Cycling Plus

DOLAN DUAL CARBON ULTEGRA R8000 SE

£1499.99 › Is it rim brakes for the win with Dolan?

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While the distance bike market seems to have gone disc brake mad, Dolan’s Dual proves that there are still lots of advantages to sticking with convention­al calliper brakes. There are some imbalances with the ride character though and the wheels on the default kit don’t do justice to its performanc­e potential.

The most obvious advantage of using rim brakes rather than discs is that they’re lighter. You can also use a lighter frame and fork as braking stress is located away from the tips where leverage has most effect. That reverse engineerin­g is clear in the relatively skinny fork legs. There are no braking forces at the hub trying to tear the wheel out of its mounts so the quick-release skewers in open dropout slots are perfectly safe, and Dolan uses them at both ends of the Dual. The potential lightweigh­t fork advantage is reduced by the fact it gets an alloy steerer rather than full carbon constructi­on, and it’s got a straight steerer rather than a tapered tube with larger base bearings.

Rivetted-on external cable mounts don’t look as classy as internal routing, although the lack of extra curves and outer cable housing mean actuation is slicker for a superlight shift feel through the low profile Ultegra levers. While on the subject of lever feel, in the dry the Ultegra brakes aren’t far off discs in terms of powerful and predictabl­e stopping. They do start to slide in terms of control and modulation during initial stopping in wet conditions, but once the rims are cleaned off they’re not massively far off disc performanc­e again.

The surprise is that apart from the Shimano RS170 wheels and 28mm tyres of the Vitus, the Dolan has the heaviest wheels on test. The next options up in the online bike builder are Mavic’s Aksiums, which aren’t much lighter, and neither are tubeless compatible.

With a full suite of new Ultegra, the transmissi­on is as smooth as it can be

Back to the bike in hand, that extra inertia is obvious when you try and accelerate and the back end of the Dolan doesn’t help. While the top ends of the seatstays are very thick above the brake for a positive stopping action, they taper away quickly below that point. The chainstays are relatively skinny too so while power still gets to where it needs to be, it’s not the sharpest accelerati­ng bike in the pack. If you’re looking for a rim-braked sportive bike that’s going to give you an advantage over disc-braked bikes on climbs it’s not the Dolan either.

Once you get their weight bowling along on flat, smooth roads the Shimano wheels have extra momentum and quality adjustable bearings to keep them spinning. Dolan has fitted a full suite of new Ultegra, including chain and cassette, so the transmissi­on is as smooth and slick as it can be.

The Continenta­l tyres roll well and the short head-tube gives it a racier fit than most sportive bikes. Considerin­g the rims are only 15mm wide internally, and you’re rolling on 25mm tyres, the frame and skinny fork skim over rough surfaces and gravel well. Hit something bigger when you’re in the saddle and the large diameter 31.6mm seatpost leaves you nowhere to hide, so rough road survival depends on you standing up and letting your feet and the forgiving fork ride it out. As it’s relatively steep for a sportive bike it can be sketchy when you’re pushing the pace on twisty descents too.

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 ??  ?? Below In the dry, the Dolan’s rim brakes’ performanc­e is up there with discs Bottom The heavy Shimano wheels take some effort to get spinning
Below In the dry, the Dolan’s rim brakes’ performanc­e is up there with discs Bottom The heavy Shimano wheels take some effort to get spinning
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 ??  ?? While power gets to where it needs to be, it’s not the sharpest accelerati­ng bike in the pack
While power gets to where it needs to be, it’s not the sharpest accelerati­ng bike in the pack

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