10 Cost Effective Ways To Make Your Road Bike Lighter

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • A lighter bike feels amazing! Everyone likes the feeling of effortless acceleration and cycling faster. Ollie often talks about aerodynamics, but underneath he is a real weight weenie, and in this video he shares 10 ways that you can make your road bike lighter without breaking the bank. Carbon fibre can be expensive, but that doesn't always make it lightweight, and there are plenty of other components that can be upgraded to save weight for a reasonable gram to currency ratio.
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Komentáře • 644

  • @davependragon1
    @davependragon1 Před 4 lety +665

    I started taking my cycling seriously from May 11th 2020, I weighed myself and I was 14st 10lb/(206 lb)/(93.6kg) and I am only 5'6" tall, On that day I stopped drinking alcohol completely, stopped eating rubbish food and started putting in the miles. It is now 5th July 2020 and I have cycled 768 miles, saved £350 by not drinking beer seven days a week, and have lost 30lbs in weight, that's nearly 14kgs in 56 days. All this has not cost me a penny on the bike.

    • @gefloigle
      @gefloigle Před 4 lety +11

      Well done! 👍

    • @markp353
      @markp353 Před 4 lety +9

      Well done.

    • @DaveRandall1
      @DaveRandall1 Před 4 lety +27

      Was going to say - either spend £100s on fancy upgrades to save maybe 2kg max across everything, or just tighten up the diet for a month or so. Most people, myself included, have a couple of spare kilos to drop!

    • @hernendezsanchez7646
      @hernendezsanchez7646 Před 4 lety +14

      Bravo mate. A buddy always says If you think you should spend money on upgrades, just remember.the most cost effective upgrade is to lose weight and stop eating junk

    • @ozmadman
      @ozmadman Před 4 lety +31

      Well done!! keep going. I am 5' 5" tall and am down to 59kg and despite this I have increased my FTP to 3.5 watts a kilo. I am also nearly 67 years old now and need all he help I can get and think I have the balance/power output about right. Would like to hit 4 watts a kilo in the next year but not sure if that is possible for someone my age.

  • @alexdi1367
    @alexdi1367 Před 4 lety +264

    0:57 - Tires
    2:51 - Tubes (latex)
    4:20 - Bar tape
    5:57 - Saddles
    7:32 - Remove frame paint
    8:50 - Bottle cages
    9:50 - QR skewers
    10:50 - Cable housing (linked)
    11:39 - Drilling holes
    Some typical component weight ranges:
    Frame/fork: 1000g-1800g (carbon), 1500g-2500g (alloy)
    Wheelset: 1400g-2100g
    Tireset: 500g-1000g
    Tubeset: 100g-300g
    Crankset: 600g-1200g
    Cassettes: 200g-450g
    Shifters: 350g-550g (mechanical, rim)
    RDs: 150g-350g
    FDs: 80g-150g
    Skewers: 50g-150g
    Bars: 200g-350g
    Stem: 80g-200g
    Saddle: 100g-400g
    Seatpost: 150g-400g
    Brakes: 300g-350g (rim)
    Pedals: 200g-450g
    Bar tape: 50g-150g
    Bottle cage: 10g-100g
    The most cost-effective are skewers, tubes, tires, stem, bar tape, cheap carbon seatpost, saddle, crankset, bottle cage, and pedals. Import carbon disc wheels and used wheels come next on the $/g return.

    • @ozmadman
      @ozmadman Před 4 lety +4

      Thanks for this..very informative. I have a cheap carbon seat post 130 grams (ok for me as I weigh only 59kg's) and a carbon saddle 95 grams(if your bum can stand it!!) 50 gram tubes, 220 gram tyres, and 220 gram keo carbon pedals(pair). Trying to make up for the 105 disc groupset additional weight but even so my budget (£1700) by modern standards bike (planet X carbon frame) still only comes in at 7.7 kg's all in with bike computer and bottle cages etc.

    • @cornishalps9870
      @cornishalps9870 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ozmadman my TCR advanced pro one weighs the same but it's all stock though and set up tubeless cost £1900 though

    • @ozmadman
      @ozmadman Před 4 lety +1

      @@cornishalps9870 probably your frame is a lot lighter. The planet X pro carbon evo is not particularly light, extra small frame is 1120 and fork 440 but it cost me only £377 last year (they are £999 now!!) and my carbon wheels (Tuff Cycle ) weigh 1490. Think I have a good balance between weight, aero and cost though. Had I been 80+ kilos then I wouldn't be so concerned about the weight but being so light and older I don't want to be pushing around a heavy bike. I also have a Dolan track bike (front brake fitted) as it is fixed gear and this still only weighs 7kg's and it is all alloy (the only carbon is the seat post and saddle).

    • @virslee1498
      @virslee1498 Před 4 lety

      I don't think I've ever commented on YT in the past few years, but this is a well done collection if OC. Thx.

    • @ozmadman
      @ozmadman Před 4 lety +1

      @@virslee1498 Watch GCN on here, the content is always good

  • @sexyhemch
    @sexyhemch Před 4 lety +272

    Dont have money for all this so i just ride naked instead , save money on cloths and grams

    • @jbratt
      @jbratt Před 4 lety +33

      Patrik Niklasson Yes and social distancing will automatically become a side benefit 😀

    • @myownsite
      @myownsite Před 4 lety

      I just stopped eating, which is an aero benefit as well.

