3T has just launched the Strada Pro, a complete bike with a SRAM Force 1 groupset and 3T wheels costing £4,850, making owning this radical new bike a little more accessible than the previously frameset-only Strada Team.
- Review: 3T Strada Team frameset
- Win a 3T Strada frameset worth £3700!
We were highly impressed with the radical new 3T Strada Team last year, so much so that it clinched two gongs in our annual celebration of the best bikes we’ve tested in the past year, both Superbike of the Year and the overall Bike of the Year awards.
The only real complaint was the big price tag. At £3,700 for the frameset, it ain’t cheap and you need to factor in nearly as much again for all the parts to assemble a complete bike. It’s worth remembering that 3T isn’t a big bike company like Specialized or Trek so probably doesn’t have the economies of scale to help bring the price down, and cutting-edge tech, due to all the development time, usually comes at a significant price.
Despite this, 3T is keen to make the bike as accessible as possible, and the Strada Pro is a proper complete bike with a SRAM Force 1 groupset and 3T wheels and parts for just over a £1,000 more than the Team frame costs.
On the surface, apart from the new blue paint finish, the frame and fork are identical but differences in the carbon layup help to bring the price down a bit, though the weight has crept up by 130g.
SRAM is the only company offering a dedicated 1x groupset so it’s top-end Force 1 is an obvious choice and on this bike pairs a 50t chainring with an 11-36t cassette. The SRAM Quarq crankset is power meter ready, so you can upgrade the spider to add power at a later date.
3T’s own Discus C35 Pro wheels use a unidirectional carbon fibre rim with a 32mm deep and 25.6mm wide profile, with straight pull Sapim CX-Ray spokes and CeramicSpeed hub bearings.
As you probably know the Strada is designed around wide tyres, 28mm being the optimum width. The Strada Pro is specced with the new Pirelli PZero Velo 25mm tyres. Why 25? That’s because the wide rims actually stretch the 25mm tyres out to 28mm, so you get the desired width with a little weight saving. It’s actually a trick some of the road.cc staff have been doing for a couple of years and is a good benefit of wide rims.
When I tested the Strada last year with actual 28mm tyres, the wide Enve rims ballooned them out closer to 31mm. It pays to consider the impact a wide rim has on tyre width when speccing wider tyres.
A 3T Aeronova Team Stealth handlebar, Apto Pro stem and Selle San Marco Aspide 2 saddle complete the full build.
Are 1x road bikes here to stay?
To say the 3T Strada has generated a lot of debate would be an understatement. It was a bike we were genuinely impressed with, and yes there are some compromises with gear selection, but on the whole, the simplicity, speed and handling of the bike overcame those gearing niggles that in general real-world riding isn’t as big a problem, if at all, that you might imagine it would be.
The man behind the Strada, Gerard Vroomen, admits in a blog post about the new Strada Pro that he was worried if the bike was a step too far but adds that he’s happy if 50% of the people hate a new design.
“Any less, and the bike is too ordinary. Any more, and there are too few people left to buy it. Well, when we launched the Strada, it certainly felt like WAY more than 50% hated it,” he explains.
- Is the front mech dead? Is there a future for the front derailleur on modern road bikes?
Despite that, the Strada has been a sales success. It reveals it had to triple production of the original Strada in January to keep up with the demand from customers clearly in favour with the unique design.
The development of the Strada Pro, a complete bike at a more affordable price, was always part of the plan says Vroomen, but delayed due to the demand for the original Team frameset.
“We believe so strongly in the Strada that we always wanted to offer it as a complete bike at a more affordable price. We realise we’re not Giant, Trek or Specialized, we don’t churn out frames by the millions, but within our capabilities and without watering down the performance of our bikes at all, we do want to make them available to as many people as possible,” he says.
A year on from that launch, the idea of a disc-equipped, aerodynamic road bike with a dedicated 1x design doesn’t seem so far-fetched. True, it’s not for everyone, it probably never will be, but with a pro team, Aqua Blue Sport, currently racing the bike and helping in the development of future revisions, it’s fair to say the Strada is here to stay.
Can we expect to see more dedicated 1x road bikes in the future? I think it’s reasonable to expect this category of road bike to only grow in the future.
More info at https://saddleback.co.uk and www.3t.bike
Don't forget you can still enter our fab competition to win a 3T Strada Team frameset right here. Be quick, entries close soon.
You can buy the 3T Strada Pro from the retailers below:
- Sigma Sports Ltd
- Corley Cycles
- 700 Windsor
- Wheelbase Ilkley
- Psyclewerx
Add new comment
7 comments
Single chainring, Curved seat tube - familiar........:
https://theadventuresofsarahandalice.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/20130912-221817.jpg?w=645&h=863
3.30pm and still no sign of BTBS, he must have nipped out to buy some puncture proof innertubes.. or maybe he's still waiting for his Amstrad PC to load up Netscape...
Looks like someone will have to perform the ritual: stand in front of a mirror (or very shiny steel frame) and say his name 3 times.
I really, really like that bike, though sadly still too rich for me at £5k
For me in my area which is more rolling than hilly I can see 1x suiting me well as 50x36 is not wildly different to a 34x25. Is the 36 the biggest cog you can get for that bike?
Well, I'll step in while we're waiting for BTBS, I for one would be pretty upset if we were all forced to adopt disc brakes, the negatives outweigh the positives for my riding. But so long as there's choice!
Still intrigued by the 1x option, I push a distinctly average sort of pace up, down and along, but I'm always fiddling between cogs at the back tyring to find just the right cadence. Even putting in a hard effort on the 40 minute flat commute the other day I found myself near the bottom of the block looking for an elusive 'in between' ratio that wasn't there. Makes me wonder if the bigger gaps on a 1x would annoy me.
Doubt 2x will ever go away though, it still exists for MTB where arguably the benefits of 1x are greater.
I doubt very much whether anyone is going to be forced into anything - for instance you can still pick up cantis, cork brake pads, 5-speed free-wheels and down-tube shifters from pretty much anywhere ! Cost for decent hydraulic disc setups is the primary negative for me, on the technical / aesthetic side I prefer them * over rim brakes on modern bikes - each to their own and as you say, as long as there's choice, it's all good.
Seems to currently be due to cost again, more than anything else (certain amount of irony there) - everything even half-decent is heading for 1x for MTB (DH only use about 5-6 speeds anyway...)
* Pure mechanical disc setups are more pain then benefit IME. YMMV.
I would love to ride one of these, I think they look great and it seems everyone who reviews or rides one seem to have the same good things to say about it.
12 speed 1x groupsets with disc brakes and tubeless tyres = our bike future?
Expecting BTBS to issue a damning reply.