Tech

Specialized champion ride experience with 5.9 kg S-Works Aethos

By Press Office · 89 comments

Press release

The creation of our Aethos road bike started with a question: “What if?”

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What if we built a bike focused around the purest imaginable road riding experience? What if we built a bike to maximize the timeless moments where everything disappears and human and machine become one. We all know these moments, the ones where we lose ourselves in the reverence of dancing up a climb or telepathically carving through a turn, where we feel liberated from the constraints that surround everyday life and the miles just melt into hours.

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The Ride Of Your Life

There are riders out there that yearn for more than racing, that see the experiences of the open road as an equivalent to toeing a start line. The demands of this sophisticated rider equal that of any racer, for where racers want for speed, these riders demand a package that accounts for everything else, too. Sprightly climbs towards the clouds, wicked descents on the other side—they demand superior handling and an unrivaled ride from a bike that’s the epitome of quality, performance, and style.

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Break The Rules

While this endeavour would allow us to apply everything that we’ve learned about making bikes over the last half-century, the goal was not to adhere to any of our preconceived notions around building them. But where would this take us?

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We’re as well-versed in the norms of cycling culture as we are in the rules of the UCI, after all, yet neither of these confines would have any bearing on our process. That’s because we see creating this instrument of transcendent bike experiences as being far more important.

It was hard for many people here to wrap their heads around a high-performance road bike that wasn’t focused on racing. We were afraid that the project would meet resistance and get cancelled, so our team worked in relative secrecy for over a year. No one knew about the project until the design was finalized, and we were making our first frames.
ROAD + GRAVEL CATEGORY LEADER – Stewart Thompson

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Billions Of Calculations In Pursuit Of One Thing – The Perfect Ride

Flipping The Script On How We Build Bikes

We know that shape contributes to the vast majority of a bike’s performance, and that’s why Aethos was born from a “Eureka” moment in the test lab. Our engineers studied the flexing and breathing of carbon frames in the pedaling test rig, and they realized the industry’s understanding of how forces flow through a frame was incomplete and ripe for massive improvements. We used staggeringly large supercomputer simulations—more than any humans can do in a lifetime—to subtly alter round tube shapes. This made their shapes more conical in key areas to deliver huge gains in stiffness and balance with the minimum amount of material. There’s nothing extra here except more stability and integrity.

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Just so we’re clear, this is a shape story of how and why the shapes work within this bike. The outcome of Aethos represents an entirely new way of designing bikes. Why’s this really cool? Because it will shape how we build all of our bikes moving forward.

No Lazy Fibers

Now, if the vast majority of the frame’s performance is dictated by shape, then the remainder plays itself out in the actual materials used and the manner in which they are connected—the frame’s layup.

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Continuing to study how these frames move under load helped determine that there were too many “stiffness layers” (or extra plies) added in the creation of traditional frames. So, with these new tube shapes, we needed an entirely new way to lay-up frames. Thankfully, it’s one which resulted in reducing the number of needed plies by 11% compared to the S-Works SL6 (which was known for being pretty damn great already). By utilizing larger, longer, and more continuous, unbroken plies, we were able to achieve more consistent positioning than on any frame we’ve made before.

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The interesting thing to note is that the wall thicknesses of the tubes, themselves, are substantial throughout the frame, but because of the smaller number of the stiffness layers, the overall weight went down significantly. The only thing along for the ride should be you.

The first frame was 545 grams. We put it on the test machine and the frame behaved so beautifully—it was so stable. We only had to add 10 grams, and we could test-ride the frame. That was the moment we knew we had discovered something big.
AETHOS ENGINEERING LEAD Peter Denk

Stiffness To Weight Number Defines Efficiency

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Accidentally Illegal

We chased ride quality with Aethos, not a number. That said, we know a light, stiff, and balanced bike is magic at the pedals. The result, however, is the lightest disc road frame ever produced, with no gimmick builds and a weight as light as 5.9kg. Aethos is very illegal in some racing circles, yet it’s still rated for a 275-pound rider and possesses all the telepathic handling, response, and stiffness targets that you’ve come to expect from every bike we make. (Psst – don’t tell the UCI).

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The New Modern Road Bike Greater Than The Sum Of Its Parts

To say that “everything has been considered with this bike” would be an understatement. We spent weeks upon weeks iterating, designing, and obsessing over every piece of the puzzle. But with the rider at the centre of the conversation, our goal was to make a bike that would fit your riding lifestyle— not the other way around.

