avatar
daviddb | 8 years ago
0 likes

Yup, with all the million and one varients the otherwise admirable Rose site offers ( I speak as a satisfied customer) they could do with a little more colourway choice so as I don't have to choose between garish graphics or plain doom black.

Avatar
macrophotofly | 8 years ago
0 likes

It's going to be hard saying " oh fabulous new bike" like you mean it when one of these turns up on a club ride....

I think it is the sheer number of fonts being used (when you include the loud graphics on the wheels) that just makes it look aweful

Avatar
Sven Van Anders | 8 years ago
2 likes

I don't want technological or engineering prowess for my cash; I want fashion and looks. Sod how it performs. Tell me how cool it is propped up against the cafe wall

Avatar
Bahrd replied to Sven Van Anders | 8 years ago
0 likes

Sven Van Anders wrote:

Tell me how cool it is propped up against the cafe wall

And on the roof rack of [my BMW/my Mercedes/my Audi].

Avatar
paulrattew | 8 years ago
0 likes

This colourway is pretty nasty, but the black version looks much better. 

Avatar
Trickytree1984 | 8 years ago
0 likes

I like it. Anyway. They do an all back paint job (which is what I have)

Avatar
nadsta | 8 years ago
0 likes

Dear Rose bikes

Please buy your logo design department a calendar. Those 80's graphics are appalling. 

Otherwise an unnattractive but interesting bike in a duck billed platypus kind of way

Latest Comments