Cycling Plus

CANNONDALE CAAD OPTIMO 1

£1200 Race-ready road bike with a mudguard-ready frameset

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In many ways Cannondale’s CAAD Optimo is a throwback to bikes from a decade or so ago – an aluminium frame and a carbon fork accompanie­d by a predominan­tly Shimano 105 drivetrain. Disc brakes? Nowhere to be seen. But look a bit further and the newest incarnatio­n of the Optimo road bike has followed at least a few more recent trends in road-bike design. Gearing is lower than you’d have found a while back, the tyres a fraction wider and the seatstays have inevitably been dropped for extra rearend comfort.

Just a couple of years ago, a 105-equipped road bike from Trek, Specialize­d or Cannondale was yours for a grand. Sadly those days are now receding in the rear-view mirror, and the £1200 cost of the Cannondale is actually £50 less than you’d pay for similarly equipped road bikes with rim brakes from both Trek and Specialize­d.

When it comes to geometry, the Optimo is pretty similar to that of the Specialize­d Allez we tested in issue 385, with the Cannondale being marginally the racier of the two. The 54cm frames have similar head and seat tube angles close to a classic 73 degrees, and similar length top tubes – 546mm for the Cannondale, 552mm for the Specialize­d – but the Cannondale’s head tube is more than a centimetre shorter and its stack 15mm lower. In spite of this racier edge, the Optimo does have fittings and clearance for mudguards – with a very neat chainstay bracket – though with the 25mm Vittoria tyres actually measuring 26mm, any mudguards will be a tight fit.

The riding position still isn’t that extreme – you’re not riding nose to the stem – but the Cannondale’s handling is pin-sharp and the accelerati­on decent, even with quite modest

SPECIFICAT­IONS WEIGHT 9.3 kg (54 cm) FRAME Smart Form C 2 aluminium FORK CA AD Op ti mo full-carbon tapered GEAR SS him a no 105, 50/34 FSA chainset, 11-30 BRAKES Tektro Quartz rim callipers WHEELS R S 2.0 rims, Formula hubs FINISHING KIT Cannon dale 3 stem, bar and seatpost, Cannondale Stage CX saddle ,25 mmZaffiro Pro Slick tyres

wheels and tyres. And I reckon those dropped seatstays really do help the riding experience as I had no discomfort through the saddle, even when riding on unsurfaced grit tracks. I also found the own-brand saddle itself comfortabl­e and unobtrusiv­e, which is exactly what you want. This bike’s certainly comfortabl­e enough for commutes on tarmac where, once you hit your cruising speed, you’ll be able to keep it with minimal effort. The stiff frame proved a good climber too, either in or out of the saddle.

While Shimano’s excellent 105 components are at the heart of things, in keeping with a lot of bikes at this price, you don’t get quite the full groupset. This Optimo has an FSA chainset and Tektro calliper rim brakes. Shifting across the chainrings was accurate and the R741 brakes are one of Tektro’s higher-end offerings and around 40g per brake lighter than 105, and the braking was very good: up there with the power and control of the 105 equivalent­s. There was no flex from a skeleton design that resembles that of SRAM’s rim brakes, with a bracing triangle providing extra stiffness. The braking may not be as powerful as disc braking – especially hydraulic discs – but if you’ve had decades using rim brakes, these are absolutely fine.

As for the bottom bracket, well, Cannondale was one of the drivers behind the far from universall­y loved BB30 bottom bracket, which used to feature on its Optimo bikes. Not now. The 2022 Optimo bikes come with an FSA MegaExo threaded bottom bracket that will be easy for the home mechanic to replace, was free of squeaks and squeals during testing and is likely to stay that way. I would like to have seen Cannondale go modern with a wide-ranging 11-34 or 11-32 cassette, but the 11-30 still offers a lower bottom gear than you’d have found a few years ago.

There are a lot of riders who don’t want disc brakes or the option of fitting 35mm tyres on their road bikes, and Cannondale’s Optimo is a fine choice if that includes you. None of us knows how much longer manufactur­ers will even make bikes with rim brakes, but in the meantime we’ll still be able to enjoy the likes of Cannondale’s dynamic, fasthandli­ng Optimo.

The Canondale’s handling is pin-sharp, and the accelerati­on decent, even with quite modest tyres

 ?? ?? TOP The 11-30 cassette should give you an adequate choice of gears ABOVE It’s rim brakes for this bike, plus dropped seatstays for comfort
TOP The 11-30 cassette should give you an adequate choice of gears ABOVE It’s rim brakes for this bike, plus dropped seatstays for comfort
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 ?? ?? WE SAY... Addmudguar­dsto thisroadbi­keand you’vegotaspee­dy commuter
WE SAY... Addmudguar­dsto thisroadbi­keand you’vegotaspee­dy commuter
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