Home Cycling Specialized added weight to the new Aethos: So we went in search of some hills to see how it performed

Specialized added weight to the new Aethos: So we went in search of some hills to see how it performed

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When Aethos 1 arrived in 2021 Specialized had just shelved the Venge, its all-out aero platform, replacing it with a one-bike-to-rule-them-all strategy, in the new aero-optimised Tarmac SL7, then SL8.

Shortly after the SL7 launched, the winningest brand in the world, as if to double down on the death of all-out-aero approach, sought to shun more pretensions from top flight racing, and produce the Aethos. The bike had all the exclusivity and real-world performance of the Tarmac race bike series, in a more practical and comfortable riding package, with less weight, designed to appeal to the general public.

It bet that plenty of bankers, accountants and lawyers would be up for shunning aero in favour of lightweight and comfort, areas which ‘normal riders’ prioritise more than the pros. Specialized were appealing to customers who wanted to say, “screw the rules, I want an exclusive bike that works for me”.

(Image credit: Andy Carr)

Enter the Aethos. Journalists loved it for its race bike handling delivered in a comfortable package, and the rest, as they say, is history. At the time of launch it was the lightest mainstream manufactured frame on sale at just 585g.

The trouble is, journalists, like pro riders, are used to being folded in half for a living. They loved the comfort in the frame, but didn’t complain about the position. Well heeled punters heard comfortable and aggressive and went out and bought them in droves, but whilst the frame delivered loads more comfort, the position afforded by Aethos was the same racy position as the Tarmac, and too extreme for some.

details of the new Specialized Aethos

(Image credit: Andy Carr)

In the new bike, Specialized seems determined to fix that problem. Stack height is up 15mm, with up to 25mm of spacers available. The integrated bar and stem now interfaces with a bearing from the Tarmac SL8. It’s oversized to allow for cable entry, and with the added transition spacers from the frame to the stem, it makes the whole thing look a lot less silly than the previous version, especially with spacers, which many customers will still want or need, even with the increased stack height. The whole front end of the bike now looks very ‘sorted’, elegant perhaps, just the way a bike of this type should look and will undoubtedly fit more customers, without them needing a hoist to get into the shower when they get home from the Sunday club run.

The extra stack height comes at a cost. 45g in fact was spent in extra carbon, which had to be paid back elsewhere in the frame. Savings were found in the bottom bracket area, some 9g, with no loss in stiffness, or so it claims. This has been possible because of extensive work on removing redundant plys, and other tweaks to the lay-up. Like the first Aethos project, Specialized relied on its ‘supercomputer’ to model the changes, then tested them in simulations till it got the right answer. Overall, the weight is up 10g, not something you often hear in a press release about a new bike launch.

details of the new Specialized Aethos

(Image credit: Andy Carr)

Despite the extra timber, the frame is still comfortably lighter than the new Cervelo R5, some 56g lighter in fact. In fact, you could be mistaken for thinking this was the old Aethos, such is the similarity to the outgoing model.

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