Home
Full Speed Ahead
Comobike
Saris
Pactimo
BBB Parts
Gaerne
Park Tool
Competitive Cyclist
Giant
Lake cycling shoes

Pro bikes, July 26, 2008

Christian Vande Velde's Garmin-Chipotle Felt DA

(Click for larger image)
Photo ©: Ben Atkins

Vande Velde's shot at the Tour podium

By Ben Atkins

The horizontal slimline top tube joins
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)
The DA's huge bottom bracket area
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)
The Felt DA uses a conventional head tube
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)
The huge aero-section down tube
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)
Like many other time trial frames
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)
In contrast to the DA frame's other main tubes
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)

After a long career selflessly working for riders like Lance Armstrong, Carlos Sastre and Fränk Schleck, a move to Garmin-Chipotle (then called Slipstream-Chipotle) for this season has given Christian Vande Velde's career a completely new direction. The 32-year-old from Lemont, Illinois was first to cross the line as the boys in argyle won the opening team time trial in this year's Giro d'Italia.

As a result, Vande Velde also wore the first maglia rosa of the race and became the first American to do so since Andy Hampsten. Although he finished the Giro in 52nd place, a strong fifth place in the closing time trial confirmed his metamorphosis from super-domestique to stage race contender.

That valuable experience at the Giro d'Italia - and the confidence of his team - brought Vande Velde to this year's Tour de France as a genuine GC hope. Indeed, Vande Velde put in a brilliant performance in the first time trial and sat within a minute of the maillot jaune through the entire second week, briefly occupying as high as third place overall.

Unfortunately, a crash on the descent of the Cime de la Bonnette-Restefond on stage 16 cost him more than two and a half minutes on the rest of the favourites, effectively seeing an end to his bid for overall victory. Even so, Vande Velde's superb time trial ability might still put him atop one of those podium steps when the race wraps up on the Champs-Elysées on Sunday.

Vande Velde will certainly hope that his Felt DA will earn him a bit of time as he makes his way along the rolling 53km-long course. Felt designed the slippery-looking frame using a mix of aerodynamic profiles developed by the US National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, powerful computational fluid dynamics software and good old fashioned wind tunnel time. The result is a shape that Felt naturally claims is one of the fastest around.

The DA bears the usual aero-profile down tube, seat stays and seatpost, and a deep cutout on the seat tube that closely follows the rear wheel. However, Felt also adds a similar cutout to the dropped down tube to help smooth airflow off of the front wheel. Conversely, the top tube is dead-level and relatively slender for minimal frontal area.

Felt's Bayonet steering system is the real departure from the norm though, as the exceptionally deep fork legs blend into an extension that completely shields the head tube. The resultant combination effectively gives the front of the bike an aerodynamic 6:1 aspect ratio and cleverly skirts around the UCI-mandated 3:1dimension for an individual frame member. The 1"-diameter steerer tube keeps things especially narrow up front, too, while an adjustable stem is on hand to accommodate Vande Velde's aggressive position.

Other clever details include a rear brake that is well concealed behind and above the bottom bracket area and well thought-out cable routing. Housings for the rear brake and both derailleurs enter the top of the frame behind the stem - where the air is already turbulent - and then exit as close to their final destination as possible to maintain the frame's clean lines.

Garmin-Chipotle uses Zipp wheels throughout and its time trial machines are fitted with the fastest ones available from the Indianapolis, Indiana-based company. The Sub9 rear disc is claimed to be the first wheel to record negative drag in the wind tunnel while the 1080 front wheel wears an incredibly deep 108mm profile. In keeping with the team's aesthetic theme, even the wheels are decorated in Garmin-Chipotle's trademark argyle. Both wheels are fitted with 20mm-wide Vittoria Crono EVO-CS tubular slicks.

Vande Velde's Oval Concepts A911 handlebar setup is also among the most radical around with their innovative JetStream technology. According to Oval, the twin airfoil design reduces drag by 4-6 percent over a single element design and the dropped grips are set very low on each side to keep Vande Velde low even when he's on the brakes. Vande Velde apparently prefers double bend extensions which, along with the rearwardly set elbow pads, are set decidedly narrow to cut through the wind.

The entirely Shimano Dura-Ace groupset (aside from the Oval A900 carbon brake levers) includes a 175mm chainset with 55 and 44-tooth rings for the predominantly flat courses of this year's Tour. An 11-21-tooth cassette is all that's needed for the high speeds expected, and the Shimano theme continues with a pair of SPD-SL pedals.

Vande Velde may be in good form and on a fast bike but what will happen on Saturday? A spot on the podium may still be a long shot but stranger things have happened in the Tour de France over the years.

Photography

For a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here

Images by Ben Atkins/Cyclingnews.com

Full specification

Frame: Felt DA
Size: 56cm
Fork: Felt Bayonet

Critical measurements
Rider's height: 180cm (5' 11") ; Weight: 69kg (150lb)
Seat tube length, c-c: 508mm
Seat tube length, c-t: 560mm
Saddle height, from BB (c-t): 789mm
Top tube length: 557mm
Saddle nose tip to C of bars: 632mm
C of front hub to top of bars: 486mm

Brakes: Shimano Dura-Ace BR-7800 with SwissStop Yellow King pads
Brake levers: Oval Concepts A900 Carbon Upgrade levers
Front derailleur: Shimano Dura-Ace FD-7800
Rear derailleur: Shimano Dura-Ace RD-7800-SS
Shift levers: Shimano Dura-Ace bar end SL-BS78
Cassette: Shimano Dura-Ace CS-7800, 11-21T
Chain: Shimano Dura-Ace CN-7801
Crankset: Shimano Dura-Ace FD-7800, 175mm, 55/44T
Bottom bracket: Shimano Dura-Ace SM-FC7800

 

Front wheel: Zipp 1080
Rear wheel:
Zipp Sub9 Disc with Powertap hub
Tyres: Vittoria Crono Evo-CS tubular, 20mm

Bars: Oval Concepts A911 Jetstream Custom Aero Bar with A900 Carbon Double Bend extensions, 38cm (c-c)
Stem: Felt Bayonet integrated adjustable
Headset: 1" integrated
Tape/grip: None

Pedals: Shimano Dura-Ace SPD-SL PD-7810
Seat post: Felt 3.1 Carbon Aero
Saddle: fi:zi'k Chrono
Computer: Garmin Edge 705

Total bike weight: 8.15kg (17.97lb)