  • @alexleide1823
    @alexleide1823 Před 4 lety +115

    A GCN Tech drillium bike sounds like a fun video, with Ollie riding the new lightweight bike in a hillclimb

  • @shafieklevy3175
    @shafieklevy3175 Před 3 lety +48

    I took the shell off my racing snail but only made it more sluggish.

    • @markjowen66
      @markjowen66 Před 3 lety +1

      Haha.. Thanks for making me snort milk out my nose

  • @calvintcs80
    @calvintcs80 Před 4 lety +463

    i successfully lose 65kg off my bike by staying on the couch and it's free.

    • @VHjykfUuYu
      @VHjykfUuYu Před 4 lety +43

      Those are rookie numbers. I lose more than 90.

    • @rodorb3022
      @rodorb3022 Před 4 lety +12

      If i weighed 65kg I'd happily ride a 10kg bike

    • @Murgoh
      @Murgoh Před 4 lety +6

      I have lost 15 kg of my own weigh during the last couple of years by riding more. That's almost twice the weigh of my lighter bike. Still, the heavier one is 3-5 km/h faster as it's a TT bike.

    • @frazergoodwin4945
      @frazergoodwin4945 Před 4 lety +26

      And the genius of this method is that the longer you stay on the couch the bigger the wieght loss from the bike!

    • @ggedney1
      @ggedney1 Před 3 lety

      I've lost well over 100 Pounds at a time sitting on a sofa, don't knock it. If you turn the sofa over, I think you will make a profit. Where'd you get a free couch that you would sit on?

  • @jasondelrey4652
    @jasondelrey4652 Před 3 lety +11

    Training on a heavier bike and switching on a much lighter bike on race day. This helps me alot

    • @TheUrzur
      @TheUrzur Před 2 lety

      Exactly. I ride my bike everyday to work and when I switch from 29x2.4 hardtail to my 9.7kg gravel bike when winter is over I cant even describe how it feels.

  • @HenryAshman
    @HenryAshman Před 4 lety +31

    Going lightweight is the same as getting aero. The rider is 85% of the problem. Lay off the cake, costs no money at all and might even save some. I dropped 35kg over the course of a year and that really made a dent in my climbing speed, I'm still 85kg so I'm hardly emaciated either.

    • @lordad
      @lordad Před 4 lety +7

      Great Tip ;) i am 75kg and gonna lose 35kg ,too for becoming a climbing machine lol ^^ yeha joke aside its ofc true... 69kg is when i am in excellent shape having 10% BFat and that would cost me nothing but discipline and these 6kg would make a world of difference in climbing speed. Nothing i could do to my bike would gave anything close to the same advantage

  • @rigurat
    @rigurat Před 4 lety +69

    A fan of latex (puts on a nitrile glove) inner tubes!

    • @onnomeeuwis4001
      @onnomeeuwis4001 Před 4 lety +3

      He made that comment himself last time

    • @oliverbridgewood3929
      @oliverbridgewood3929 Před 4 lety +3

      Spent 10 years wearing nitrile gloves pretty much every day of my life!

    • @rigurat
      @rigurat Před 3 lety

      @@oliverbridgewood3929 Likewise!

    • @beemrdon52
      @beemrdon52 Před 3 lety

      There are other real latex items he could have put on...

  • @user-on1cy5iz3u
    @user-on1cy5iz3u Před 4 lety +35

    4:28 surely Ollie, you not only have taken the bar tape off, you chopped the bar off.

  • @inspiredtotired8369
    @inspiredtotired8369 Před 4 lety +18

    Loving the "Butthead" style haircut.
    We need Hank in the room, to form GCN's version of Beavis & Butthead ;-)

  • @idaf5244
    @idaf5244 Před 4 lety +11

    Not bothered about saving weight I'm just here to keep track of the mullet progress

  • @boeingbros0550
    @boeingbros0550 Před 4 lety +117

    To loosely quote casually explained: "Just get any other cyclist to carry your extra crap". Probably best way to save weight

    • @mrbenclegg
      @mrbenclegg Před 4 lety +1

      Nailed it

    • @VHjykfUuYu
      @VHjykfUuYu Před 4 lety +7

      Good inner voice:
      - Just give him an inner tube and a cookie.
      Bad inner voice:
      - Shit in his back pocket.

    • @jaspreetsidhu5708
      @jaspreetsidhu5708 Před 4 lety +1

      Never carried a pump to this day.

    • @byrondixon4648
      @byrondixon4648 Před 4 lety +1

      One of my few KOMs had assistance from my son carrying my spare tube and tyre leavers and pump and tool bag and water bottle 🚴

  • @waxy954
    @waxy954 Před 4 lety +175

    Shaving that hair off will save 2kgs I reckon

  • @AstroLaVista
    @AstroLaVista Před 4 lety +41

    Do a Drillium project video, that would be awesome.

    •  Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/HdYGLDk2e4U/video.html

  • @grommet20002000
    @grommet20002000 Před 4 lety +7

    Tubeless wasn't mentioned which is a far more upto date solution compaired to latex tubes. But my favorite for those of us with short legs. is to chop off any seatpost inside the frame that is not needed, keep 10cm in the frame and cut off any extra below that.

