There’s always been conflict between the gear that riders and mechanics want on bikes and the list of sponsors written on the side of the team bus. This year’s Tour de France is no exception with various decals scraped off, painted over or taped from sight.
Sponsor-incorrect gear often includes tubulars, chainrings, saddles and power meters. In the gallery above we have examples of each.
Tubulars have often been one of the sneakier items, as relabeling sidewalls with hot patches isn't too hard to do, and while some makers like FMB have telltale sidewalls, others are harder to distinguish. On the other end of the spectrum, oval chainrings are pretty difficult to hide, and the token piece of electrical tape over the logo is used more out of respect for current sponsors than in any real attempt to hide the product's identity.
Cannondale-Garmin's use of SRM power meters instead of the Garmin Vector meters have been one of those more obvious ones for the last two seasons. While some of the riders do use Garmin-branded Exustar pedals — but usually without the Vector's pods — in conjunction with a SRM meter, some riders like Ryder Hesjedal just use Shimano Dura-Ace pedals and a SRM. While team mechanics did initially tape over the SRM logos last season, this year they have stopped bothering.
Sometimes teams don't even bother to disguise sponsor-incorrect product. Do you see Garmin Vector power meter pedals here?
- Cycling shoe trends of the Tour
- Tubular tricks for stage 4's cobbles
- Fabian Cancellara's yellow Trek Domane
- Big data comes to the Tour
- Tour time trial tech
- Road bike tech
You can read more at BikeRadar.com
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