220 Triathlon

GIANT TCR ADVANCED 2 DISC £1,899

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Giant’s TCR seems to have been a fixture in the bike world for more years than we care to remember, and its evolution is closely entwined within the history of the company. From Mike Burrows’ original revolution­ary compact frame design, Giant has continuous­ly improved the TCR, keeping it relevant.

Today’s TCR range is built from three different qualities of carbon fibre, or Advanced-Grade Composite, in Giant speak. The Advanced, Advanced Pro and Advanced SL bikes are all available in rim and disc brake versions, which is becoming much less common, and our Advanced 2 Disc is the cheapest carbon disc TCR available. With an identical profile to its more costly siblings it requires a close look to tell some models apart. You won’t be able to see the aluminium steerer, which interrupts the otherwise completely carbon fibre frameset, and it’s not something to lose sleep over. It’s hard to spot the Shimano RS-510 chainset (the sole deviation from a full 105 hydraulic groupset) and Giant’s PR-2 Disc aluminium wheelset does a passable impression of carbon.

So the TCR scores in the looks department; where the bike’s aluminium aberration­s do become apparent is on the scales. Although at 8.84kg for a ML frame size it’s hardly an anchor, and is around 2kg lighter than the similarly priced steel bike we began racing on in 1988. With 52/36 x 11-30 gearing, this TCR should satisfy the needs of everyone from racers to weekend riders and its sensible build helps you make the most of its potential.

For some time, Giant dealers have been supplying customer bikes already set up tubeless, if required, and our 25mm Giant Gavia tyres arrived ready to go. On the 30mm tall PR-2 rims, they measured 26mm wide, which looks close to the frameset’s limit because there wasn’t much more space between the tyres and the seat tube,

chainstays or fork. Being tubeless, you can take a little more of a liberty with tyre pressures and the improvemen­t in rolling resistance and suppleness gives a 25mm tubeless tyre a feel much like a 28mm tyre with an inner tube.

COMPLIANCE AND COMFORT

Where the Canyon seems like an endurance bike with a racy feel, the TCR goes like a race machine but offers greater compliance and rider comfort. In ML size the 570mm top tube with 110mm stem, 168mm head tube and 997mm wheelbase create an ideal position for a rider used to 56cm bikes.

The 73° head and seat tube angles help with perfect weight distributi­on for predictabl­e handling whatever the terrain. Giant’s aluminium bar and stem have an unyielding feel when out of the saddle, but give precise control with good ergonomics and help soak up road vibrations. Giant’s Contact saddle has a pronounced fore-aft curve and a pressure-relief channel, which proved more comfortabl­e than expected. The Variant seatpost works hard dynamicall­y, as well as being aerodynami­cally shaped. The seat tube mostly shares the seatpost’s airfoil profile, while the down tube covers almost all of the bottom bracket shell’s width.

The sloping top tube slims dramatical­ly by the buttressed seat tube junction, behind which are wishbone seatstays and asymmetric chainstays. The gear cables enter the head tube through neat ports and the rear brake hose on the side of the down tube, but the front brake hose is routed externally. The substitute­d chainset doesn’t affect the 105’s confident performanc­e, with slick shifts, controlled stops and great satisfacti­on.

Whether spinning smoothly over our local broken tarmac or making mincemeat of tricky corners, the TCR’s performanc­e envelope exceeded our expectatio­ns.

“The substitute­d chainset doesn’t affect the 105’s confident performanc­e, with slick shifts, controlled stops and great satisfacti­on”

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