Condor Super Acciaio Disc
On that last note, while the fabrication here is top notch (Condor’s builders are held in high regard within the industry, and rightly so), special mention should go to the paint scheme, which strikes a wonderful balance between classy and punchy, refined but head-turning. I daresay whatever trends are afoot, this bike will age well.
In pure construction terms, though, the top tube is ovalised (wider than it is tall) in a way designed to promote vertical flex but resist twisting, so too the seatstays flattened. Up front is a 44mm head tube and below is an oversized down tube and chunky chainstays.
At a claimed 2.1kg for the frame, Condor hasn’t scrimped on material, but those extra grams seem to have been put to good use. Out of the stalls the Super Acciaio has the feeling of an excited buck rather than a stately mare, and on the climbs the extra weight is mostly unapparent thanks to the front and rear stiffness on offer. Gradients above 10% do highlight the extra weight, but I’ll happily accept that for the way the Acciaio descends.
Confident customer
If the Super Acciaio has one standout strength, it’s handling. At low speeds the bike feels just fine but, like all great descenders, when the road plummets the handling becomes more responsive, the overall feel of roadholding that much more assured. I reckon it’s for this reason that I achieved a PB down one particularly fast and sinuous descent that I take all test bikes on.
On arrival at the descent I normally ease off at the top and dab the brakes here and there, but on the Super Acciaio I felt secure in carrying good speed over the crest and not touching the brakes once on the way down. It’s not an inherently fast bike, in that it’s not designed to be aero and isn’t super-light, but it’s easy to go fast on this bike because its handling and planted feel inspire confidence to push the limits of speed.
Of course, a bike is more than its frame, and thoughts need to be spared for the Super Acciaio’s components. The Fizik finishing kit has been around for a while and for good reason – it works, both functionally and ergonomically – while the Ultegra mechanical disc groupset does a fantastic job of the tasks handed it, especially when it comes to dependable, well-modulated braking. So far, so
It’s not designed to be aero and isn’t super-light, but it’s easy to go fast on this bike because it inspires confidence
to be expected from these established brands. The Mavic Cosmic wheels were a nice surprise, though.
For a long while Cosmics were a go-to wheel for upper-tier bikes and upgrades, but various brands and industry trends have made the Cosmics look outdated. For these latest-generation wheels, though, Mavic seems to have rolled back the years (or finally caught up, depending on how you look at it) to offer wide, blunt-nosed rim profiles and a very competitive-for-a-45mm-deep-wheel 1,490g weight (claimed).
It did have a little help from its friends, mind, as the Mavic Yksion Pro tyres are made in conjunction with fellow French brand Hutchinson, using its 11Storm compound to deliver a tubeless tyre that rolls fast and feels grippy. Regardless, the wheelset is a fine choice for the Super Acciaio, mirroring the bike’s steadfast feel and augmenting its speed and acceleration with aerodynamic finesse.
Many wins, few losses
If you can’t tell, I really like the Super Acciaio. It ticks a huge number of boxes, from the most subjective of all – looks – to elements inescapable, such as performance. We spent most of a grubby winter together and shared some miles that would have been much more soul-searching were it not for the bike. Yet there is room for improvement.
First up, as functional as the Ultegra mechanical groupset is, I just can’t abide the bulbous nature of the hoods. Yes they have to fit in the mechanical gubbins plus the hydraulic fluid reservoir, but stacked up against their Di2 counterparts they look positively gawky and don’t feel nearly as tactile.
This is easily changed – at a cost – because Condor offers the Super Acciaio as a custom build so you can spec the parts you want, and I’d want Ultegra Di2 instead, or if I was set on mechanical, a Campagnolo Chorus or Record gruppo. Less easily changed, though, are the dropouts.
I’d stop short at calling the Super Acciaio’s dropouts ugly, but they are very functional and, being fairly sizable pieces of solid machined steel, I can’t help but feel they add unnecessary weight and limit comfort. It’s not that the bike is uncomfortable, it’s just that it could be more comfortable if the entire length of the chainstays was a tube. This could be achieved (and is by a few other brands) by using 3D-printed dropouts (simply welding disc mounts onto a regular steel tube is structurally problematic).
Yet 3D printing isn’t without its own cost, and arguably that could undermine the Super Acciaio’s other great attribute – that for under £2,000 you get a frameset that performs exceptionally well but also oozes the finish and looks of a custom steel bike costing twice as much.
As ever, it’s a trade-off, but at least with the Super Acciaio, what you forgo will feel negligible to what you gain.