  • @neil7769
    @neil7769 Před 4 lety +10

    Some more things: Switch to SRAM Red 11sp cassette if you are using Shimano or Campy 11sp (need a new freewheel as well with Campagnolo). Much the lightest 11sp option. Get custom Ti pedal axles (available from a specialist retailer in the States). Weigh bar end plugs and use the lightest ones (you probably have a bunch of different ones in your odds & ends box - the Deda ones are good). Use aluminium bolts to hold bottle cages on (make sure to regularly grease them to prevent corrosion). If your clincher wheels need rim tape, use veloplugs rather than tape. Oh yes, and the weight weenies bashers are correct in one respect - have a cr*p too before you ride.. More confortable as well as lighter.. ;-)

  • @67er_matze97
    @67er_matze97 Před 4 lety +4

    0:35 haha!! I like that view. A very light bike not only feels great, it also makes your wallet a lot lighter. So if I carry my wallet with me on my bike rides I'm already twice lighter. I think that's definitely worth it ! It's so fun to be a bit bike nerdish ! Great episode dudes 👍

  • @johnreese3762
    @johnreese3762 Před 4 lety +1

    Great info! Thanks! Just installed time trial tires and latex tubes.. Big help!

  • @X2Broster
    @X2Broster Před 4 lety +15

    Narrower tires weigh less. No high costs. A very light helmet brings comfort and weight reduction. These are my tips.

  • @maniac0303
    @maniac0303 Před 4 lety +16

    Remove any removeable stickers! Sometimes you can save a "lot" of weight... Mosttimes on some cheaper allow wheel sets you can peel off the stickers and you can save up to 35g....

  • @swtcraigmachine3832
    @swtcraigmachine3832 Před 4 lety +10

    Tyres - the first check for me is always running tyres that have a folding bead instead of tyres that have a wire bead. 👍🏻

  • @jotapi4010
    @jotapi4010 Před 4 lety +38

    You can actually make money getting weight off your bike: Just reduce waist circumference.
    Even better: do this on your bike.

    • @stefanwagener
      @stefanwagener Před 4 lety +2

      Right, replace 28" with 27.5" inch wheels and tires.

  • @zaxmaxlax
    @zaxmaxlax Před 4 lety +73

    Taking a d*mp before a ride is the most cost effective way to save weight.

    • @stevenr5149
      @stevenr5149 Před 4 lety +1

      and the most satisfying? ;) Hey the older I get...(sorry but I am an ER nurse nothing about the body is off limits).

    • @TraumaER
      @TraumaER Před 4 lety +8

      Not sure this obsession with grams of weight. I thought biking was about getting stronger? Why the need to make it easier?

  • @jakagaber
    @jakagaber Před 4 lety +62

    Instead of using 300g bar tape wrape the handle bars with that 40g inner tube?

    • @cornishalps9870
      @cornishalps9870 Před 4 lety +8

      Your onto something there...

    • @beemrdon52
      @beemrdon52 Před 3 lety

      300 gram bar tape? What BT is that heavy?

    • @kev7355
      @kev7355 Před 3 lety +3

      I have been doing that for a while actually. Using old tubes ( punctured ) as "bar tape". A nice pair of sharp scissors is all you need for it. Pretty comfortable but there is a distinctive smell on your palm after a long ride.

  • @mellissanash7517
    @mellissanash7517 Před 4 lety +9

    carbon fiber seat post, titanium rail seat, swapping all my bolts & skewers to TI & switching to tubeless.

  • @stevenrose3352
    @stevenrose3352 Před 4 lety +2

    Totally agree tyres and tubes are the place to start. A few things I changed on my race bike...
    Chain and cassette is a good place to look for weight savings, where you can not spend loads and keep reliable performance. I like the KMC X11SL chain and SRAM red cassettes. The SRAM cassette is steel, not ti, so it lasts really well. Look out for a lightly used second hand one and it'll last a good while.
    KCNC KQR skewers are another good (non-extreme) option - 45g and have a nice solid axle (I've broken a butted ti axle before) and good clamping force.
    Also to the dullards saying about body comp.... When you're fit, you eat well and train well - let's say you're 4.5w/kg+ then you don't really have a kilo or maybe even half a kilo to lose without affecting performance. Or if you're overweight, why not lose weight off yourself AND your bike? Also it's fun to geek out, and have a light bike!

  • @j.j.thomas9569
    @j.j.thomas9569 Před 4 lety +2

    Watching this video whilst sanding my new super six evo Himod frame (2016 model). Going to be built with 2nd hand SRAM red etap and enve finishing kit, but love all the tips. Hoping to go sub 6 for a training bike for the Surrey hills. Cheers GCN!

  • @ashleysinani4207
    @ashleysinani4207 Před 4 lety

    what a fascinating video
    i'm trying loads of these

  • @perjakobsen9198
    @perjakobsen9198 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey guys! Thanks for an absolute joy of a channel you have! Regarding the
    section, i might have an 11'th one: The fat(in many cases, mine included...) blob on top of the horse! The cost-to-weight ratio might be neglectingly overlooket, if you ask me! Not to mention the health-to-enjoy ratio. In many cases(mine you...), it may go through the top of the collender(so to speak)! There is however one major obstacle in this 11'th way: The fat blob(me-self-included...) has to get ON the horse, and PEDAL!! Thanks again, guys!

  • @aybekcihan4864
    @aybekcihan4864 Před 4 lety +9

    Seatpost. There are lighter options. Say like 125 grams carbon seatposts. You can easily save 100-200 grams.

  • @avicenadelcastillo988
    @avicenadelcastillo988 Před 2 lety

    Fantástico ideas !! Thank you very much !

