Pro bike: Carlos Sastre’s Cervélo TestTeam Cervélo S3

2008 Tour de France champion finally goes aero

Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

Published: February 3, 2009 at 8:00 am

Carlos Sastre became one of the hottest tickets in cycling after winning the Tour de France last year. The news that he was on the market for a new team led to several offers, including one from the big-bucks Katusha squad, but Sastre ultimately opted to go with the new Cervélo TestTeam.

Citing the opportunity to be more involved in product development, Sastre said he was looking forward to giving his feedback to Cervélo and the other partners. "It's a new project which fits very well with my way of being,” he said in September. “It offers the opportunity to open frontiers and collaborate more actively with our sponsors and their clients. At the same time, we can contribute more efficiently to improving the technology of our materials.”

As a former CSC rider, Sastre was familiar with Cervélo frames. He moved to the team of Bjarne Riis for the 2002 season and has ridden the technology-intensive bikes ever since CSC switched to them the following year. Unlike other riders on the team, though, Sastre has always opted for frames with standard profile tubes rather than more aerodynamic ones such as the Soloist and the SLC-SL, starting with the prototype Cervélo R2.5 – the company’s first all-carbon frame – all the way through to the latest R3-SL.

Sastre had cited the R3-SL’s lighter weight (approximately 150g lighter than the SLC-SL), slightly snappier acceleration and easier handling characteristics in wind to explain his preference, which was also sometimes shared by the Schleck brothers last season. However, this year he’s finally made the move to the SLC-SL’s successor, the S3, and is finally on aero tubing.

The front end of the s3 closely resembles its slc-sl predecessor with its hourglass-shaped head tube and deep aero-section down tube: the front end of the s3 closely resembles its slc-sl predecessor with its hourglass-shaped head tube and deep aero-section down tube - Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

The change is significant, and says a lot about the construction of the S3. According to team head mechanic Alejandro Torralbo, who accompanied Sastre from CSC, it wouldn’t have happened otherwise. “Four years ago Carlos had a bad crash in the Tour de France [2004] and afterwards he had many, many problems with his back,” he told Cyclingnews at the recent team training camp in Portugal. “Afterwards he found it hard to be comfortable and so preferred to use the frames with the standard tubing over the aero frames … he felt they absorbed vibration a bit better and this helped his back. However he’s very happy with the S3.”

Sastre expanded on this, telling Cyclingnews: “The Soloist is a very stiff bike and I'm not too heavy. Some roads are very rough and jumpy. When the frame is really stiff, all that vibration goes into your back and, for me that is not good. But with the S3, the difference is huge. It is like a bike of two halves … half is like the Soloist, half of it is more or less like an R3. The big difference is that Cervélo have managed to keep it as aerodynamic as the Soloist, yet it is as close as possible in comfort to the R3. Put together, the bike doesn’t lose stiffness, and when you put the power down it translates very quickly into speed. I think it's a revolutionary bike.”

The front triangle of the S3 is very similar to its forebear, with airfoil cross-sections that Cervélo says are optimised for the lower speeds typically encountered on a bicycle – instead of for aeroplanes – with changes that include a more elliptical leading edge that supposedly helps cut through the air.

According to cervélo, its modified airfoil tube profiles are optimised for the lower speeds encountered on a bicycle instead of on an aeroplane: according to cervélo, its modified airfoil tube profiles are optimised for the lower speeds encountered on a bicycle instead of on an aeroplane - Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

A new internal cable routing system moves the derailleur housing entry points from the sides of the top tube to the top tube immediately behind the head tube. Cervélo claims this is more aerodynamic but also reduces cable friction and shaves off weight relative to other similar arrangements as the S3 uses internal housing stops instead of full-length housing.

At back, more slender R3-like seatstays add vertical compliance for a more forgiving ride than the SLC-SL, and the chainstay shape has been revised for better aerodynamics. And while the frame is 80g heavier than the SLC-SL, the company says it's a faster ride in most situations due to that aero profiling.

For now, Sastre is the only team rider on the frame but the rest of the Cervélo TestTeam will be using it a little later in the season.

The bike also features a 3T Funda Pro fork, a Cane Creek integrated headset and aero carbon seatpost. Sastre’s bike is fitted with a Shimano Dura-Ace 7800 groupset when we caught up with it, although Torralbo said the Tour winner would change to the 7900 group soon.

There is a dura-ace 7800 rear derailleur on here for now but it will soon be replaced with a 7900 one: there is a dura-ace 7800 rear derailleur on here for now but it will soon be replaced with a 7900 one - Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

One of the most striking components on the bike is the chainset. Sastre won the 2008 Tour de France using Rotor Q-Ring elliptical chainrings mounted on FSA crankarms and the entire team has gone all-Rotor for 2009, using the Q-Rings, a novel self-aligning bottom bracket and – officially - the Ágilis Evo crankset.

