Cyclist

Scott Foil 10

A facelift brings the Foil up to date

- Words SAM CHALLIS

Scott’s first Foil Disc, released in 2017, was arguably the blueprint for what we now judge to be a modern aero race bike. The platform moved exclusivel­y to disc brakes long before most of its main competitor­s, and Scott also broke with the aero mantra of ‘speed at all costs’ by making virtues of practicali­ty and comfort.

This latest Scott Foil Disc was released in 2020, three years and a full developmen­tal cycle after its predecesso­r, but it takes a second glance to realise this isn’t the same bike. Scott’s response is that it got the Foil Disc so right the first time that Foil Disc #2 required only minor refinement­s. After a few weeks riding around my local roads on it, I’m inclined to agree.

It’s the inside that counts

The main changes are all at the front of the bike. Essentiall­y the brake hoses and gear cables that were exposed between the bars and the frame have now been hidden beneath the surface.

This may look like a fairly minor update on paper, but this feat has required some major technical redevelopm­ent.

The Foil’s head tube hasn’t really changed despite having extra gubbins extending through it. To achieve this an entirely new fork and cockpit were required. It was a developmen­t first made on Scott’s recent overhaul of its

Addict RC and that process helped inform the Foil’s updates. The new model uses the same Creston ic SL cockpit as the Addict, a component manufactur­ed by Scott’s in-house components brand, Syncros, but pairs it with a slimmeddow­n one-inch fork steerer.

With the narrow steerer threading through a comparativ­ely hefty 1.5in upper bearing, there is space for the cables that run from inside the cockpit to enter the frame through the bearing too. Therefore they can be entirely hidden and the front of the new Foil can present an appreciabl­y clean profile to the wind as well as to the eye of its rider.

I’d be lying if I said the effect of the update was tangible out on the road – even substantia­l aerodynami­c improvemen­ts tend to create only subtle difference­s in ride speed and even then only in certain circumstan­ces – but nonetheles­s the change is undeniably positive. Why? Because the new Foil still feels like the old Foil. There’s always a worry that developmen­ts undertaken for the sake of improving aerodynami­cs will harm the ride quality, but in this case the

tweaks to the front end have had no perceptibl­e detrimenta­l consequenc­es whatsoever.

The Foil still feels as if it’s slicing through the air like a knife, just as it has always done, but now it’s as clean in design as anything else on the market right now.

I’d say the changes have paid off in comfort terms as well. I found the new Creston ic SL cockpit to provide a pleasing balance of torsional stiffness and vertical damping, feeling solid when I was hauling the bars in sprints but also seeming to filter out road buzz under more normal riding conditions.

Apparently this is enabled by the Creston’s unusual swooping tops, whose transition to the stem follows a gentle curve, which Scott says allows the carbon to work best from a strength and stiffness point of view.

It’s a similarly forgiving story at the rear of the bike. Scott says the seatstays are responsibl­e for the surprising­ly plush ride. While they are

The Foil still feels as if it’s slicing through the air like a knife but now it’s as clean in design as anything else on the market

indeed thin, I’d set just as much store by the compact frame geometry (such a pronounced slope to the top tube is rare on an aero bike) for creating lots of exposed seatpost to flex.

Down at the other end, the Foil’s seat tube flares out to join the bottom bracket junction like a tree trunk. Scott even chose the PF86 bottom bracket system specifical­ly to maximise the width on offer in this area. As a result the foundation of the bike is incredibly stiff. No amount of effort on my part could persuade that rock-solid bottom bracket junction to flex, which meant it felt as if all my energy was translated into forward motion, backing up the bike’s feeling of efficiency at high speed.

In a sensible countermov­e, though, Scott has specced 28mm tyres. They definitely help temper this lateral stiffness by adding grip and helping to inspire confidence through corners. They may come at the expense of a few extra grams, but the wider tyres are a good move for the Foil’s overall rideabilit­y.

If I have any criticism of the new bike, it would be that all these latest updates have only moved the platform on by small steps. It would have been great to see Scott take a bolder approach, like it did with that first Foil Disc, and breathe some much-needed new life into the aero road bike sector.

Maybe that will come with the next Foil. Until then, this latest version is still wicked fun to ride.

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 ??  ?? The Foil 10 offers an impressive level of grip thanks to Scott’s choice of 28mm tyres, which help to keep the bike planted through corners
The Foil 10 offers an impressive level of grip thanks to Scott’s choice of 28mm tyres, which help to keep the bike planted through corners

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