Cycling Plus

CINELLI EXPERIENCE CENTAUR £1149.99

› Classy-looking Cinelli, Columbus and Campagnolo combinatio­n

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Cinelli is one of the names of the Italian cycling industry, founded by ex-pro Cino Cinelli in 1948. Better known today for its stems and bars, the Milan-based company is now under the presidency of Antonio Colombo, of Columbus tubing fame, so it’s no surprise to find a neatly finished triple-butted Columbus aluminium frame. Unusually in these days of Shimano, Shimano, Shimano, our Experience comes with 11-speed Campagnolo Centaur among a near all-Italian component specificat­ion.

The Centaur shifters are joined by Campag’s Calima wheels and parts

from fellow northern Italian company Miche. These include the 12-29 cassette and unusual 48/32 HSP Race chainset. Cinelli, naturally, is responsibl­e for the stem, bar, seatpost and even the saddle. About the only non-Italian component is the 25mm Racepac tyres from Schwalbe’s budget Impac range.

Cinelli appears to be joining German companies by emblazonin­g phrases everywhere, from the Skinny Racing Stays on the straight, pencilslim seatstays to the Reactive Racing Geometry on the down-tube and Megahead Tapered 1.5in on the Columbus carbon fork with its tapered aluminium steerer.

But it does seem to work. The oversized steerer and head-tube deliver taut, precise handling. Those skinny stays keep it comfortabl­e enough for the commuting, training and sportive-type riding that the Experience is designed for.

Being Italian the Cinelli’s geometry is on the aggressive side. Compare it with a Specialize­d Allez with a similar length top-tube, and the Experience has a shorter head-tube, shorter chainstays and a slightly shorter wheelbase. This makes the handling snappier and more direct, something that its steep frame angles – 73-degree head/73.5-degree seat angles – only add to.

Skinny stays keep it comfortabl­e for commuting, training and sportive riding

Somewhat surprising­ly given this geometry and its generally racy credential­s, the Cinelli’s gearing is slightly on the low side. This tester (and his knees) approves but others may want something higher than the slightly restricted 48x12 top. The 32x29 bottom gear is similar to 34x31, which got us up the short 11 per cent blasts on our ride home.

Shifting from the Campagnolo levers and mechs across the Miche chainset and cassette was spot on. There’s still a reassuring ‘click’, although it’s not quite as pronounced as before, or maybe our ears are following the knees on the way out. The small thumbshift­er on the inside of the hoods – left for shifting to the small ring, right for smaller sprockets – has been sculpted for a better feel.

The Miche brakes aren’t great and would benefit from cartridge brake blocks. They lack the easy power of hydraulic brakes and don’t even match the cable disc brakes on the Merlin. We’d upgrade the blocks when they wear and it’s the same for the 25mm Racepac tyres, which are from Schwalbe’s budget Impac brand. They performed well enough, but the quality triple-butted frame and carbon fork deserve much better to really make them sing.

Overall, the Experience is a lovely, lively ride and a great, eye-catching ‘Sunday best’ bike. It’s about the most wallet-friendly entry into Campagnolo-world, and its ride will equal that of pretty much any carbon road bike at this price. Bellissimo!

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 ??  ?? Below The Racepac tyres: the bike’s only non-Italian component Bottom Small thumbshift­ers on the inside of the hoods: sculpted for a better feel
Below The Racepac tyres: the bike’s only non-Italian component Bottom Small thumbshift­ers on the inside of the hoods: sculpted for a better feel
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 ??  ?? A lovely, lively ride and a great, eye-catching ‘Sunday best’ bike
A lovely, lively ride and a great, eye-catching ‘Sunday best’ bike

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