Cycling Plus

WHYTE WESSEX £2250

› Is Whyte’s Wessex the ‘ultimate UK road bike’ it claims?

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UK-based Whyte might be better known for multiaward-winning, genre-defining mountain bikes but its head designer, Ian Alexander, is an ex-elite category road racer with an attitude to testing and riding that’s as gritty and hardcore as the Spring Classics. It’s the mix of this attitude, the latest road biking trends and Whyte’s practical innovation that make the new Wessex such a significan­t bike.

While it’s been enjoyably versatile over summer, we noticed that the worse the conditions got the better the Wessex felt. The classic road race ride position creates a proper fighting stance for taking the weather on the chin. The stipple tread 32mm Schwalbe S-One tubeless tyres on 21mm rims at 75psi, plus taut frame feedback via the 12mm thru-axles front and rear, create a planted feel that takes potholes, sticks, field wash and other road ride perils in its stride. They also let you make maximum use of the Ultegra disc brakes with powerboost­ing 160mm rotors at either end.

That’s handy, as it’s got a habit of carrying serious cruising and descending speed without you even realising. This was perfectly illustrate­d on wet, leafy and dark Yorkshire Dales roads while testing lights in the early hours. Casually clocking one of our fastest descents on a segment we’ve ridden countless times got us to the split entrance (the classic triangular village green thing) to our next turn quicker than we were expecting. On most other bikes we’d have just let it run and then done the 120-degree second turn. On the Wessex we ignored the wet leaves, hauled on the anchors, pointed our knee, sighted the exit and didn’t even come close to brushing the kerb or soiling our seat pad.

Mudguards, fat tyres, chunky rims and disc brakes mean a hefty 9.13kg weight, but direct power delivery means it’s no slouch on the climbs once you’ve got the wheel weight turning. The smooth wheels and semi-aero frame hoover up rough or smooth road miles easily. With the option to fit tyre and frame-hugging full-width mudguards, plus carefully sealed internal seatpost clamp and cable/disc hoses it as mechanical­ly weatherpro­of as its handling.

If you’re feeling flush Whyte has a 7.6kg Ltd Edition Wessex with a 200g lighter frame and fork, SRAM Red eTap and Easton EC-90 SL Disc wheels for £6000, and to be honest the promise of that frame as a future build project is the only reason we’re sending the standard Wessex back.

Beautifull­y blended road warrior makes yearround UK riding fast, safe and enjoyable

 ??  ?? SPECIFICAT­ION Weight 9.13kg (size 54cm) Frame Unidirecti­onal monocoque carbon Fork Carbon, tapered steerer Gears Shimano 105, 11-32, FSA Gossamer cranks Wheels Easton AR-21 rims, Centerlock hubs Brakes Shimano BR-805 hydraulic, 160mm rotors Finishing...
SPECIFICAT­ION Weight 9.13kg (size 54cm) Frame Unidirecti­onal monocoque carbon Fork Carbon, tapered steerer Gears Shimano 105, 11-32, FSA Gossamer cranks Wheels Easton AR-21 rims, Centerlock hubs Brakes Shimano BR-805 hydraulic, 160mm rotors Finishing...
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