  • @micahsherer7189
    @micahsherer7189 Před 4 lety +22

    Of course, no mention of Ali Express here... I dropped 700 grams for about £70 by going with Ali Express carbon seatpost, saddle, bottle cages, titanium skewers, poly pedals... Been riding these parts for 2 years and 10,000 km with little to no issues.
    Best gram/£ ratio is definitely to be had buying parts on a cheap Chinese site like this.

    • @thibaultquelavoine5811
      @thibaultquelavoine5811 Před 4 lety +2

      care to share the components ? Sort of on a budget myself hehe

    • @ryanhaney2042
      @ryanhaney2042 Před 4 lety +2

      Thibault Quelavoine check out OG-Evkin. I’ve used their carbon seat post and stem on my winter bike, no issues

    • @sprayaho1ic
      @sprayaho1ic Před 4 lety +1

      Ryan Haney got OG-Evkin aero bars couple of months back. Very nice for the money!

    • @ryanhaney2042
      @ryanhaney2042 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sprayaho1ic For the money the finish is really good. I got one of the head unit mounts and they realised there was a flaw. Sent me out some washers to fix it without even asking. I've been super impressed with them. I'd love to see a video review on the disc road frame they have. Maybe GCN would do it one day...

    • @micahsherer7189
      @micahsherer7189 Před 4 lety +2

      @@thibaultquelavoine5811 Toseek is a pretty good brand on AliExpress. Also Elita One seatposts are good. Knockoff bontrager bottle cages. Top result for titanium skewers (don't remember brand).

  • @tigerpjm
    @tigerpjm Před 4 lety

    You're a champion Ollie!

  • @Lelo86
    @Lelo86 Před 4 lety +2

    Ollie is the "New and Improved" Si. Very thorough....only thing you missed is the rider weight. You should do a video on everything rider weight! Or even the science of weight on bike, tyre pressure, racing weight, pro tips, weight nutrition and the good old #2 before a race.

  • @hec_3549
    @hec_3549 Před 4 lety +14

    You forgot the most important thing on your list: VALVE CAPS

    • @gcntech
      @gcntech  Před 4 lety +3

      Hah - we don't count them anyway

  • @daniellai9370
    @daniellai9370 Před 4 lety +58

    Best weight reduction is your own body

    • @LordVilmore
      @LordVilmore Před 4 lety +9

      what a stupid comment!
      for fit people this is a bad and unhealthy idea that will make you slower.

    • @daniellai9370
      @daniellai9370 Před 4 lety +2

      @@LordVilmore May be you looks like Peter Sagan, I don't and will never have the fitness as him, not even close.

    • @LordVilmore
      @LordVilmore Před 4 lety +2

      @@daniellai9370 I hope you are healthy! There are enough people that are thinner than Sagan, don't tell them they should reduce body weight.

    • @rookie4619
      @rookie4619 Před 4 lety +5

      For a lot of people this is true though. Nothing more hilarious than a fat beer belly in lyrca on a high end bike.

    • @stsstz2586
      @stsstz2586 Před 3 lety

      I totally agree because you will get a lower Center of gravity on your bike. And in many cases, older bike riders have a higher BMI and own more money to strip down their bikes.

  • @bondy284
    @bondy284 Před 4 lety +1

    Enjoyed that👍🇦🇺

  • @Biblicalgiants
    @Biblicalgiants Před 2 lety

    Great video!

  • @edicolon1245
    @edicolon1245 Před 3 lety +1

    You guys do a great job. I can always pick up a pearl or 2 from you. One thing to keep in mind is that not all of us are out to race. Maybe make sure that in your videos you add advice for the more mundane of us, it would would be appreciated. Thank you.

  • @andrewince8824
    @andrewince8824 Před 4 lety +1

    If you like rim brakes then I recommend the Odyssey Springfield system. Super lightweight with excellent stopping power and will usually fit road bikes despite bring designed for BMX. Even better, it uses a single central sping which automatically balances the calipers.

  • @Jeff-bd4gg
    @Jeff-bd4gg Před 4 lety

    I have been using ultra lightweight butyl tubes coated with talc powder. Works amazing. Low RR

  • @DENCHBEATS
    @DENCHBEATS Před 4 lety +6

    I’ve recently switched to the tubolito’s and they’re amazing, just as fast as latex. Hold air much better as well

  • @andrewbackhouse5828
    @andrewbackhouse5828 Před 4 lety

    Peak forward AND peak back. You're onto something with that colander, Ollie!

  • @neil_down_south
    @neil_down_south Před 4 lety +2

    We need a video on converting to lightweight cable outers. I've seen very mixed reviews on their ease of installation and performance. Maybe get Jon Cannings back for a special!

  • @thomasklindwortb4239
    @thomasklindwortb4239 Před 3 lety

    Great vid!

  • @jevgeniardassov
    @jevgeniardassov Před 4 lety

    I agree. Carbon wheels are the least bang for your buck in terms of weight saving. Frame would be better. But I'd also start with seatpost, stem, seat, pedals and so on. Easy to change, not majorly expensive. Also shifters are a good investment.

  • @user-tq3ud9zi7w
    @user-tq3ud9zi7w Před 4 lety +5

    Also Titanium screws for your bottle cages and stem, for around $30 you can save about 40 grams in total.

