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New Canyon Speedmax Turns Pro-Only Aero Tricks Into a Production Tri Bike
Canyons Speedmax already has a race resume the most tri bikes would love to claim. So far, the Speedmax has eight Ironman World Championship titles, T100 wins, and is the go-to rig at races like Challenge Roth and the Ironman World Championships. So Canyon didnt need to prove the Speedmax could go fast. The bigger job was making that speed easier for more athletes to access via fit and adjustability without hours of work and screaming.The new Canyon Speedmax CFR and CF SLX are built around AeroID, Canyons new fit-and-aero system. We all know the frame matters, but the rider can matter more. Canyon says in their research, more than 70 percent of the total drag comes from the athlete.So how do you optimize around that? The new Speedmax places a huge amount of emphasis on body position, cockpit shape, storage, hydration, and how all of that works together.(All photo/Canyon)Canyon Speedmax | Custom For EveryoneCanyon has spent years building custom setups for athletes like Laura Philipp, Sam Laidlow, Kat Matthews, and Patrick Lange. Those one-off ideas have now been folded into a production bike, which means riders get a much wider range of aero adjustability without needing a custom cockpit or a pile of money to tweak it. AeroID: Canyons New Speedmax SystemAeroID is split into four parts: AeroShield, AeroFuel, AeroFit, and AeroBase. Those cover the cockpit, fueling setup, rider fit, and the frameset itself. All are, you guessed itvery aerodynamic. The most obvious piece is AeroShield, Canyons new closed cockpit structure. Closed cockpits have been floating around the pro ranks for a while, but usually in custom or prototype form. Canyon is bringing that shape to a production Speedmax. The cockpit adjusts for width, length, and grip angle, so riders can fine-tune their position without being boxed into a single narrow setup.The closed shape is not just there to look dramatic in transition. Canyon says it guides airflow around the athlete, while the larger contact area and raised sidewalls improve comfort, stability, and control in the extensions. A fast position is only useful if you can actually stay in it comfortably for hours.For riders chasing the top setup, there is AeroShield Pro. This version was refined as a prototype and used in two Ironman World Championship wins. It will now be offered as an upgrade, with seven sizes available. It uses a lightweight monocoque construction, drops 300 grams compared to the standard AeroShield, and Canyon claims it saves another 3 watts at 45 km/h.Three watts is not exactly free speed you can feel in your shoes, but this is triathlon. People have spent a lot more (time and money) chasing a lot less.AeroFuel: Storage Without The DragCanyon also put a lot of effort into fueling. Plenty of long-course races are lost because someone missed a bottle, under-fueled, or didnt practice their race-fueling setup during training.AeroFuel is Canyons modular hydration and storage system. The goal is to let athletes carry their preferred nutrition while keeping the bike as clean as possible. Canyon says the new Speedmax can carry more than 3,500 ml of liquids across the cockpit, inside the frame, and behind the rider.AeroModuleUp front, the AeroModule sits between the riders arms. Depending on the module, it can carry liquid, gels, a flask, or solid fuel. It attaches with a tool-free click mechanism, which should make swapping setups easier than the usual zip-tie-and-electrical-tape routine. Canyon also claims that filling the space between the forearms helps smooth airflow around the cockpit, resulting in a drag reduction of up to 7 watts at 45 km/h.At the rear, the Splitter Plate Pro seatpost system places one or two bottles higher and more horizontally behind the rider. The bottles sit in the riders wake, helping to reduce turbulence between the legs rather than acting like two little parachutes behind the saddle.The internal frame bladder has also been updated. Capacity ranges from 650 ml to 850 ml depending on frame size. That is not the flashiest update, but anyone who has tried to clean old drink mix out of a frame bladder knows it is a very real improvement. Because you dont wanna drink when your hydration tastes like drink mix and mold.Canyon says all AeroFuel pieces are competition-legal, so athletes should not have to sweat bike checks before the race even starts.AeroFit: More Range, Less HassleFit is probably the biggest story on the new Speedmax. AeroFit offers riders a much broader adjustment range, especially for stretched-out aero positions near the legal limit.The AeroShield cockpit has a wide arm pad adjustment range, and Canyons Cockpit Post system allows stepless, millimeter-level tuning for stack, reach, and angle. The goal is to make cockpit changes quick and accurate without turning every adjustment into a garage project.Cockpit Posts come in three reach-and-stack options, selected by Canyons updated sizing algorithm. Canyon pre-installs the selected setup before shipping, so riders should only need to handle final tweaks after unboxing. Every bike also comes with a premium torque wrench, and all key adjustment bolts use TX25 heads.Small detail, big win imo because if you need something swapped on a TT or Tri bike, its not an easy (or cost-effective) process its a bummer all around.AeroBase: New Frame, 700c Across the RangeAeroBase is the frame platform. Canyon says it keeps the previous Speedmaxs aero foundation while adding more stable, progressive geometry for riding fast in full-race trim.Sizing gets a notable change. Canyon says its pro athletes pushed for a better fit range for smaller riders, so the old XS size with 650b wheels are gone. The new Speedmax uses 700c wheels across the entire range and now starts at size small, with reduced standover and fit options for riders starting from a 630 mm seat height.That means smaller athletes get the same wheel platform and the same performance package as everyone else. No oddball wheel size, no second-tier version, no close enough fit compromise.New Carbon LayupThe Speedmax CFR also gets a new carbon layup. Canyon says the frameset is 250 grams lighter than the previous version, with complete bike weight dropping by up to half a kilo. Even with the weight savings, Canyon kept bottom bracket tool pouch storage for mid-race repairs. Because no matter how aero the bike is, flats still happen.Canyon Speedmax Models & PricingThe new Canyon Speedmax range includes two Speedmax CFR models and three Speedmax CF SLX models. Both arrive with Shimano Di2 or SRAM AXS shifting, though this depends on your market and availability. Every Canyon Speedmax bike comes with a power meter, DT Swiss ARC wheels, Continental Aero 111 tires, and a Fizik Transiro saddle. However, the level of those components will differ for each model. CFR $10,900 / 11,000CF SLX $8,500 / 6,500CF $6,000 / 5,000Whats the sweet spot? The Speedmax CF 7 Di2 stays in the lineup as the value play, with carbon wheels, electronic shifting, hydration, storage, and a power meter for $8,500 / 5,000MyCanyon customization is available on new Speedmax CFR and CF SLX models, depending on market. Riders can change or upgrade the cockpit, Cockpit Post, crank length, and saddle, basically getting the fit more dialed. Speedmax CF SLX 8 models can be upgraded with the Splitter Plate Pro seatpost, which comes standard on CFR models. CFR buyers can choose DT Swiss or Zipp 454 or 858 wheels, plus rear disc wheel options.Canyon.com.
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