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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    943

    Component Upgrade on new Madone 5.1?

    LBS has a new Madone 5.1 on sale and BF gets a discount so I am going to test ride this weekend. BF mentioned that the components are not usually the best. My question is, for someone that is very serious and may race one day... what would you upgrade to?

    5.1 comes with:
    Frameset
    Wheels
    Wheels Bontrager Race

    Tires Bontrager Race X Lite, 700x23c, folding

    Drivetrain
    Shifters Shimano Ultegra STI, 10 speed
    Front Derailleur Shimano Ultegra
    Rear Derailleur Shimano Ultegra
    Crank Shimano Ultegra 50/34 or 52/39/30
    Cassette Shimano 105 11-25 or 12-27 (triple), 10 speed
    Pedals n/a

    Components
    Saddle Bontrager Select FIT CRZ+
    Seat Post Aluminum seat mast cap
    Handlebars Bontrager FIT VR, 31.8mm
    Stem Bontrager Race X Lite, 7 degree, 31.8mm
    Headset Cane Creek IS-2 Integrated w/cartridge bearings, sealed, alloy; 1.125" top, 1.5" bottom
    Brakeset Shimano Ultegra w/Shimano Ultegra STI levers


    Basically I am trying to see how much I am looking at to see if I can finance this purchase in the first place.

    Thanks in advance!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    1,414
    It should be fine for racing as is. You don't need to upgrade the Ultegra unless you have cash burning a hole in your pocket and you want to shave every gram you can. You MAY want to consider asking the shop if they would swap out the crankset for a standard double (usually they will give you a substantial credit for this, so you are basically just paying the difference, but shops vary), since you may want higher gearing for racing, but then again you may not. In any case you'd probably be better with the compact than with the triple.

    Switching the wheels for a lighter set would probably be the biggest payoff for the money, but you can do that any time and don't need to be in a hurry, you could definitely race on the heavier wheels until you feel like you can justify buying lighter ones.

    My bf has a 2007 Madone 5.2 and did not have a good experience with the stock Bontrager tires... and you will probably have to replace the seat... but depending on the deal you are getting, I would say it looks like a good bike. I don't think you'd have to do a lot of upgrading. Of course everything could always be lighter, and eventually you might be making some non-necessary upgrades like carbon bars, lighter stem, lighter seatpost (though I'm not sure how many options you have for the seatpost on the new Madone, come to think about it), etc, but that's another story...
    Last edited by VeloVT; 08-01-2008 at 07:33 AM.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Longmont, CO
    Posts
    545
    What she said -- I got the 4.5 due to budget, so I asked a lot of questions about upgrades over time.

    The one thing you can't upgrade is the frame. My understanding is that with each whole number in the Madone series, the frame weight goes down by about a pound. So yours would be a pound lighter than mine, and the 6 series would be a pound ligher than that.

    I hate Bontrager saddles, so I had the shop swap that out immediately.

    The number one upgrade the shop guy recommended, if I felt like it, was a lighter wheelset. That difference may be noticable, whereas shaving a few grams here and there by buying higher end components probably won't be.
    monique

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    Ooooh.... You might really be getting a new bike. How exciting!

    Ultegra components are great. Many racers use them. Dura-Ace is the best, but keep the Ultegra. It will serve you great.

    Yes, the most noticeable upgrade you can make are the wheels, but again, you can do it later. It's not like the Bontrager Race wheels have much resale value anyway. Lightweight wheels really feel different on accelerations.

    If you are a really strong rider, you might want a standard double crankset rather than the compact one the bike comes with. I think for racing that would be essential. Again, you could make that switch later, but maybe the shop would do it for you for free. You would be switching out parts that cost the same.

    Last thing... I'm surprised the bike comes with an aluminum seatpost. Carbon is much more comfy, and it seems weird to ride a carbon bike and an aluminum seatpost. You may want to spend a little to change that.

    So, other than the seatpost and maybe the crankset (if you are really strong), I wouldn't change a thing at first!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    943
    Great advice liza, bounceswoosh & rij73!! Thank you!

    Bf has a triple crank cause his Madone came with one but I dont know that pros and cons on that. I know that on his 2300 I am on the big ring & middle-ish cog for the majority of the time with good cadence.

    The saddle I am using now on the hand me down is a Bontrager gel and I hate it so I was planning to get a new one anyway. The saddle on the bike at LBS is not the one in the picture- it is a cut out but I did not see the model on the Bontrager website.

    I had to swap a wheel with BF from his Madone this week cause of a flat and I did notice that it was much lighter so I can see where that can make a difference. Think that is an upgade that I can make as I get closer to racing in Oct.