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Perfection Is In The Details

From dropouts to derailleur hangers, no gram was overlooked. The same can be said about the approach of our partners at Roval Components. They’ve been working towards the same North Star of ride quality, and the 1284-gram Alpinist wheels and new Alpinist bar/stem combo were tailor-made for Aethos and the ride of your life.

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Founder’s Edition

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We celebrate every new platform we introduce with a Founder’s Edition. Limited to 300 bikes globally, this is the lightest build on offer, and it features an exclusive, stunning paint scheme with colour-matching finishes on some of the more unique parts. This S-Works Aethos includes the lightest Shimano Di2 componentry, the Roval Alpinist bar/stem combo cockpit (the first production bike to feature these), and upgraded CeramicSpeed bottom bracket and pulley wheels.

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South African Availability and Pricing

The Aethos S-Works frame will be available at R80,000 and the Aethos S-Works Di2 complete bike for R200,000.

More details available on Specialized.com.

AETHOS FAQ

Is the new Aethos Rider-First Engineered™?

Yes. Every frame size has the same legendary climbing responsiveness and descending prowess you’d expect from any of our Performance road bikes.

How much does the Aethos weigh?

The S-Works Aethos uses our most premium FACT 12r material and layup to achieve a painted frame weight of 585g in the lightest colorways.

The complete out-of-the-box weight of the S-Works Di2 model is 6kg in the Carbon/Chameleon Red Gold colorway.

What about the different colourways?

The lightest frame colorway is the Satin Carbon/Jetfuel that weighs 585g. Other colorways will add roughly 25g (like Satin Carbon/Chameleon Red Gold or Satin Carbon/Gloss Black Chrome) to 45g (like Gloss Clay/Flake Silver or Satin Flake Silver/Chameleon Red Gold) more.

As a lightweight frame, is it still reliable?

Aethos represents a new way of thinking about how to engineer a bicycle frame–like all Specialized production frames, it must undergo stringent testing to ensure it meets all quality and safety standards. In fact, due to the optimization of the tube shapes and layup, the Aethos frame is exceptionally durable, even as a lightweight bicycle.

What is the geometry of the Aethos?

The Aethos features identical fit and handling geometry as the Tarmac SL7. Detailed measurements can be found in the geometry chart.

How is stack and reach measured on the Aethos?

Stack and reach are measured to the center of the top of the headtube, as is customary. Although these numbers are different than the Tarmac SL7, the fit geometry is identical between the two framesets.

What offset will the Roval Alpinist seatpost come in?

The Roval Alpinist seatpost is available in a 12mm offset and in 300mm and 360mm lengths. All complete bikes and framesets will be spec’d with this Roval Alpinist post.

What build configurations is the Aethos compatible with?

The Aethos is only compatible with hydraulic disc brakes. All models can be built with electronic drivetrains, but only the 10r framesets can be built with mechanical drivetrains.

Roval Alpinist Cockpit: Is it compatible?

The Roval Alpinist Cockpit is compatible with all Aethos models and framesets. It was designed as a bar/stem combo to reduce weight, while giving riders the fit and performance they expect. It will be available in 10 different sizes (as combinations of stem length and bar widths) by early 2021.

Alpinist Cockpit: Is there an integrated computer mount?

The new Alpinist Cockpit offers an integrated computer mount with compatible mounts for the following brands: Wahoo, Garmin, Polar, Cateye, and Bryton. Additionally, there is a mount designed around GoPro devices, Specialized Flux Lights, and a new mount designed for Specialized Stix lights.

What’s the largest tire size you can install on the Aethos?

Every Aethos comes spec’d with 700x26mm tires, however, the frame was designed with much larger clearance in mind. You can fit tires up to 32c on 21mm rims with 4mm of clearance all around. Of course, this is all still dependent on the exact tire and rim combination as there is quite a bit of variation among tires especially. We suggest that you check fitment of the tire before you take it out for a ride

Can I remove the Front Derailleur Hanger?

Yes! The Aethos has a removeable FD Hanger, which gives you the cleanest set-up when running a 1x drivetrain. If the FD Hanger is removed, a cover for the routing hole and two bolt holes is included with your Aethos. The hanger’s construction is different between the 12r and 10r frames, so please refer to the User Manual for proper installation.