    • @gcntech
      @gcntech  Před 4 lety +2

      Good one William

    • @peterpendergast5778
      @peterpendergast5778 Před 3 lety +3

      Actually Titanium screws can be expensive , as its not really a highly stressed part you can easily use Aluminum or Plastic screws . Also there is a big steel bolt that goes down the centre of the stem to put tension in the headset , this also is not highly stressed as its only finger tight check the size and buy anodised Aluminium for a bit of bling

    • @OFFSHOREDOUG
      @OFFSHOREDOUG Před 3 lety +1

      I have carbon screws on my 5g carbon cages. Not even €7 each. 40% lighter than aluminium.

  • @joeottsoulbikes415
    @joeottsoulbikes415 Před 4 lety

    There are small things you can do over time. Cut your seatpost to a length that ensures you have enough in the frame that you are not going to break the frame but have no excess. When it's time to overhaul your hubs, check and see if the maker of the hub offers a titanium or alloy cassette body and axle kit. Many pedal brands use the same design across a platform so when you overhaul your pedals you can change the axle to titanium. Shimano shifters can sometimes be interchangable with the actual lever that you put your fingers on so you can change out the alloy lever on some 105 shifters with the carbon lever of an Ultegra. Stem faceplate, some manufacturers like FSA offer replacement faceplate and you can change out the alloy one for a carbon one. FSA also has titanium bolts that will work on most of the stems but you will usually need to nicely ask there warranty guys to provide those since they are not in the catalog. Same with brakes. Most of the bolts and hardware for lower end brakes is the same size and thread pitch as the high end stuff so you can use the titanium bolts from the high end parts to rebuild your low end stuff.

  • @calayanrail
    @calayanrail Před 4 lety +2

    The linked cable housing is actually much cheaper in the long run as the links can be reused many many times. When changing housing, you only need to buy the inner liner which only costs around 1 dollar per meter.

  • @Boopop1024
    @Boopop1024 Před 4 lety +2

    I have a drillium Stronglight chainset on my wall. It's really pretty I think, loads of holes. Bought it to go on my '84 Dawes Galaxy to do Eroica Britannia, that's looking like a way off though :( Still I get to enjoy it on the wall some more at least!

  • @bonerjamz1992
    @bonerjamz1992 Před 4 lety

    Haha. Love the pounds vs kilograms pun in the thumbnail. Hilarious.

  • @cokebottles6919
    @cokebottles6919 Před 3 lety

    I got a set of PERGEAR Carbon bottle cages, I then used some ultra fine sand paper to get a matte finish. $28, ultra light, holds firm, no logos, matches my frame. Highly recommended!

  • @baronvonhoughton
    @baronvonhoughton Před 4 lety +7

    I'm a fan of cheap Chinese carbon bits off ebay.
    I've done; Saddle, seatpost and handle bars, each only £40.
    Each item saved me about 150g.

    • @ugastronomie1237
      @ugastronomie1237 Před 4 lety

      @Ryan Hustler 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @ltu42
      @ltu42 Před 4 lety +1

      Consider also titanium skewers (~$10 and 100 g savings) and bottle cages ($16 for a 33 g pair).

    • @baronvonhoughton
      @baronvonhoughton Před 3 lety

      @Ryan Hustler All parts over a year of heavy use, no problems.
      You keep paying over the odds for your parts that are made in China anyway.

    • @baronvonhoughton
      @baronvonhoughton Před 3 lety +1

      @@ltu42 Good call, did that saved 75g!

    • @rolfaalto
      @rolfaalto Před 2 lety

      Careful with the handlebars -- lots of examples of epic catastrophic failures of cheap Chinese bars on CZcams!

  • @peterbrister5191
    @peterbrister5191 Před 3 lety +3

    Big difference to the overall weight on my bike - lost 7kg in body weight.👍 Much easier on up hill sections but slower on the down😉

    • @francescobredemeyer6077
      @francescobredemeyer6077 Před 2 lety

      Maybe not if you've become more aero in the process then you've become faster climbing and decent wise. Double bonus, congrats on the weight loss!!! 👍

  • @ikramidris2386
    @ikramidris2386 Před 4 lety +1

    I save more than a kilo on my bike.Mostly explained on the video, but didnt't do the tire and inner tire upgrade, and also big no for drilium :DDD
    One of the most significant weight saving is after cutting my seatpost (of course still saving minimum insertion length from company's recommendation) and unbranded 16 grams carbon bottle cages with $15 each (won't work well on C*melback bottles, but no problem with Elit* bottles)! Cables seems promising and will be my next target after this video!

  • @retroonhisbikes
    @retroonhisbikes Před 3 lety

    My bike started off as 8.5kg without pedals, by the time i finished upgrading stuff the bike now weighs 8.2kg
    But to be fair, i added pedals 320g, bottle cages 64g, computer mount 27g, garmin computer and sensors 125g, rear light mount 15g, camera mounts 50g. Brake pads with cooling fins.
    carbon Stem and carbon seat post saved 150g, and carbon wheel set saved even more weight.

  • @rubberplantsandwich
    @rubberplantsandwich Před 4 lety

    I've done everything you said Ollie, spent loads of dosh on low weight upgrades but I'm still 14stone!

  • @royevans4581
    @royevans4581 Před 3 lety +2

    I have a CAAD12. Fitted the Save carbon seatpost, Mavic Ksyrium pros, Ultegra Di2, Carbon handlebars, and changed bolts to titanium. These are functional upgrades first and foremost, but it has saved a a lot of weight over standard. Will weigh the bike and add result in a bit.

    • @marcgtsr
      @marcgtsr Před rokem +1

      1 year later...

