- Location
- Somewhere wet & hilly in NW England.
And people keep buying all the new technology
We should've consigned R&D to the bin at the Penny Farthing stage.

And people keep buying all the new technology

We should've consigned R&D to the bin at the Penny Farthing stage.![]()
And people keep buying all the new technology
I bore myself saying this, but my main gripe with discs on road bikes is that I always feel it was an industry wide decision to essentially push the cost of bikes up. The whole shift towards various tech 'improvements' like DB, aero frame, integration of cables/cockpits etc. all seems to have enabled price increases in the last 5 years that are far and above inflation or even R&D costs to manufacturers. In many ways it feels like a a big motivation is to keep trying to justify price hikes with something new every few years.
If a very small/easy movement of the lever makes disc brakes go to 'full stopping power' that doesn't make them easier to modulate (than rim brakes), it makes them more difficult.
But it is my impression that prices have actually fallen for mid range new bikes in those last 5 years.
Just as an example, I pad £2100 for my Cube Attain GTC Race (105 11 speed groupset) in August 2021.
The nearest equivalent now is the Attain c.62 Race, which is £1899 (Cube's own price, probably available less elsewhere), with 105 12 speed mechanical groupset.
I was thinking more of traditional rim brake vs disc. In 2019 I bought a custom spec Cannondale Caad12, full sram red 11 speed mechanical, mavic ksyrium sl wheels, quarq powet meter and fizik finishing kit. It was £2700.
Like you say, that would get you a cube or similar with 105 mechanical and a fairly standard set of wheels. For something of a similar spec and weight of the Caad, you would be looking at £5k+ in current disc bike.
I have a Dura ace equipped rim braked bike with carbon rims which I found stopped very well. I then got a disc braked bike and swopping between the the two I‘ve found I need adjust my braking distances.
With the discs it’s leave it to the last minute and use one finger on the brake lever. With the rim brakes it’s start planning where to brake from the word go on steep descents.
On some of the steep descents round here on the NY moors I get a bit of a forearm pump from braking on the rim braked bike and I have pretty good finger and forearm strength from rock climbing for 50 plus years.
When discs came out I was sceptical about the need for them and they aren’t essential but they do work well.
I do wonder if the instant stopping power of discs causes what seems to me to be on the increase, crash’s in the bunch in pro racing. If the persons if front causes you to grab your brake then the person behind you will run it to the back you. Such is the stopping power.
but that price increase isnt necessarily to do with the discs, the bike I bought 11 years ago had mechanical disc brakes for under £800, the bike I bought last year had hydraulic disc brakes was £400.