Front brake caliper adaptor: Why is there a proprietary part?

All Aethos frames were engineered to maximize the performance potential in the pursuit of the perfect ride–this includes optimizing the front disc brake caliper mount for 160mm rotors only. In doing so, the engineering team designed a new adaptor plate designed to work with any flat mount caliper to reduce the weight of the fork, without sacrificing any stopping power or reliability.

Where is the Shimano Di2 A-Junction Box?

The Shimano A-Junction will be installed in the handlebar.

What are the other tech specs of the Aethos?

All Aethos models have a 68mm BSA threaded bottom bracket. The Aethos has 142×12 and 100×12 thru axles and follows the Shimano flat mount disc brake standard.

Will Specialized sponsored race teams use Aethos?

No. The Tarmac SL7 can be built and raced at the 6.8kg UCI weight limit and represents a significant aero advantage over Aethos.

Why is Aethos UCI approved?

Although the Aethos can be built and ridden well below the UCI weight limit, UCI frame approval is still very important. This approval allows riders to utilize the Aethos as they wish, as many amateur events across the world require participants to use a bike that is UCI approved. UCI rules also dictate that these bikes each have a label in a conspicuous location permanently adhered to the frame.

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Comments

Paulst12

Oct 11, 2020, 7:28 PM

Really?... 

yup... 6.8kgs is the minimum allowed weight at licensed events.... thats not to say they will weight your bike, but thats the general rule. They are stricter at events like SA Champs and for Elite cyclists though where you wont be allowed to start an event with a bike lighter than the minimum.

Patchelicious

Oct 11, 2020, 7:55 PM

you must have a very understanding wife or you know how to disguise the new purchases well :ph34r:

Understanding, no. Astute, yes.

 

She seems to have negotiated a “$1 spent on bicycles = $1 spent on her” to keep the peace deal.

The Ouzo

Oct 12, 2020, 5:55 AM

Look we're not saying it's fugly, or crap or anything negative. Its a nice bike I'm sure but really the marketing....

its a bike, a light one and decently classic looking but there are plenty of highly desirable brands with products that ticks that space without the pretentious marketing.

 

And lets be honest here....its takes a special kind of (Trump) person to look past the C64, Z-Zero or Sarto options if you're looking for that special something

actually there is plenty of tech in modern road cars that have come from F1 (and other motorsports).

Wayne pudding Mol

Oct 12, 2020, 6:43 AM

Let’s face it, if it wasn’t a Spez the resident “I hate Spez” lot would probably be ooohing and aaaahing at it.

The bicycle is beautiful.  I love bikes and if I had endless cash I wouldn't mind buying a 200k bike to ride to the coffee shop or to come 3337 in the CTCT

I'd do it because I was minted and love bicycles so to my mind it wouldn't be a waste

 

I don't align myself with the brand despite their great bikes. So in la la land where I have all this loot, I'm not a buyer.  But in la la land with money falling out of my stuffed pockets I'd spend millions on bikes

 

But if you like spez and you have a spare 200k that you earned, buy it, I won't knock you, it's your money.  

 

In this case some of the hate is Spez related, for some the money seems obscene.  

 

Spez don't care and neither do the guys who are going to own one

 

But it's still beautiful.  All bikes are beautiful, even the ugly ones.  From 1000 bucks to this bargain, I love em all

DieselnDust

Oct 12, 2020, 8:20 AM

actually there is plenty of tech in modern road cars that have come from F1 (and other motorsports).

 

 

do you have specific examples?

TNT1

Oct 12, 2020, 8:25 AM

do you have specific examples?

 

Surprisingly:

What Has F1 Ever Done for Us?

 

https://bleacherreport.com/articles/1816116

Nick

Oct 12, 2020, 8:38 AM

Don't fall for the trap. F1 is a pointless comparison.

Top end bicycles are tangible things you can go out and buy. You can even swap and change most of the components between bikes. The useful things and components that first appear on a super bikes will be available down the range at some stage.

While an F1 car is something that only exists and makes sense in F1 land.

DieselnDust

Oct 12, 2020, 9:23 AM

Surprisingly:

What Has F1 Ever Done for Us?