    BF says I am stong... and I am a big gear masher! Other people have told me I should be racing. I know nothing... I am going by what others have said.
    Last edited by arielmoon; 08-01-2008 at 08:08 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Eastern Indiana
    Posts
    373
    My wife has a 5.1, it's an AWESOME frame and great bike. NOTHING wrong with any of the components. It's full Ultegra other then the cassette!

    We upgraded her's with RaceXLite wheels and a Dura-Ace cassette, because we already had them - makes a killer bike!

    Your only real concern would be triple vs double. Either is fine, a double shifts slightly better, and a compact double can give you much of the lower end a triple does, but you can race fine with either. You go just as fast on either!

    Great Bike! Congrats!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Switzerland
    Posts
    2,032
    Wheels ARE the one best thing you can do to your bike.

    Mavic Ksyrium SL or sommat from Zipp. I love my Ksyriums, they are sexy.

    A carbon seatpost... oops that doesn't fly with the new Madone seatpost system.... ok at least a great saddle.

    Get some good light pedals. Don't get Time, maybe Look Keo Carbon if you want to do yourself some good.

    ps. the 12-27 cassette works just peachy on a double, maybe the LBS will swap that for you.
    It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.

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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    Quote Originally Posted by Mr. SR500 View Post
    My wife has a 5.1, it's an AWESOME frame and great bike. NOTHING wrong with any of the components. It's full Ultegra other then the cassette!

    We upgraded her's with RaceXLite wheels and a Dura-Ace cassette, because we already had them - makes a killer bike!

    Your only real concern would be triple vs double. Either is fine, a double shifts slightly better, and a compact double can give you much of the lower end a triple does, but you can race fine with either. You go just as fast on either!

    Great Bike! Congrats!
    My husband's 5.2 came with racexlite wheels but my 5.1 didn't. Do you think they're worth the difference? Maybe I should put his wheels on my bike and try them?

    Also, he's had 3 flats and I've had none. Think there's a connection?
    It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot


    My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
    Posts
    4,364
    Quote Originally Posted by Mr. SR500 View Post
    Your only real concern would be triple vs double. Either is fine, a double shifts slightly better, and a compact double can give you much of the lower end a triple does, but you can race fine with either. You go just as fast on either!!
    From experience I can tell you no - if you really wish to be in contention to win races, I would not recommend a triple. You very rarely see anyone race on them and there is a good reason. It seems like a small thing, and for a recreational ride it doesn't make any difference, but even the tiny bit of lag that you experience shifting up from the small ring on a triple can mean the difference between staying on the break or missing out. So you end up handicapping yourself by not riding in the small ring ever -that means your small ring is a 42 instead of a 39 (or a 36 if you use a compact).... (I had a 52-42-32). I looked into switching my old bike from a triple to a standard or compact and in the end I would have had to spend so much money that I just saved for a new bike. For a while I swapped my middle ring on the old bike to a 39 and locked out the small ring. I use a standard double now

    A compact double should be fine. I know plenty of people who race with them, though you may someday miss that top end that you don't have with a compact, especially given that Florida is very flat and often windy. In a tail wind situation you may very well want to push a big, big gear.

    As far as the rest of the bike goes, everything is fine as is. I know plenty of people who started racing on far less advanced bikes.
    Last edited by Eden; 08-05-2008 at 10:05 AM.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    34
    I put the DuraAce derailleurs, brakes, shifters, cassette, from my Blue to my Madone. I also put on my Mavic Ksyrium wheels. That being said, the components and wheels that came on the 5.1 re pretty good, and the Blue rides nice with them. I just prefer the ride with the DuraAce components.

    I actually LIKE the seat that comes with this bike, and left it on.

    Enjoy!
    That's Just How I Roll!

    Aloha,

    Southside Sally

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    943

    Update

    Got rained out of test riding on Sat. Will try again this weekend!

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    S. Dak.
    Posts
    488
    I swapped out the aluminum mast cap on my 5.1 with a carbon mast cap. The aluminum cap started a noise (ping) that resonated through the top tube.

    Surprisingly I've got along well with the bontrager saddle after I took off the plastic piece that surrounds the seat. After a 7 day bike tour and a sore bottom I figured out it was because of where my posterior contacted the plastic.

    I saved my bontrager folding tires for a rainy day and put on continental 4000.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    I like tweaking new bikes to suit my tastes and here's what I do:

    1. new saddle
    2. new rims--Mavic Crossmax SLR for the mtb, Ksyrium SL for the roadie
    3. new cranks--FSA with sealed ceramic bearings

    I'm also debating about putting on a different cassette on the roadie and a Salsa mtb handlebar for the Epic.

 

 

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