Rodale

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Cannondale Synapse Carbon 6 Apex review

The 6 is the entry level carbon Synapse, but uses the same sculpted SAVE PLUS frame as the £3,000 model. 

  • Highs: Smooth, pothole-proof cruiser ride with the widest off-the-peg spread of gears
  • Lows: Frame weight, flex and heavy wheels all bog it down when you put the boot in
  • Buy if: You let rides unfold at a comfortable pace rather than pushing them along

Developed from the pivotless rear ends of Cannondale’s full suspension mountain bikes, flat sections on the chainstays and seatstays are designed to provide ‘micro suspension’ between you and the road. 

The fork, seat tube and seatpost are designed with dramatically tapered centre sections to increase flex too. The result certainly isolates a decent amount of road shock over rough surfaces and reduces jolting over potholes. 

That’s more impressive considering the decidedly firm ride of the heavy duty Schwalbe Lugano tyres, although their inertia does add a helpful steamroller effect on rough roads compared with lighter rubber.

On the subject of weight, aluminium inserts for the seatpost and the fork’s alloy crown and steerer mean the chassis is heavy. The sturdy Shimano wheels are also weighty, so spinning the Synapse up to speed is a relatively prolonged process.

You need to make the most of the extra-large 32-tooth sprocket on the SRAM WiFli transmission to keep power application smooth rather than jerky in or out of the saddle too; try to push a bigger gear and the SAVE rear end can start to bounce to the rhythm of your cranking, which is really off-putting on the steepest climbs, when it’s better to have all your effort winching you up from the valley floor, not turning your bike into a spacehopper.

While the handling geometry itself is fine, there’s also noticeable distortion between rider and rubber when you start snaking downhill. It’s more of an approximate line vagueness than a treacherous load up and twang trait, but it’s another reason why more aggressive riders should be looking at the racier Super Six at the same price.

But as we’ve said, the extra wheel weight and the frame’s ability to shrug off holes and sustain speed is a real bonus in terms of flatland momentum, so if you’re more into cruising than climbing the Synapse is on your wavelength.

 cannondale synapse carbon 6 apex:

This article was originally published in Cycling Plus magazine, available on Apple Newsstand and Zinio.



Source: BikeRadar.com Road Bikes & Gear

Froome battles on into final rest day at Vuelta

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Sky leader loses more time on final climb to Cuitu Nigru


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Monday, September 3, 2012

Subway Pro Cycling looking for a new major sponsor

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New Zealand Continental team loses backer after eight years


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Great Britain announces long list for road world championships

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Wiggins, Froome, Cavendish, Armitstead, Pooley highlight selections


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Cataldo produces masterpiece at Vuelta a España

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Italian wins on race's toughest day


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Nibali happy to lead young Italian team

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Sicilian prepares for Worlds at Giro di Padania


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Cuitu Negru - the climb to end all climbs

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New Spanish 'super-climb' concludes the Vuelta's single hardest day


Source: Cyclingnews News Headlines

Storck Power Arm compact chainset review

In terms of an upgrade, Storck’s Power Arm represents a massive investment even compared with the likes of Sram Red and Shimano Dura-Ace. But it does offer the sort of performance that goes along with that price. 

At just over 500g, it’s very light, yet it feels – and measures up as – stiffer and more responsive than any of its competitors. Shifting quality is good, though not quite the best, but there’s little else to fault this chainset on. 

The cap for installing the non-drive crank is slotted to be tightened using a coin and not a tool. This is to ensure you don’t overtighten it levering on a spanner or screwdriver. 

This article was originally published in Cycling Plus magazine, available on Apple Newsstand and Zinio.



Hat Tip To: BikeRadar.com Road Bikes & Gear