 

https://bleacherreport.com/articles/1816116

 

 

There is a lotof BS in that article. A lot!

 

FUEL:

There is very little similarity between F1 fuel and fuel you fill up with at the pumps. This is a topic I am very close to. There is very very little similarity. The components are common but the blend ratios, octane, combustion velocity, all bery different. Anti friction additives were first used in road cars long before race cars.

 

Gearboxes:

Semi auto gearbox Porsche developed for the 962 has noting in common with that in the Ferrari 639/640 family and nothing in common with the BorgWarner box currently known as DSG. DSG also existed before the 962's box was crafted.

 

Active suspension, was around long ago. What Williams did was make it useful for F1. Citreon played aorund with it in the 60's and had it on passengers in the 80's. No road car uses active suspension except for the AM Valkrie I believe.

 

KERS: Toyota Pruis predates KERs in F1. In fact active hybrid tech is a road carry over to F1

 

Carbon Chassis:

Save a few hyper cars it's never really caught on. Too expensive and can't be mass produced.

 

I asked for the examples because I wanted to see how successful the F1 marketing machine is/was and It appears it is.

 

its not like bicycles. The bike you buy is the same bike the Pro's ride, There was more separation between the pro bikes of the 80's than there is today's world of plastic fantastics. 

 

F1 is a world away from the market its supposed to provide trickle down tech to. A huge opporttunity missed was the "World engine concept" that the VAG group proposed. This proposal suggested the use of a 4 cyclinder, 2.0L turbo engine base that stemmed from a production engine. It could be homologated for use in rally, WEC, F1 and even F2 with the differences coming from turbo size, KERS, and MGUK  configuration and  battery storage capacity and deployment.

it would also have allowed any manufacturer to build an engine even a tuning house to provide powertrains for any motorsport discipline.

Instead we have 1.6L V6 engines that only Mercedes is willing to invest in heavily and boring races.

 

Aethos is nowhere near an f1 vs road car comparison. What it is a discussion point. And that in itself is clever marketing. Like I said, there's no hate for the bike or brand coming from me (i've softened my position on Spaz mostly because at the lower end of the spectrum they have started to offer really good quality at affordable prices). Its just that I don't buy into the market positioning of the Aethos when there are a lot of exceptional options at the price point. WWith R200k to spend I'd be looking at something that really floats my boat;

Time Alpe d'huez with SRAM Red AXS or Campagnolo Super record EPS.

Colnago C64 with Campagnolo Super Record EPS. (might just squeez in under R200k)

Look 785 Huez RS with SRAM Red AXS

Bianchi Speciallisma with Campagnolo Super Record EPS

SARTO Seta+ with Record 12

 

There's so many more options to choose from unless you're a die hard Specialized owner and now there's an offering for you to have the same bragging rights.

lechatnoir

Oct 12, 2020, 10:33 AM

this bike looks fantastic. and if i had the money, I'd buy it. But the same can be said for any other bike. because, bikes, y'know...

 

We know the market for this bike exists, and Spez  are merely taking advantage to do business, as that's what businesses do.

 

who am i to begrudge someone a bit of happiness, even if they do have more money than sense? which is my judgment, and quite possibly wrong. We all have more money than sense at times - it's all relative and probably why Bikehub exists.

 

I say good for them. More happier riders riding bikes should make us all happy.

I say good for them. More happier riders riding bikes should make us all happy.

Eugene Oppelt

Oct 12, 2020, 7:33 PM

Cool footage

Quirky insight discussion

 

Enjoy ????

 

Chris_

Oct 22, 2020, 5:55 PM

Ha We have the same news feeds. I was just reading this too

Patchelicious

Oct 22, 2020, 6:57 PM

R150k for another Ultrgra bike? Nee man! If you can afford R150k just go full cream and get Sworks.

 

But this particular bike reminds me too much of the Tarmac SL4. Maybe this is Spez’s best plan yet. Reuse old molds, and just say its new...

Mongoose!

Oct 23, 2020, 9:01 AM

I assume part of the R200k price tag is a provision for all the warranty replacements to follow on such a light frame and wheels... :ph34r:

Veebee

Oct 23, 2020, 9:39 AM

I assume part of the R200k price tag is a provision for all the warranty replacements to follow on such a light frame and wheels... :ph34r:

But its Spez, they are bulletproof thats why you pay R200k

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