Bike of the Week | Lapierre’s Prorace is a stealthy cross-country ripper 

XC hardtail features new carbon construction and triple-triangle rear end 

Oscar Huckle / Our Media

Published: May 3, 2023 at 9:00 am

Launched in September 2022, Lapierre’s Prorace CF 9.9 cross-country hardtail has arrived at BikeRadar Towers for testing.

This hardtail mountain bike has 100mm of suspension travel and is easily identifiable by its triple-triangle style design, which Lapierre claims introduces further compliance.

Let’s take a closer look at this race-ready build.

Shaving weight

Lapierre Prorace top tube detail
The Prorace has been on a diet. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

The Prorace sees a significant reduction in weight over its predecessor, thanks to the brand’s new UD SLI (Unidirectional Superlight Innovation) carbon construction. This first debuted on the brand’s XR and XRM full-suspension cross-country mountain bikes launched in March 2022.

There are two tiers of carbon frame, with this frame using the lighter 'UD SLI Team' carbon layup. Lapierre claims an 845g frame weight in a size medium, with the second-tier frames said to be 970g in an equivalent size.

Lapierre says it has used new unidirectional Torayca carbon fibres. The brand is remaining coy on what exactly is used, although it notes T1000 carbon fibre features mainly on the top-tier frames.

Lapierre also claims it has been able to expel excess resin from a new polypropylene rigid mandrel it has developed (what the fibres are wrapped around in the manufacturing process). The brand also says it has reduced the wall thickness of the tubes to save weight.

3D Tubular Concept on Lapierre Prorace
The 3D Tubular Concept will be familiar if you've seen Lapierre's road bikes. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

The hardtail inherits the 3D Tubular concept the brand has used on its road bikes since 2015, such as the Xelius SL 9.0.

What is effectively a triple-triangle design sees the seatstays separated from the seat tube, which Lapierre claims improves their flexibility and disperses vibrations and other shocks via the top tube.

Lapierre Prorace against a wall
The geometry isn't groundbreaking. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

The geometry has also been revised, heading down the longer, lower and slacker route. All sizes feature a 68-degree head tube angle and 74-degree seat tube angle, with the reach 455mm on a size large.

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A lightweight race spec

At £5,999/€6,799/AU$11,999, the Prorace CF 9.9 we have in for testing sits at the top of the range.

For carbon-framed models, the range starts at £1,999/€2,299/AU$4,299 for the Prorace CF 5.9 and there’s even an aluminium 4.9 model at £1,499/€1,499/AU$3,499.

RockShox is on suspension duty on the Prorace CF 9.9 with its SID SL Ultimate Charger Race Day fork.

The bike is decked out with a SRAM X01 Eagle AXS drivetrain, the only deviation being an X1 carbon crankset. Lapierre opts for a 34t chainring, with the crankset spinning on a PF92 bottom bracket.

SRAM Level TLM brakes on Lapierre Prorace
The TLM is the top brake in SRAM's lightweight Level range. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

SRAM’s Level TLM disc brakes bring you to a stop and Lapierre specs a 180mm SRAM Centerline rotor up-front and a smaller-diameter 160mm out back.

Maxxis Rekon Race tyres on Lapierre Prorace
Maxxis rubber is always nice to see. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

Lapierre provides its own XC CL 29 carbon mountain bike wheels with an asymmetric rim. The wheels feature a 27mm internal rim width and are wrapped with Maxxis’ Rekon Race mountain bike tyres in a 29x2.35in flavour. The Rekons feature Maxxis’ 3C MaxxTerra triple compound with a 120 TPI casing.

Fizik Taiga saddle on Lapierre Prorace
A Fizik Taiga saddle rounds out the build. - Oscar Huckle / Our Media

A 740mm-wide FSA SL-K carbon handlebar in 740mm width is paired with Lapierre’s own 7050 Alloy forged stem. The brand also provides its own lock-on grips and alloy 27.2mm-diameter seatpost, with a Fizik Taiga saddle.

Our size-large test bike weighs in at 9.79kg without pedals.

The Prorace is part of a cross-country bikes group test, so stay tuned for senior technical editor Tom Marvin’s verdict.