    • @royevans4581
      @royevans4581 Před rokem +3

      @@marcgtsr Haha, sorry mate, forgot all about it. Still have the bike, just weighed it in it's current setup, with a huge rear cassette on the back for tackling the many hills I have around here, and it comes in at just under 8 kilos. The cassette is BIG. 11-40.
      Seatpost is great, with a Specialised Toupe saddle, can ride on it all day long. Di2 is brilliant. Bolts gave me a massive drop in weight (kidding). My next task is dropping a few stone off my middle aged frame! Soon creeps back on when you don't keep up the cycling.

  • @yogicycle1
    @yogicycle1 Před 4 lety +2

    I tried the Tubolito tubes last year. They are really super light. The first one fitted failed instantly at the valve. Great customer service from the German company who sent two replacements. I persevered. A further failure where the valve is fixed to the tube. I had two left. The third failed not even moving at a cafe in Majorca. Parted against a wall in 25c went down, tube split. Had one left, but now removed as they are simply far too unreliable. I think the concept of the material is great but not worth the risk. The most reliable light tubes I’ve found are schwalbe extra light.

    • @stevenr5149
      @stevenr5149 Před 4 lety

      I l really like the Schwalbe SV14A at 108 grams for my 42 mm 650B wheels. 1 flat this season. My rides range from pavement to category 3 gravel. However, I weigh 108 lbs. Rene Herse has a great selection of light-weight Schwalbe tubes.

    • @stevenrose3352
      @stevenrose3352 Před 4 lety

      I had several Conti Supersonic inner tubes fail at the edge of the reinforced patch round the valve. One on the front wheel while riding (scary), and several while not even riding. I ditched them for Vittoria latex - I always check pressure before riding anyway, it only takes a minute.

  • @barianelozano2614
    @barianelozano2614 Před 11 měsíci

    A light wheelset is the most effective one, well everything is effective but if the first thing you will do is to get a very light alloy wheelset then light tires and latex inner tube. That feeling is so wonderful!

  • @clayeewing
    @clayeewing Před 4 lety

    I recall the other reason people I know stopped drilling their components all those years ago: all metals fail if you reduce their structural integrity enough. Handlebars broke, cranks sheered, derailleurs exploded. This led to the ultralight movement in mountain bike components, which led to not just ultralight components but spectacular failures where riders were severely injured and sparked lots of lawsuits, which prompted the (deservedly) legendary response by Keith Bontrager on what he thought about all this: Light, cheap, durable: pick two. Still brilliant.

  • @henrywu6801
    @henrywu6801 Před 4 lety

    #AskGcnTech Hi Ollie, great shows. I've got 120pounds for headunit and I wonder which one is better. It has to be powet meter compatible and has Navigation. And what's the difference between Garmin 130 and 130plus. Which one will you choose. Thanks.

  • @KoenMiseur
    @KoenMiseur Před 4 lety +1

    I keep my gel-bartape, I'll have the allday comfort (especially in Belgium) above 100grams!

  • @barrycorney3665
    @barrycorney3665 Před rokem

    My first road bike, soon to be winter hack, is a nasty Tourney spec Carrera TDF weighing a whopping 12kg and 14 gears (2x7) with Tektro brakes... I've sourced some new, some old bits from Ebay etc and now it has 105 calipers, and 4600 Tiagra 20 gears...I decided that the difference between a cheap set of wheels (needed for the cassette, old wheel had a freewheel lol) and some Mavic Aksiums was a false economy so bought the Mavics. Strangely though the biggest saving was moving from a square taper BB to HTII, and 200g from the chainset switch, new cassette was 367g cos I wanted a 36T lower, but my biggest shock was the fact the 105 calipers weighed 3g MORE than the shonky Tektros!! Just hope they really brake better.... The biggest saving to come though will be the replacement fork- the original all steel one is 1190g and I've a carbon one in the post that when cut to 225mm should be around 500g... the total saving will take the bike to 10.3 (inc pedals) which is great...I just need to do my bit now and shift some lard....

  • @paulwinstanley4595
    @paulwinstanley4595 Před 3 lety +1

    recently into cycling, usually do running, lighter bike... im terrified on current road bike lol, came down winter hill yesterday and never been so nervous, felt like nothing was under me

  • @Spaeckli
    @Spaeckli Před 4 lety

    Love your mullet getting stronger

    • @gcntech
      @gcntech  Před 4 lety

      Cheers Spaeckli, should Ollie keep it?

    • @Spaeckli
      @Spaeckli Před 4 lety

      @@gcntech he has to
      everey centimeter of mullet is the equivalent of 100g in weightsavings, facts

  • @leesuuton5083
    @leesuuton5083 Před 4 lety

    Just needed to replace a tyre on my boardman hybrid ! Cheapest tyre weighed 800 grammes , luckily I noticed before buying , and got the original Vittoria tyres weighing 400 grammes each

  • @rjtopper68
    @rjtopper68 Před 4 lety

    I like the many different phases of his bangs. Especially at 12:50 when one stray hair floats around like an old mans eyebrow. I'm just messing with you though, this was a very informative video, but I'm going to have to do some research on Drillium.

  • @yumyumhungry
    @yumyumhungry Před 4 lety +16

    I find cranksets can be one of the most cost effective upgrades.y giant defy came with 105 but a no series crank. Went ultegra, $200 dollars for 400g weight savings

    • @Jaeoh.woof765
      @Jaeoh.woof765 Před 4 lety

      So, do you feel the improvement?

