What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

Advertisement
What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

Specialized S Works Venge review

Daniel McMahon/Business Insider

The Specialized Venge ViAS was the winningest bike at the 2017 Tour de France.

Advertisement

It's not every day you get to drive the fastest car or fly the fastest plane, so when a leading bike brand agreed to let me borrow its fastest bike, I got plenty excited.

The California-based Specialized sent an S-Works Venge ViAS Disc, a whole lot of bike that has won stages in the Tour de France and countless other top races. It's an aero road bike built to do one thing: go fast.

Complimentary Tech Event
Transform talent with learning that works
Capability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More

I've been riding this impressively equipped Venge - with wind-cheating ZIPP wheels, the novel electronic shifting eTap, and powerful SRAM disc brakes - for the better part of a year.

Swapping my regular bike for a superbike was like going from a Civic to a Corvette. Here's what it was like.

Advertisement

{{}}

First impressions: wicked fast, technically crisp, surprisingly comfortable, supremely balanced.

First impressions: wicked fast, technically crisp, surprisingly comfortable, supremely balanced.

The aero road bike became a thing around the mid-2000s. The new kind of bicycle had a single purpose: to go fast in a straight line.

Engineers tested lightweight carbon-fiber tubes of myriad shapes and sizes to help riders slice through the wind, reduce drag, and go faster. But while the early aero bikes were significantly faster, they handled like time-trial bikes. Over bumpy roads they felt harsh, the handling twitchy. They were not fun to ride.

Thankfully, aero bikes have a come a long way, as has the Venge. Specialized's fastest offering, which has now seen a few iterations, inspires more all-around riding confidence and feels comfortable for a carbon aero bike.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

When Specialized rolled out this version of the Venge, in 2016, it said it was the fastest bike it had ever made, as well as "the stiffest and most aerodynamic." That meant something, given that Specialized has its own "Win Tunnel" and for years has been making some of the most sought-after bicycles, which have won just about every race you can name, including world championships, the classics, and grand tours. In fact, the current men's world road champ — and one of the best bike racers of all time — counts a Venge among his quiver.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

But let's be clear: You buy an aero bike to be the fastest on your group ride or the first across the finish line. At least now you can have your speed and enjoy it, too, because the dragster has evolved to Formula One.

When it launched this Venge, Specialized claimed the bike would save a rider a whopping 45 seconds over 40 kilometers (about 25 miles) compared with the Tarmac, the company's climbing bike, which itself has since been updated.

More stages were won at the 2017 Tour on a Venge ViAS Disc than on any other bike.

More stages were won at the 2017 Tour on a Venge ViAS Disc than on any other bike.

Germany's Marcel Kittel, one of the world's fastest road sprinters, won a whopping five stages at the 2017 Tour aboard a Venge ViAS Disc. In fact, Kittel made Tour de France history by becoming the first rider in the world's greatest race to win a road stage on a bike with disc brakes.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

All around the Venge is an emphasis on integration of aero shapes that help limit wind resistance.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike
Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike
Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike
Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

I didn't used to like flat aero bars: They just looked like overkill. And, more important, I didn't like how they felt when my hands were on the tops. But over time I got used to them, and now I like them on the right bike, as on this Venge. (And, really, round bars would look silly here.)

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike
Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

My tester came with eTap, SRAM's wireless electronic shifting system. It's quite different from its rivals, notably Shimano's Di2. First, because it's wireless, there are no gear cables running from the cockpit to the derailleurs. It renders a cleaner look and makes cleaning and routine maintenance easier. And you'll never have to replace cables and housing.

Second, you shift differently with eTap than you do with a conventional system. With a light tap of the right shifter (pictured), the system shifts to a harder gear; with a tap of the left shifter, it shifts to an easier gear. When you tap the right shifter and the left shifter at the same time, eTap shifts from the little chainring to the big ring or vice versa. (Watch SRAM's video for eTap here.)

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

SRAM says the eTap system on a full charge will provide one month of riding — or 1,000-plus kilometers (over 620 miles) — under normal use. Typical full charge time for each derailleur battery is about 60 minutes when charged with the provided A/C adapter. There are also batteries for the shifters; they'll last two years under normal use (estimated at 15 riding hours a week), SRAM says. MSRP for the aftermarket eTap groupset is $2,760.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

To my surprise, I got used to eTap's novel shifting in little time, and I liked the logic of it: right harder, left easier, right harder, left easier. There are pro teams using eTap, so it's race-proven. I especially loved that I could make micro adjustments while riding. I took a real liking to eTap; it just worked perfectly.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

Besides getting my first ride on eTap, the most exciting thing about this Venge was riding wider tires, these being the 28 mm ZIPP Tangentes.

Because this bike has disc brakes, you can run wider rims and tires, which is a beautiful thing. In fact, there has been a trend toward running wider tires with lower pressure. Conventional wisdom used to say narrower tires with higher pressure — for example, 23 mm tires inflated to 120 PSI — were faster. But research has found that wider tires with lower pressure actually roll faster in real-world, non-lab conditions. Plus, a wider tire gives you greater grip of the road, which means you have more control of the bike.

