Super light Kilo TT?
#1
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Super light Kilo TT?
Anyone have a sub 17 lb Kilo tt? Mine is around 20.5 lbs, wondering what it would take to get it down in weight. Could you share a parts list?
Dave
Dave
Last edited by bonsai171; 10-22-19 at 05:53 PM.
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This guy used to post here and I think he said his was under 17: https://www.pedalroom.com/bike/2012-...-pro-sold-6476
#3
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This guy used to post here and I think he said his was under 17: https://www.pedalroom.com/bike/2012-...-pro-sold-6476
Any idea if the Kilo tt and Kilo tt pro frame are the same?
Dave
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nice looking kilo but sub 17 lbs is suspect, at least not with the components listed. the rims alone are 615 grams each.
have to cut a lot of places to get below 17 lbs with a steel frame and fork. i understand wanting to shed some weight, but going ham on a kilo to make it "super light" doesn't make sense. better off with a different frame set.
have to cut a lot of places to get below 17 lbs with a steel frame and fork. i understand wanting to shed some weight, but going ham on a kilo to make it "super light" doesn't make sense. better off with a different frame set.
Last edited by REDMASTA; 10-23-19 at 11:47 AM.
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Might've been with a different wheelset, but there were scale pics. I'm way too lazy to go digging for it.
#7
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This guy used to post here and I think he said his was under 17: https://www.pedalroom.com/bike/2012-...-pro-sold-6476
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coomer is on a beautiful vacation and will take care of the issues when he returns.
#10
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This was mine. 17.2 lbs. Kinises carbon fork,CXP22 to Formula,Sugino crank,bb and ring,Forte Precision seat post,700x28 Specialized All Condition folding,Crank Bros Smarty pedals,Shadow Conspiracy half link chain,Salsa steel threadless stem,Ritchey headset,Profile Design bars and Cannondale saddle.
Last edited by BoozyMcliverRot; 10-26-19 at 06:45 PM.
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This was mine. 17.2 lbs. Kinises carbon fork,CXP22 to Formula,Sugino crank,bb and ring,Forte Precision seat post,700x28 Specialized All Condition folding,Crank Bros Smarty pedals,Shadow Conspiracy half link chain,Salsa steel threadless stem,Ritchey headset,Profile Design bars and Cannondale saddle.
An aching back is keeping me off a bicycle today and the Interwebz is my companion this morning so BoozyMcliverRot I hope you won't take my comment as anything other than trying to keep a dying discussion going for ****zngigglz...
Despite my best efforts to control them, I have weight-weenie tendencies that leak out sometimes and anytime there's a thead with "Super light" in the title it catches my attention.
Nysss bike but I can't help but think that to get it to 17.2 lbs the frame must be world-class light, which does not seem all that likely, 'cos CXP22 to Formulas and a 1/2 link chain ain't exactly a recipe for weight reduction, and while your other bits are nice - I'm not going to search them all out but they don't strike me as being super light either. Or...maybe you were trolling?
#12
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I've never viewed so-called "weight-weenies" with disdain. I figure there are worse ways you can spend your money. So the pursuit of shedding weight if that "trips your trigger" is fine by me.
To that end, saddle choice can obviously be huge, but that comes with potential trade-offs regarding comfort. I'm a Brooks guy so I'm riding one of the heaviest options.
Tires and tubes are a fairly easy way to shed weight, but durability might be compromised. However, materials are getting so good that I'm sure there are some good, reasonably robust choices.
If I were to try to eliminate weight, carbon bars, forks, seat post, stem and possibly cranks would enter the picture. Never had carbon cranks. A friend did and he said he wouldn't buy them again. I'm sure they have fans.
I will say that I have a few bikes that every time I lift them I am shocked at how light they are. So I get the appeal.
To that end, saddle choice can obviously be huge, but that comes with potential trade-offs regarding comfort. I'm a Brooks guy so I'm riding one of the heaviest options.
Tires and tubes are a fairly easy way to shed weight, but durability might be compromised. However, materials are getting so good that I'm sure there are some good, reasonably robust choices.
If I were to try to eliminate weight, carbon bars, forks, seat post, stem and possibly cranks would enter the picture. Never had carbon cranks. A friend did and he said he wouldn't buy them again. I'm sure they have fans.
I will say that I have a few bikes that every time I lift them I am shocked at how light they are. So I get the appeal.
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Why not look for a carbon frame / fork as well as lower-profile carbon rims laced to decent hubs? Also carbon seatpost, stem, and bars. I'd think that could get you under 17#. Of course, even if you bought direct from Chinese vendors, you'd still be at $900-1000 or so. Is that too much? Just thinking aloud here...
#14
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nice looking kilo but sub 17 lbs is suspect, at least not with the components listed. the rims alone are 615 grams each.
have to cut a lot of places to get below 17 lbs with a steel frame and fork. i understand wanting to shed some weight, but going ham on a kilo to make it "super light" doesn't make sense. better off with a different frame set.
have to cut a lot of places to get below 17 lbs with a steel frame and fork. i understand wanting to shed some weight, but going ham on a kilo to make it "super light" doesn't make sense. better off with a different frame set.
