Cycling Plus

PILOT VETURI

£5187 › New titanium ride from Holland

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The Dutch seem to have a thing for titanium, going back to Airborne (US/ Dutch), then with Van Nicholas, J.Guillem, and now Pilot. Alongside offering the Veturi in a range of standard sizes Pilot also offers a fully custom option for a 249 surcharge. The Veturi is a race bike with more relaxed geometry, and sits squarely as what we used to call an audax bike, designed to be ridden long distances, and can take racks and guards. The ride position is shorter, and the head-tube is tall, yet thankfully Pilot has kept the head angle to a keen 72.5 degrees so the Veturi doesn’t feel laboured or dull. The carbon fork and lightweigh­t carbon clinchers infuse the steering with a lightness of touch, yet it doesn’t ever feel twitchy or unstable.

The swoopy, curved rear stays meet a pair of oversized, intricatel­y machined dropouts and slim asymmetric chain-stays that provide a plush level of compliance, magnified by the supple 25mm Schwalbe Pro One tyres – spread closer to 27mm by Dutch brand 9th Wave’s broad and blunt carbon rims.

Pilot hasn’t skimped on the details, the high-grade titanium frame is beautifull­y finished with tightly controlled and consistent welds along with mudguard mounts and fittings for a rear rack, so you could easily put the Veturi to work for touring and bike-packing duties with a switch to more all-road tyres.

Italy’s 3T provides its carbon bar and seatpost from the Team Stealth range, plus an aluminium Team Stealth stem. The bar is well shaped with a semi-deep drop that opens through its curve for a comfortabl­e handhold when hustling along at speed in the drops.

The bottom bracket has been upgraded to a fully ceramic unit over the standard Shimano item, and the rear mech uses a Fouriers ceramic

The high-grade titanium frame is beautifull­y finished

pulley kit, which upsizes the jockey wheels to a 12/16t combo. The claims for oversized jockeys are a smoother chainline for more consistent shifts and less power losses through he drivetrain. It’s hard to judge the improvemen­ts as Ultegra always impresses, but the shift quality is slick, noise-free and consistent.

9th Wave has created some very good hoops. The straight-pull hubs look very Mavic mountain bike wheel-like and the 38mm-deep rims are wide at 27mm with a 19mm internal width. They’re tubeless ready and we’re impressed with just how well these are built.

With a great gear range and smooth riding quality, the Veturi relishes steep slopes. The truly comfortabl­e ride position meant we were happy to sit in and drive the pedals on extended ascents. When you’ve crested the rise, the supple feel of the chassis makes it a confident downhill companion.

Braking is as good as we have come to expect from Shimano’s hydraulics, though the mix of a flat-mount front BR-RS805 and post-mount RS785 at the rear is unusual, as is the choice of wavy-profiled Magura rotors, but the brakes were consistent and free from noise.

The Veturi is an accomplish­ed, if slightly old-school, bike. It’s as at home on long club runs as on self-supported shorter tours. The ride is smooth and remarkably stable yet it handles with just the right amount of speed to make it exciting when you want to give it some beans.

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 ??  ?? Below Attention to detail extends to the intricatel­y-machined dropouts Bottom Tapered head-tube bears the Pilot badge
Below Attention to detail extends to the intricatel­y-machined dropouts Bottom Tapered head-tube bears the Pilot badge
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 ??  ?? The Veturi is an accomplish­ed, if slightly old-school, bike
The Veturi is an accomplish­ed, if slightly old-school, bike

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