Perhaps best of all, riding feels more comfortable with less pressure because softer tires better absorb road vibrations (the tires literally bounce less). In a sense, your tires are your only suspension. (I ran 90 PSI in front and 100 in back.) Mated to the superfast ZIPP 454 NSWs, the R28 tires handled confidently on all roads, including over fine gravel and cobblestones and under heavy braking.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

My tester came with the stealth-looking ZIPP 454 NSW carbon clinchers. ZIPP says the rim design comes from studying humpback whale fins, hence the patented sawtooth profile. The dimples? They improve airflow, the company claims. According to ZIPP, the design translates into a faster, more controlled, and more efficient ride, in headwinds and crosswinds and under heavy braking.

These are the most stable road wheels I've ridden, and probably the fastest. When riding into strong crosswinds — or even no-handed — I found the 454s to be predictable. This wheelset complements the aero Venge nicely, and the wide rim profile allows for the plump 28 mm tires, making for a fast pairing. The wheels don't come cheap; you'll pay $4,000 for the set.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

Just as electronic shifting is replacing mechanical, disc brakes are becoming more ubiquitous on road bikes. Discs first appeared on mountain bikes, then cyclocross bikes, then gravel bikes, and now road bicycles. Last year I saw some Tour riders on discs, but this time around we should see full teams on them.

While rim brakes might be easier to work on and be more aesthetically pleasing to some, disc brakes dissipate heat better and provide better modulation; in other words, they give you more secure and smoother stopping power. Ever try to stop quickly and confidently in the rain on a bike with rim brakes and carbon wheels? Not fun! Discs just function better. The drawback is they're heavier and more expensive, but over time that will change, too, in consumers' favor.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

My tester came with a SRAM Red 11-speed cassette with a massive gear range (11-32) that served me well everywhere I went, whether up punchy climbs or long, steady ones, down 50-mph descents, and in all direction of wind.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

I rode the Venge on all the roads I normally ride — smooth tarmac, chip seal, light, fine gravel, bike paths of all stripes, over cobbles, and even in the grass when a couple of occasions called for it — but also up 2,500-feet climbs. What continually impressed me was how well balanced and fast the bike felt at high speed. Even when throwing my weight around movement felt stable, smooth, fluid. In this respect it was unlike any other bike I've ridden to date. And even though he was sponsored by Specialized, it wasn't for nothing that one of the best classics riders in the sport said the Venge ViAS Disc was the "best bike" he ever had.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

The Venge was at its best and liveliest in sprints, on flat, windy, winding roads, over rolling hills, and down the fastest, twistiest descents. It's a serious bike whose aero qualities are most fully realized at high speed.

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What's one of the fastest aero bikes like uphill? Surprise: It was absolutely good. Yes, with the discs there is a weight penalty of nearly a pound, and you could easily find a lighter wheelset if that's a priority; but remember, too, this is a larger bike at 58 cm. I still found the Venge to be a steady, smooth climber. At low speeds it doesn't have the light, snappy responsiveness of, say, the Tarmac, but for a bike that prizes speed above all, it's still a perfectly good bike for some serious climbing, though it wouldn't be any mountain goat's choice on a big-elevation day. The upside? You'll descend faster on this bike than most any other, and do so with a healthy sense of control and balance, even at 50 mph.

Advertisement

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

What it's like to ride a $13,000 Tour de France road bike

This is a lot of bike, more than most roadies will probably ever really need. It's also expensive, prohibitively for most. But it rides incredibly well and is wicked fast while being super stable. And while there are plenty of fine bikes out there that cost a lot less, none that I have ridden come this close to perfection, if that even exists. If money were no object and I didn't spend much time climbing mountains, I'd seriously consider this bike as my go-to.

For some — especially the weight-obsessed — the negative with this Venge, besides the price, is its heft: In size 58 cm with pedals it weighed 18 pounds even. Yet a slightly heavier bike isn't going to be an issue for those who ride mostly flat roads, race criteriums and flatter road races, and the like. And if you do want to hit the climbs now and again, you're still good to go on a Venge.

Bike weight, in my view, is massively overrated among enthusiasts and weekend warriors. If you love going uphill and want to stay on a Specialized, I'd opt for the brand's climbing bike, the Tarmac. But unless you pedal a bike for a living, weight should not be criterion No. 1; compliance, handling, and road feel should come before for us amateurs. The Venge ticks all those boxes and then some.

So who's this bike for? It's ideally suited to deep-pocketed hardcore roadies and competitive cyclists who want one of the fastest, best-performing aero road bikes. Think Formula One. It's about covering ground quickly, on flat terrain, in sprints, and downhill. Everything is engineered to slice through the wind and give you "free speed." And my first impressions — wicked fast, comfortable, balanced, predictable — remain true a year on.