Home Cycling FiftyOne Sika review: Has this Irish frame builder caught the big brands napping?

FiftyOne Sika review: Has this Irish frame builder caught the big brands napping?

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FiftyOne Sika review: Has this Irish frame builder caught the big brands napping?

There’s a pattern in road cycling that the team at FiftyOne wasn’t happy with: the industry designs bikes for professional racers and then sells them to the rest of us, rather than putting the needs of the majority of riders first. So we, the everyday rider, end up with geometry that is too aggressive, the tyre clearance too narrow, and a position that is too unforgiving for anyone that isn’t a full-time athlete. What’s more, if you want to change anything, it’ll likely cost you extra. The FiftyOne Sika is the brand’s first non-custom road bike, and it’s their answer to the aforementioned conundrum.

On paper it’s an almost confusing prospect. Endurance bike clearances, but no provisions for things like mudguards or bags, combined with climbing bike weights and geometry that sits somewhere between race and endurance. So how does that play out on the road? I rode it through a pretty grim few winter months on my local Peak District roads to find out.

Assassin gravel bike into production, and it’s been designed with a clarity of purpose that larger brands sometimes lose. The team, led by ex-Pro Aidan Duff, has reportedly built over 500 custom frames and conducted an equal number of bike fits, and that accumulated knowledge was used to design the Sika.

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FiftyOne Sika road bike

(Image credit: Tim Russon)

The frame itself weighs a claimed 690g for a medium and is built using a blend of Toray fibres, which is all the more impressive given it accommodates 40mm tyres. That clearance is achieved through a combination of dropped chainstays and a taller fork with a shallow crown and long-legged straight fork blades that sit proud or slightly further forward than normal on smaller sizes; it gives the bike an increased level of versatility, while still keeping a classic race-bike aesthetic.

FiftyOne Sika road bike

(Image credit: Tim Russon)

Tube profiles look traditional and round at a glance, but actually use NACA aerofoil designs and plenty of clever forming. There’s no aero data from the brand, but the shapes are clearly more than decorative, showing performance intentions whilst still maintaining a classic look.

FiftyOne Sika road bike

(Image credit: Tim Russon)

The open wishbone seatstay connects near the top of the seat tube rather than using the dropped-stay look that has become de rigueur elsewhere, giving the rear a compliant, damped feel. Combined with a standard 27.2mm round seatpost in an external clamp, it makes for a comfortable ride and offers plenty of options for upgrades or fit changes that would be more troublesome with a specific aero setup.

The frame uses a T47 inboard threaded bottom bracket, which is as wide as possible for frame stiffness while retaining the alignment and easy-to-work-on benefits of threaded cups. The rear derailleur hanger is SRAM’s UDH universal standard, so spares are easily available and leave the option of using SRAM’s gravel T-type rear mechs should you fancy going for the simplicity of a single-ring setup.

FiftyOne Sika road bike

(Image credit: Tim Russon)

Geometry is on the racier side of endurance, or on the endurance end of race, depending on how you look at it. My medium bike has a stack of 555mm and a reach of 380mm. The Specialized Tarmac SL8 in a medium or 54cm, for example, is 544mm and 384mm, whereas Specialized’s endurance bike, the Roubaix, is 585mm and 381mm. The closest bike ive found in geometry terms is the Cervelo Caledonia with near identical stack and reach figures, with it just being 2mm shorter and the same height, though its ride characteristics are more of a cruisy endurance bike than the Sika.

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