Dave
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You don't need everything carbon in order to have a lightweight bike. In a lot of cases, carbon parts offer you only slight weight savings over aluminum parts, and oftentimes aluminum gets you more grams saved per dollar. Eddy Merckx's hour record bike was like 12 pounds and made of steel (granted they drilled a ton of holes in it and it was probably fragile as hell, but still). Weight conscious wheels are tires will usually get you pretty far. Then you can look at the more minor bits and find other opportunities.
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You don't need everything carbon in order to have a lightweight bike. In a lot of cases, carbon parts offer you only slight weight savings over aluminum parts, and oftentimes aluminum gets you more grams saved per dollar. Eddy Merckx's hour record bike was like 12 pounds and made of steel (granted they drilled a ton of holes in it and it was probably fragile as hell, but still). Weight conscious wheels are tires will usually get you pretty far. Then you can look at the more minor bits and find other opportunities.
#18
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If you want a lightweight steel bike, I would recommend checking out Rodriguez with their Shiftless frame, then upgrading to the nicer tubes (they are out of S3 but have been trying to get ultralight for a while). I would put on a full carbon fork (Whisky or ENVE come to mind) and some light weight wheels. Ideally for those you want a shallow rim with a lower spoke count (but still practical for your riding and weight) and use quality parts lighter weight parts. All City New Sheriff SLs are one of the lightest fixed gear hubs out there and great quality. I have used them on two bikes and zero complaints.
For your cockpit I would probably look to carbon stuff or find some of the loads of lightweight aluminum stuff on the market. Me personally on my lightweight dream machine I would use more titanium and probably my usually Zipp Service Course SL-70 Ergo bars which I have on 4 or 5 bikes and love.
If you are running brakes go with Cane Creek eeBrakes and Jagwire Elite Link Housing and SRAM S900 levers if doing drop bars but the S500 alloy levers aren't that heavy. If a flat bar set up is more your speed then TRP carbon cross levers are a good choice or me I would go Paul Canti Levers.
For a light drivetrain I would go with Kappestein so you can run 11 speed chains and chainrings then find a nice light crank and you are set or if 144BCD is your jam they make a 11speed 144 bcd chainring and you could run Sugino DD75s which are fantastic cranks. If you want even lighter weight get it set up for a gates belt drive (not recommended for the brown streak crowd but if you use brakes you will be fine) I know Schindlehaur does some already made aluminum fixed gear bikes with belts.
You could easily build a bike that is 13lbs or probably even less like this.
For your cockpit I would probably look to carbon stuff or find some of the loads of lightweight aluminum stuff on the market. Me personally on my lightweight dream machine I would use more titanium and probably my usually Zipp Service Course SL-70 Ergo bars which I have on 4 or 5 bikes and love.
If you are running brakes go with Cane Creek eeBrakes and Jagwire Elite Link Housing and SRAM S900 levers if doing drop bars but the S500 alloy levers aren't that heavy. If a flat bar set up is more your speed then TRP carbon cross levers are a good choice or me I would go Paul Canti Levers.
For a light drivetrain I would go with Kappestein so you can run 11 speed chains and chainrings then find a nice light crank and you are set or if 144BCD is your jam they make a 11speed 144 bcd chainring and you could run Sugino DD75s which are fantastic cranks. If you want even lighter weight get it set up for a gates belt drive (not recommended for the brown streak crowd but if you use brakes you will be fine) I know Schindlehaur does some already made aluminum fixed gear bikes with belts.
You could easily build a bike that is 13lbs or probably even less like this.
#19
Senior Member
An aching back is keeping me off a bicycle today and the Interwebz is my companion this morning so BoozyMcliverRot I hope you won't take my comment as anything other than trying to keep a dying discussion going for ****zngigglz...
Despite my best efforts to control them, I have weight-weenie tendencies that leak out sometimes and anytime there's a thead with "Super light" in the title it catches my attention.
Nysss bike but I can't help but think that to get it to 17.2 lbs the frame must be world-class light, which does not seem all that likely, 'cos CXP22 to Formulas and a 1/2 link chain ain't exactly a recipe for weight reduction, and while your other bits are nice - I'm not going to search them all out but they don't strike me as being super light either. Or...maybe you were trolling?
Despite my best efforts to control them, I have weight-weenie tendencies that leak out sometimes and anytime there's a thead with "Super light" in the title it catches my attention.
Nysss bike but I can't help but think that to get it to 17.2 lbs the frame must be world-class light, which does not seem all that likely, 'cos CXP22 to Formulas and a 1/2 link chain ain't exactly a recipe for weight reduction, and while your other bits are nice - I'm not going to search them all out but they don't strike me as being super light either. Or...maybe you were trolling?
17lbs on a gearless,brakeless steel bike isn't hard. I never weighed just the 55cm frame,but it's double butted 4130 chromoly,so I would guess its at about 3.8lbs to 4lbs.