However, Sastre has been trying out an as-yet-unnamed prototype whose radically drilled-out construction and larger-profile arms are markedly different from the production EVO. “This prototype is being tested by Carlos and many other riders of the team as part of our promise with the team to develop the most technological cranks possible for the riders,” Rotor’s Curro Nieto Rozalén told Cyclingnews.

“The prototype cranks are in their primary testing phase so we don’t have much information yet. However, the main idea is to make both a strong and aerodynamic hollow aluminium crank.”

This is in turn mated to a Quarq CinQo Saturn wireless power meter, which will send information to the team’s Garmin Edge 705 GPS-enabled computers. The designers claim it is lighter and more durable than that of their closest rival SRM, and also allows the user to change the batteries more easily.

The elliptical rotor q-rings that sastre successfully used in last year's tour de france are now attached to a prototype set of rotor crankarms: the elliptical rotor q-rings that sastre successfully used in last year's tour de france are now attached to a prototype set of rotor crankarms - Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

Sastre’s crankarm length is something that was influenced by Torralbo. He said: “I've worked with him for the past four years. He was using a 54cm bike then but after a year he changed to a 51. Four years ago he also changed from 172.5mm cranks to 170mm. I told him I felt they would be better for his size and pedaling style, so he tried it. He gained 10 more revs per minute in his pedaling and was pleased with that.”

Another change in that time was his choice of saddle. “He was originally using an SLR saddle but sometimes he had a problem with his hamstring,” the Spanish mechanic said. “So we changed him to another shape, a Prologo. Now he'll use the Fizik Antares and that works well for him.”

Sastre used Speedplay while with CSC and the company has come across to the Cervélo TestTeam as one of its partners so he will continue to use the Zeros in 2009. 3T is another official partner and Sastre’s bike is fitted with an ARX PRO stem plus traditional-bend Rotundo Pro handlebars. Zipp Team Issue aluminium wheels and Vittoria Open Corsa EVO CX 23 mm clinchers are used for training but any variety of carbon-rimmed Zipp tubulars will undoubtedly be fitted come race day.

Team head mechanic alejandro torralbo says the elite custom macia cages are tough enough to last an entire season if needed: team head mechanic alejandro torralbo says the elite custom macia cages are tough enough to last an entire season if needed - Shane Stokes/Cyclingnews.com

The bike is completed with Elite Custom Macia composite bottle cages. Torralbo said they are light and very well made, being able to last a full season if required.

As with the other riders on the team, Sastre is encouraged to give feedback to Cervélo and the various other partners about how the equipment is functioning and if any tweaks need to be made. So far he seems content.

“I've been training for almost a month-and-a-half on this bike and I'm honestly very happy with it,” he said. “I also think we have really good equipment, really good material, and so far everybody is happy with things. That's really good.”

With the emphasis on innovation and pushing the boundaries, it’s likely the team will have some special goodies for this year’s Tour. Sastre will showcase those, using the technology to try to repeat his stirring 2008 victory.

Bike spec:

  • Frame: Cervélo S3, 51cm
  • Fork: 3T Funda Pro
  • Headset: Cane Creek integrated
  • Stem: 3T ARX Pro, 120mm x -6º
  • Handlebars: 3T Rotundo Pro, 42cm (c-c)
  • Tape/grips: 3T
  • Front brake: Shimano Dura-Ace BR-7800
  • Rear brake: Shimano Dura-Ace BR-7800
  • Brake levers: Shimano Dura-Ace STI Dual Control ST-7800
  • Front derailleur: Shimano Dura-Ace FD-7800-F
  • Rear derailleur: Shimano Dura-Ace RD-7800-SS
  • Shift levers: Shimano Dura-Ace STI Dual Control ST-7800
  • Cassette: Shimano Dura-Ace CS-7800, 12-25T
  • Chain: Shimano Dura-Ace CN-7801
  • Crankset: Rotor prototype with Quarq CinQo Saturn power meter and Q-Rings, 170mm, 53/39T
  • Bottom bracket: Rotor SABB
  • Pedals: Speedplay Zero Stainless
  • Wheelset: Zipp Team Issue (training)
  • Front tyre: Vittoria Open Corsa EVO-CX, 700x23mm
  • Rear tyre: Vittoria Open Corsa EVO-CX, 700x23mm
  • Saddle: Fizik Antares
  • Seatpost: Cervélo carbon aero
  • Bottle cages: Elite Custom Macia
  • Computer: Garmin Edge 705
  • Other accessories: Nokon brake cable housing

Measurements:

  • Rider's height: 1.73m (5' 8")
  • Rider's weight: 61kg (134lb)
  • Seat tube length, c-c: 440mm
  • Seat tube length, c-t: 495mm
  • Saddle height, from BB (c-t): 725mm
  • Tip of saddle nose to C of bars (next to stem): 540mm
  • C of front wheel to top of bars (next to stem): 535mm
  • Top tube length: 530mm (horizontal)
  • Total weight: 7.0kg (15.4lb)
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