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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193

    Thumbs down this can't be good

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    UCI 'approved' stickers to adorn racing bikes
    Wednesday, 12 January 2011

    The International Cycling Union (UCI) has published on its website further details of the protocol that will eventually see all bikes used in the professional ranks adorned with 'UCI approved' stickers.

    The system, first proposed last year, is designed to ensure all bikes used in professional races adhere to the governing body's technical regulations. The stickers will have to be displayed on bikes used in road, track and cycle cross races.

    The stickers will be provided for frames (and forks) only when they have gone through the UCI's new Approval Protocol that came in to action from January 1 this year. It will not be applied to frames that are already on sale or in production.

    Frames made in moulds will have to go through the full Approval Protocol with initial drawings submitted for approval by the UCI before a prototype is again submitted. More traditional 'tubular' frames made by welding or glueing tubes together will go through a shorter protocol whereby they are approved by the UCI via the technical drawings alone.

    The full Approval Protocol could add several months to a manufacturers production schedule, and threatens to limit the amount of new products seen at bike races through the season.

    A manufacturer will have to get each of its models approved (the approval is limited to eight frame sizes) before they can be raced on, and a frame that undergoes design changes will have to go through the procedure each time.

    The rules don't stop there either:

    The positioning of the sticker on the frame also has to be approved by the UCI. It will have its own identification code (paired with the certificate the manufacturer receives) and must be visible, indelible and inseparable from the frame.

    Not only that but the manufacturers will have to pay for the privilege. The UCI claim the costs involved merely cover the expense of the procedure. The full Approval Protocol will cost £7,800 + VAT while the simplified procedure (for tubular frames) will cost just £500 + VAT.

    A list of approved models will be available on the UCI's website and they will be entitled to carry out random checks at the start of bikes races.
    The approval system is set to be eventually rolled out to all parts of a bike, and restrictions on clothing have already been announced. A team must register a specimen of clothing with the UCI at the start of the year, and 'riders clothing shall always be identical to the specimen lodged.' Team Sky had several different jerseys last year, each one designed for different weather conditions.

    The UCI claim, with no hint of irony, that 'the approval for frames and forks is a service that the UCI has set up for manufacturers... and the sport in general.'
    http://www.cyclingweekly.co.uk/news/...ing-bikes.html

    UCI will bankrupt bike makers, says Masiguy
    by Carlton Reid

    IN NEWS

    Industry heaps scorn on 'Approved by UCI' labels. Only the top three bike makers could hope to benefit from the "extortion".

    While some in the bike trade believe the UCI's new labelling scheme is a "storm in a teacup" and once spread out over a number of frames the cost will be "peanuts", others see the UCI's move into labelling of products as a deeply worrying development.

    The UCI's new labelling scheme is initially aimed mostly at time trial frames but the UCI has indicated it will seek to certify components and clothing, too.

    BikeBiz spoke to industry figures in the UK and US. The big bike brands refused to comment, a possible indication that the UCI labelling process will be most costly (in time and money) for smaller bike companies.
    http://www.bikebiz.com/news/read/uci...s-says-masiguy

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
    Posts
    4,364
    Makes me glad I only need a USCF license to race here.....
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

    visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Indiana.
    Posts
    101
    I read a thread on RBR that discussed this in depth but of course I couldn't find it now...! Ugh.
    "Limits are a state of mind: break them before they break you."
    --Michael Cotty

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Latest development:

    'Approved by UCI' labels suspended following industry backlash
    by Carlton Reid

    IN NEWS

    The UCI has been forced to withdraw its stickering program. A revised program will be announced in February.

    The Union Cycliste Internationale held a two day meeting with bike companies last week, trying to explain the rationale behind its 'Approved by UCI' label program which would have forced suppliers to spend many thousands of dollars getting frames measured by a lab appointed by the UCI.

    Suppliers have told BikeBiz.com the UCI measures could "bankrupt smaller companies" and would lead to less innovation and more expensive products for consumers.

    Industry sources have told BikeBiz the meeting was "uncomfortable" and that the UCI refused to take questions.

    Now, on the BikeBiz trade-only forum, a supplier posted an email from the UCI, which was sent earlier today, to those companies that attended the meeting in Switzerland. It reveals that the UCI will suspend the stickering program and a revised program will be presented on 1st February.
    More here....

    http://www.bikebiz.com/news/read/app...ustry-backlash

 

 

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