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TECH NEWS

Shiny Stuff Episode 2 - Velotoze, Shimano, Merida, Thorn and Repente

The guys are back for another round of shiny stuff

Dave and Liam root through the testing box of swag to pick out shiny stuff to show off. This week we’ve got strange gloves from Velotoze, Shimano shoes, a fancy Italian saddle and two lovely bikes. Also featuring a Sean Connery impression.

Shooo mishh Moneypenney, ssshall we begin?

Thorn Club Tour - From £1675

This versatile touring bike is going with the latest trends and offering you the space for some very wide rubber. With a 700c wheel, you’ll be able to fit 40mm tyres while mounting 650b wheels increases that to 54mm tyres. That opens the bike up to more than just touring. You could easily load it up for a gravel bike-packing trip for instance.

The steel frame comes with a range of mounting options for bottle cages, mudguards, racks.

Up front is a 110mm Boost hub with a 135mm quick release at the back. Complete bikes start from around £1675 but how would you build up yours?

Repente Latus M - €219

Repente Latus M 2

This short and stubby carbon saddle from Italian brand Repente looks pretty wide but the stubby design is deceptive. At 142mm wide, this T700 carbon saddle comes in at just 144g.

While many brands target their saddles at a specific rider, say a male road racer with good flexibility, Repente advertises this saddle as a unisex design and says that road and off-road riders should find it comfortable.

Shimano RC5 Road Shoes - £129.99

The latest kicks from Shimano, the RC5, is their third-tier offering and out of the box, they look rather good. They borrow a lot of tech from the higher-end RC7 and RC9 shoes that we really like and the price is rather attractive too at just £129.99.

A carbon-reinforced nylon sole provides a stiffness rating of 8/12 on Shimano’s scale. There’s also a Boa L6 dial to close the synthetic upper.

Velotoze Waterproof Gloves - £49

If you’re a rider that still likes to head out when it’s chucking it down, you may well be familiar with Velotoze. Their sleek overshoes became very popular with cyclists of all abilities and now they’ve launched a pair of gloves.

These are designed to work from -5ºC to 15ºC, stopping the water and the wind from freezing your fingers. While there’s now an absence of races to test these in, we’re sure there will be plenty of rainy days around 8ºC to come.

Merida Mission CX Force AXS - £4200

Merida Mission CX Force

We’ve already had a good go on Merida’s Mission cyclocross bike, but the addition of carbon wheels and a wireless Sram Force AXS 1X groupset, along with some fancy carbon finishing kit has brought the weight down to a svelte 7.95kg in this size large.

While cyclocross season is over, it shouldn’t be difficult for Dave to find some mud to slide around in.  

That’s it for this week. We might be self-isolating but we’ll find an inventive solution for next week’s episode of Shiny Stuff.

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4 comments

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matthewn5 | 4 years ago
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Does anyone make a dynamo hub for a 110mm front fork spacing?
I can't remember having seen one, unless it's Son's 'fatbike' standard. Seems a problem for a touring bike.

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ktache replied to matthewn5 | 4 years ago
1 like

Just a quick search found me this-

https://www.cyclingabout.com/best-dynamo-hub-bicycle-touring-bikepacking/

Don't know if it of any use.

Avatar
Derk Davies | 4 years ago
1 like

Re. Velotoze gloves. Just use latex gloves. And if it's cold use them under your normal gloves. Because if the gloves last as long as the overshoes you'll be wasting a lot of money buying them.

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Liam Cahill replied to Derk Davies | 4 years ago
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The gloves are a different material and seem a lot more robust.

Saying that, my Velotoze overshoes have lasted a year each time. I've only had one pair rip. The others I've replaced because they've become stained (yes, I'm a moron for buying white haha).

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