    • @xx-----------xx873
      @xx-----------xx873 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Jaeoh.woof765 I doubt you would feel it while riding (apart from stiffness), but picking up your bike would be noticable.

    • @spamfremail
      @spamfremail Před 4 lety +5

      Definitely! Can’t believe you missed cranks of this list GCN! Recently picked up a nearly new carbon FSA K Light on eBay for a fraction of its new price. Weight 586g. Replaced non-series shimano. Weight 840g! Ollie could lose his mind if he saved over 250g for under £100 😂. Absolute transformation of the bike too.

    • @chiefrocker12
      @chiefrocker12 Před 4 lety +1

      Not for everyone, but I spent a few years analyzing the gear ratios I often rode, and with all the hype around 1X, I carefully chose the front ring and rear cassette to make a 1X. Carbon cranks from Praxis, Garburuk oval chainring and I took off about 300g, albeit that wasn't the intent.

    • @spamfremail
      @spamfremail Před 4 lety

      Steve King But, what Ollie says at the start of this is true. A lighter bike FEELS different, more lively and responsive under your feet. And I don’t mean a 100g lighter bike. I’ve been upgrading a 2016 Focus Cayo which has a brilliant super light frame but is saddled with cheap crap from the shimano spares bin! I’ve upgraded - so far - the crank, the al post and the seat with carbon items. This has already saved me over 400g and this is instantly noticeable when you pick the bike up. This was an 8kg bike that is now 7.6kg. Still have the bars and wheels to go which will save another 400g. And yes, you do notice a 250g crank and BB upgrade. The bike flies up hills when you stand on the pedals 😀

  • @niceracleous9999
    @niceracleous9999 Před 4 lety +2

    You forget about the rear cassette. You can save over 100g on that, and in my experience the CNC type ones last considerably longer too , so not really more expensive in the end.

    • @TheUrzur
      @TheUrzur Před 2 lety

      You can make a custom cassette and make your own gears with weight as low as 150 grams (8sp)

  • @omaiques
    @omaiques Před 4 lety +1

    Nice video Ollie! I put vittoria latex inner tubes when I bought my Fulcrum wind 55. Overall you can notice the watts saving and the rolling resistance, however to my horror hehe the two of them explode inflating them one last week and the other today... Literally they made a hole near to the valve crazy... I can not understand why. Did it ever happened to you?
    Also, another way to save weight not too expensive is put a top end cassette like durace if you run ultegra for instance (I did that). I would change also the crankset for something more lighweight but that can be more £££
    Cheers!

    • @floardeche6972
      @floardeche6972 Před 2 lety +1

      I use vittoria latex since one year and everything is fine for m. Maybe I’m not as fast as you 😅

  • @tristanwhitehead6029
    @tristanwhitehead6029 Před 4 lety +2

    Tube savings weight is at least 3X since we generally ride with at least three tubes. Two in the tires and one spare.

  • @donutdrachen4365
    @donutdrachen4365 Před 4 lety +1

    Damn, you guys looked bloody good in the new Castelli kit :)

  • @relaxingmeditation5155
    @relaxingmeditation5155 Před 3 měsíci

    You deserve a like and a comment

  • @stevem.3646
    @stevem.3646 Před 4 lety +2

    Ask yourself, "If Alaphillippe rode my bike, would he go faster than me?" As long as the answer is Yes, the bike is not the problem.
    But I went for the new Saddle -110g, Seatpost -50g, Wheels -400g, Handlebar -120g, Conti Supersonic tubes -150g (2 +spare) Now I've got a sub 16lb Caad12 and I'm still slow!

  • @cattac9924
    @cattac9924 Před 4 lety

    I found a used full carbon bike for 1000 euro, I weighed it and it came in at 7,6 kg! It had ultegra components as well, I made a good deal for sure! Although you might find that not that impressive, Im pretty new to road cycling so its good for me!

  • @henrikerdland578
    @henrikerdland578 Před 4 lety +4

    Switch to Time pedals. They are a lot lighter than other brands. And perform as well as Look or Shimano

  • @fender1000100
    @fender1000100 Před rokem

    Seat posts and pedals can make a difference too. Took 1.2lbs of weight off my folding bike. Just upgrading them.

  • @andrewince8824
    @andrewince8824 Před 4 lety

    If you can shrink your front and rear gears while keeping good ratios then you can knock of weight from both cassettes and the chain which can be made shorter.

  • @jaimedebrum8557
    @jaimedebrum8557 Před 4 lety

    Some bar end plugs can be suprinsingly heavy (like supacaz) i saved some good weight just replacing them with cheap plastic ones

  • @mathewrose2951
    @mathewrose2951 Před 4 lety +1

    A saddle and lighter pedals count as more permanent upgrades as well because they transfer to your next bike when it’s time for a change. I have a few fizik saddles that were pricey, but I keep my saddle when I change bikes, so no money is “lost” on those

    • @ltu42
      @ltu42 Před 4 lety

      That applies to most weight saving upgrades other than the frame, truth be told.

  • @itsonlyme9938
    @itsonlyme9938 Před 4 lety

    Hi I have tried latex inner tube very soon got a puncture from snake pinch between the rim and bead despite having the correct tyre pressure.

