Mine neither.
UCI rules are stuck in the 19th century. They've held back the development of bikes that will let you go further and faster for the same effort. The Boardman Lotus was a prime example, banned because Merckx didn't ride one like it, for Christ's sake.Mine neither.
I'm assuming this would be for the splashing and jogging brigade, as I doubt it would meet UCI rules for a TT bike?
It's an interesting point but I'm going to find myself in the unusual position of defending the UCI, in principle at least. The UCI's sole concern is racing. Having sets of standard specifications at least provides a more level playing-field in terms of equipment for cycle racing. The true test should be rider against rider, not kit vs kit. I know this sounds naive given the disparities in funding, access to specialist training facilities and other forms of 'preparation', but its one less unfairness.UCI rules are stuck in the 19th century. They've held back the development of bikes that will let you go further and faster for the same effort. The Boardman Lotus was a prime example, banned because Merckx didn't ride one like it, for Christ's sake.
So how would a bike like the Lotus branded one Boardman road make the playing field less level? It would probably be cheaper to make than a standard diamond frame as the design is far simpler and once it came onto the mass market every cyclist could afford one. Similar to the restrictions on aero positions on TT bikes, they cost nothing and are more efficient so what's not to like?It's an interesting point but I'm going to find myself in the unusual position of defending the UCI, in principle at least. The UCI's sole concern is racing. Having sets of standard specifications at least provides a more level playing-field in terms of equipment for cycle racing. The true test should be rider against rider, not kit vs kit. I know this sounds naive given the disparities in funding, access to specialist training facilities and other forms of 'preparation', but its one less unfairness.
So how would a bike like the Lotus branded one Boardman road make the playing field less level?
I not necessarily disagreeing, but the focus them becomes on the equipment rather than the rider. The UCI has to tread a fine line between allowing innovation and ensuring that equipment does not dominate. They generally go the conservative route and I'm broadly sympathetic, but no more than that. It would probably be more interesting if they loosened the reigns a little, but at the same time they'd risk opening the doors to innovations that would genuinely skew results away from rider ability.So how would a bike like the Lotus branded one Boardman road make the playing field less level? It would probably be cheaper to make than a standard diamond frame as the design is far simpler and once it came onto the mass market every cyclist could afford one. Similar to the restrictions on aero positions on TT bikes, they cost nothing and are more efficient so what's not to like?
The Lotus bike was a track bike, so fixed and superhuman gearing.I am curious: why has the Omni such a low gearing compared to the Lotus?
Are some time trials in very hilly areas?
Both quite spaceship like imo.
I certainly haveYou have now..
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1/ The racing would be faster (It is racing, after all).By the same argument, I can't see how they would benefit things either. What difference do you think it would actually make to the racing?
The pictured Lotus has gears.The Lotus bike was a track bike, so fixed and superhuman gearing.
The omni looks like it's using SRAM's 1x drivetrain, so no front derailleur. The spec says 48x11, which is probably more practical that it sounds for something Triathlon focused, but I imagine powerful riders or those that like to give it beans downhill would find it under-geared.
1/ The racing would be faster (It is racing, after all).