Eddy Merckx FI

Eddy Merckx EMX-525

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The Eddy Merckx EMX-525 has been designed to deliver you to the line, first. If you read some of the reviews and advertising about the EMX-525, you’ll have heard how it’s been designed with stiffness and ride quality as it’s priority, rather than super light weight. You may be forgiven for expecting a hulking lump of carbon that simply rolled over it’s competitors, but at 1094g for the frame only, it’s plenty light enough for all but the most militant of the weight weenie crowd.

 

The Merckx EMX-525 loitering at the signing on

The Merckx EMX-525 loitering at the signing on

 

Obviously for us amateurs, a lightweight bike is a wonderful thing but with the UCI weight limit imposing a ceiling on pro bikes, the designers at Merckx decided that it would be better to concentrate on ride quality rather than shaving more grams off their frame weights, weight which would have to be replaced if the bike was ridden in an officially sanctioned UCI race. This is something bigger, more powerful riders will appreciate, as with more material to play with the emphasis turned back to stiffness and control. With this bike riders know all their power is going into propelling them forward.

 

The massive headtube of the  EMX-525, will make your  bike feel inadequate!

The massive headtube of the EMX-525 will make your other bike feel inadequate!

 

At first sight the EMX-525 stands out when compared with other top end machines. It’s muscular, all angular and hard edges, almost stealth-fighter like in appearance. The head tube is a massive carbon construction, that promises tons of front end stiffness. In contrast the much thinner, kinked seatstays offer the promise of some compliance amidst all that stiffness.

 

The kinked and asymetric rear end hold the promise of some compliance amidst all that stiffness.

The kinked and asymmetric rear end holds the promise of some compliance amidst all that stiffness.

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Written by

Simon Whiten (London and Northumberland, UK) has been riding for over 20 years and raced the road and the track extensively in the UK and Europe. He is obsessed with the turbo trainer and the ‘shortcut to race fitness’.

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3 Responses

  1. Robby says:

    The Eddy Merckx-525 has to be my dream bike, have to start saving up for one.

    • simon says:

      Yes I would have to agree. It does look awesome. Light frames are all well and good, but this one just seems ‘right’ – I imagine it would be superb in a sprint or similar hard effort. Hopkins certainly liked it. He told me it was the ‘most racey race bike’ he’d ever ridden.

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