  • @stevenr5149
    @stevenr5149 Před 4 lety

    I WANNA SEE DRILIUM! Maybe a few presenters each drill one out and then have a contest, It would be a super-cool video. Maybe have an intro showing some actual drilled bikes from back then. Maybe points for most weight removed, Points for best looking drilling, and then an actual race on a rough course to make give the end of the video more drama. Looks like we are in the same tribe--of hair. I haven't cut mine since Covid. It looks just as wild as yours(which is awesome). Unfortunately I don't have a GCN presenter's face to match the hair :( LOL.

  • @razorree
    @razorree Před 2 měsíci

    how are the super light QR skewers? they are weaker, so, do we compromise on bike/frame stiffnes then ?

  • @davidfort5801
    @davidfort5801 Před 4 lety

    Do you know if you can get latex inner tube for 32c size tyres ???

  • @dezoksiribon
    @dezoksiribon Před 4 lety

    0:19 which bar tape has Dan on his bike (the black and red one)? somebody knows?

  • @Bugumir
    @Bugumir Před 4 lety +1

    My respects to those who are at levels high enough to require such extreme measures. I, for one, shall begin by dropping my love-handles, saving both weight and beer money.

  • @quincemothman
    @quincemothman Před 4 lety

    I upgraded and lightened my Wilier by replacing the wheels that came with it with Dura-ace C24s. ( Carbon/alloy ) with continental 5000 tires. Though expensive they are still a lot cheaper than complete carbon wheels and just as light and well designed. A heavy chariot with light wheels will go faster than a light chariot with heavy wheels. 😉

    • @kjbeaud
      @kjbeaud Před 3 lety

      Awesome. I have the c24s on my trek emonda. They are amazing and spin for days. Sure they dont look as cool as all carbon wheelset but once you ride them they are sweet. Plus alloy brake track never have a problem braking.

  • @danielhertercasagrande1686

    As a Junior I had a trainer he advised us instead of drilling the chainring we d better go out for training the guy’s name is Paul Köchli. With mid class components one can race on amateur level. My experience is that one kilo on the bike makes about 8 seconds on 350 meters altitude difference most people overestimate. Better investment is a good Hometrainer that you don’t miss trainings in bad weather conditions

  • @ariffau
    @ariffau Před 4 lety +2

    Great content Ollie and team! But I do prefer reliability and comfort more than lightweight everything.
    For an example, cheap heavy butyl tubes and puncture resistant tyres are amazing when you dont have to pump your tyres every day and do not get punctures for a whole year 😌 who doesn't want that?

    • @LukezyM
      @LukezyM Před 2 lety

      Weight weenies?

    • @palmergaz
      @palmergaz Před 2 lety

      Maybe not clicking on a video about weight saving would have been more relevant to you? 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @marek4698
    @marek4698 Před 4 lety

    Noticed it already in the last video, but now I gotta ask you guys. 01:30 Is Ollie growing a mullet?? And if so, is there any aerodynamic advantage to it over a regular haircut?

  • @steviejojo3448
    @steviejojo3448 Před 4 lety

    i found a cheap ebay carbon saddle that was similar to all my saddles.... 30$ 110 g, I have put 1k miles on it and its comfy for me... light does not have to be super expensive

  • @Mannerzs
    @Mannerzs Před 3 lety

    where can I find the outer cable that you reference in this video please?

  • @evelasq1
    @evelasq1 Před 4 lety +5

    Switching from a 105 group set to a Dura Ace group set is far too expensive and I would suggest upgrading to an Ultegra group set instead.

  • @chrisvanbuggenum871
    @chrisvanbuggenum871 Před 4 lety +3

    Damn, I've done them all already.

  • @KirbyTheKirb
    @KirbyTheKirb Před 3 lety

    I bought a regular hybrid with a nice 105 set-up and hydraulic brakes. It´s not as light as proper road bikes but it´s still lighter than many commuter/hybrid bikes at around 10.5kg. But by far the best way to lose weight is for me to just lose weight, which is the plan.

  • @tsjolkie1
    @tsjolkie1 Před 4 lety +1

    Water bottles! You almost always have them with you and if you replace your current water bottles with something like a Elite Fly, you can save two times 30grams (60 grams in total) for a 750ml sized bottle. They only cost 5 euro's more than their heavier counterparts.

  • @oeylille
    @oeylille Před 4 lety +24

    I recently cut my seat post, not to save weight, but it was ridiculously long. Probably did cut a few grams though.
    Don't bring 2 full water bottles if you don't need to. They are close to 1kg each.

    • @davidhellyer5353
      @davidhellyer5353 Před 4 lety +3

      100% right. Always laugh at my weight weenie buddies who carry full untouched bottles for entire ride

    • @ajfarrington
      @ajfarrington Před 4 lety +1

      Dim With et

    • @ltu42
      @ltu42 Před 4 lety +1

      @@davidhellyer5353 weight weenie-ism is not about performance as such, it's just a tinkering hobby. Like lowering your car and tinting the windows won't make it faster, people do that just because they like it better that way. 1 extra kg of water over the elevation difference of Alpe d'Huez increases your time by 20 or 40 seconds. Who cares, unless you're trying to win something.

    • @OFFSHOREDOUG
      @OFFSHOREDOUG Před 3 lety

      I have lightweight water bottles can easily save 100g for no extra cost as they are just as cheap as heavy ones.

  • @carlsmith1956
    @carlsmith1956 Před rokem

    What about a ceramic bottom bracket, weight savings and rolling resistance... ? Current bike old school 95 eddy Merckx Ti with dura ace 9spd...lol