Cycling Plus

BMC ROADMACHIN­E 01

£8799 › BMC’s finest road machine?

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Looking like a futuristic, stylised bike concept drawing with clean lines and no cables, BMC’s new three-model range is topped by the integrated and gloriously sleek Roadmachin­e 01, designed to split the difference between the altitude-friendly SLR01 all-rounder, and cobble-taming GF01 endurance bike.

The frame is compatible with mechanical shifting, but in this Shimano Di2 guise there’s barely a wire or hose to be seen, as integratio­n was top of BMC’s developmen­t list. Available on this model only, the ICS (Integrated Cockpit System) stem conceals the hydraulic brake hoses and shift wires. They then pass either side of BMC’s patented flat steeer into the frame or fork leg.

The seat-tube has a Kamm Tail profile, extending to the D-shaped seatpost, whose flattened rear edge incites flex for comfort. The fork crown is partly enveloped in the dropped down-tube, and the rear wheel tucks into a seat-tube recess. Aerodynami­cs have been considered within the unfussy, neat design.

Just as 25mm road tyres have become the new normal, many new bikes can take even fatter rubber. The Roadmachin­e 01 comes with 25mm tyres, but our early test example had 28mm Continenta­ls, with room for 30mm. With the ability to go large, 12mm thru-axles at both ends, hydraulic discs, and carbon clinchers, plus a race-ready frame, BMC may have started another trend, and we like it.

The sub-1500g DT Swiss RC38c Spline wheels are lively performers, with a good balance of accelerati­on, weight and aerodynami­cs. At 21mm externally, they’re not as wide or as blunt-profiled as even DT’s latest design, so do feel a little less stable in some conditions.

There’s no shortage of grunt, with enormous lateral rigidity from the

Aerodynami­cs have been considered within the unfussy, neat design

head-tube backwards that channels your efforts through the steering and drivetrain. On steep climbs, every pedal revolution creates an incredibly positive mini-surge of accelerati­on, and at speed, the Roadmachin­e is composed, just waiting for the chance to unleash its kick. Compact chainrings wouldn’t be a racer’s choice, but until mere mortals can race with discs, the Dura-Ace Di2 gearing is perfect for all but the brawniest rider.

The Roadmachin­e’s crisp steering and stability is perfect for racing and cruising. Even with larger tyres, it’s lively, with a rapid change of pace and an easy ability to sustain speed. That beefy but refined front end has great torsional rigidity, and when sprinting, climbing or flicking through bends at impressive lean angles, control is never less than certain, and mid-corner line changes are intuitivel­y simple.

Ride quality is excellent, supple enough to conform to road corrugatio­ns or cobbles without ever compromisi­ng steering control or forcing you from the saddle.

The Roadmachin­e makes an impressive array of ability, versatilit­y, ride quality and fit accessible to any rider. It’s not cheap in this spec, but pro-level machinery rarely is, and the only things that prevented a faultless score are the wheels. They’re light, smooth and ride well, but in design terms, a generation behind DT Swiss’s latest wheels, which doesn’t make the most of this brilliant frame.

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 ??  ?? Below Integrated Cockpit System stem hides cables away Bottom BMC has used a 140mm brake rotor at the rear and 160mm up front
Below Integrated Cockpit System stem hides cables away Bottom BMC has used a 140mm brake rotor at the rear and 160mm up front
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 ??  ?? At speed, the 01 is composed, just waiting for the chance to unleash its kick
At speed, the 01 is composed, just waiting for the chance to unleash its kick

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