goatstick
Team SCDRR
Posts: 349
|
Heard today down at the bike shop after my first CA2 testride: "So JS... We thought that 21 hours at the HC600 was all you. We now suspect it was that preproduction CA2... Time for a rematch?" That wasn't me that said that! I promise, John! :^) CA2 vs Corsa - First ride thoughts. I have some thoughts about my observations that I mostly will leave out for now. If you want me to comment further on something, please ask. My shiny new CA2 frame arrived yesterday so I spent the afternoon and evening swapping the frame and fork out from under what used to be my Corsa. Except for cable housing, a different rear brake caliper and the larger OD steering riser, everything but the frame and fork was the same, so I figure this would provide a pretty good opportunity to compare the two bikes. Equipment Differences: The frame is subtly different so the carbon seat mounts at a slightly different (lower) angle. I had to raise the seat stays a couple of notches to get things back to the measurements I had made on the Corsa. Cable routing is slightly better, especially for the rear brake caliper. The rear brake mount for a 650C allows a more std road bike caliper and I used a fairly new Shimano 105 caliper that performed very, very well. The chain idler is mounted a little more outboard than on the Corsa which presents some slight challenges to my 11-32 rear cassette and long cage rear derailleur. I'm not done working on this issue though I did a few things to improve the situation. The BB cage is an eighth inch wider than the Corsa so my FSA MegaExo BB doesn't need a spacer. I had to redrill the carbon seat to match the new mount. The Ride : A fairly gentle 50 mile ride with nothing more than about 6% grade hills and decent road surfaces. To start out, the CA2 doesn't magically increase your speed (at least not until you get past about 30mph). The CA2 felt almost identical to the Corsa below about 25mph. I was expecting a smoother ride but really didn't feel that. Even though the seat position and angle is almost identical to the Corsa I think there is something subtly different that my body needs to get used to. Below about 25mph I was slower than normal and felt a little puny. Once I kicked it up past 25, the CA started to behave differently though. Transitions from flat to climb were like silk as compared to the Corsa. No wall where you went from cranking to having to punch it to climb fast. I generally wasn't terribly impressed up to that point though. At least not until my legs warmed up a little and I punched the first climbing turn. I tore into the turn, starting powering up at the apex and the bike simply took off. I was doing 33 up a 3% 1/2 mile grade and I wasn't even really up to power. Several more ~4% grades I tore up doing about *5mph* faster (over 30) than I have ever done them. Then on a long ~1-2% downhill against about a 10mph headwind I broke 40mph, followed by a flat stretch where I held 36mph for about a quarter mile against that headwind before I had to back down! I could hardly believe I was flying that fast. The rest of the ride was similar. At lower speeds and power outputs the bike was fairly mundane (like a Corsa :^). It was when I really powered up and especially at speed that the differences became evident. Specific comparitive comments: Especially on flat ground, cranking the Corsa hard caused a pretty severe head-shake. I know I induce it but it's there and I can't figure out how to really crank the thing really hard when it happens. Absolutely nothing of the sort on the CA2. That 40mph happened when I was finally able to crank flat out and not have to power down to keep myself on the road. Above 30mph the CA feels noticeably more aerodynamic. Not only can I crank harder to go faster but I don't have to crank as hard to go the same speeds as on the Corsa. With everything else the same, that pretty much leaves frame/fork differences to account for it. The CA2 frame has smoother transitions than the Corsa. I think above 30mph they really start to pay off. Climbs are subtly easier. Hey, you still have to crank about as hard, but my broken feet didn't experience the same stress and pain on the CA2. Now, several hours after the ride, there still isn't the level of pain I'm used to. For me, this may be the most important feature of my CA2 for long rides. I really have no idea as to why this is the case. Same chain, derailleurs, cranks, pedals and shoes...
|