A 200mm stem and 25cm bars
Rane Roatta tucks into the aero 'shrimp' position on his custom Cannondale Topstone Lefty
This competition is now closed
By Jack Evans
Published: March 6, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Rane Roatta's psychedelic gravel racing rig is as unique as the varieties of fruit he sells for a living.
A 200mm stem and very narrow handlebars enable Roatta to hunch into an aero tuck he calls the ‘shrimp’.
The three-time undefeated Florida Gravel state champion also races with four bottle cages – including one on the top tube of his Cannondale Topstone Lefty frame.
A gigantic single chainring and custom carbon wheel with multi-coloured spokes are among other eye-catching features.
We’ve spoken to Roatta, 30, about his bike and asked what's behind his tech choices.
Roatta's bike is built around a Cannondale Topstone Lefty frame and fork with a plethora of custom parts and an aero-optimised cockpit.
"It's the best gravel bike I’ve ridden," he says. "It feels like a mountain bike with rocket boosters – it's super-smooth and goes so fast."
Check out his custom Cannondale Topstone with a 200mm stem 🍭🍌 pic.twitter.com/DV90u5ergS
Roatta runs a single 50t oval chainring and 10-52t cassette from Garbaruk. He says his 50/10 highest gear enables him to pedal when travelling up to 65km/h with a tailwind and on paved sections of gravel races.
"If the maximum [gear] you can fit on is a 48/11, you risk spinning out on downhill sections or in a group on the flat," Roatta says.
He adds that a lower cadence from bigger gears helps maintain stability on bumpier gravel trails. Roatta runs SRAM 170mm cranks and uses a Quarq power meter.
Roatta is 6ft 3in but uses a 200mm stem on a medium (approximately 54cm equivalent) Cannondale Topstone frame.
"The long stem gives a longer reach, which helps me get tucked down with my arms level [to the stem] or below level."
Roatta says using a smaller frame also enables him to expose a little more seatpost, improving comfort.
Roatta believes his background in triathlon gave him the ability to hold a crunched-up aero position he calls the ‘shrimp’.
In a solo breakaway or headwind stretches in gravel races, Roatta says: "Aerodynamics is the biggest thing holding you back."
The long stem and narrow bars help Roatta get his arms close together and his head below his wrists and hands.
Roatta uses UCI-legal handlebars, which are 35cm wide at the drops. However, he rests his elbows on the bars – an illegal position under UCI road and gravel racing rules.
He bought a set of 55cm alloy handlebars from Amazon. He then had a friend cut them down to 25cm across the tops and weld them back together. The hoods are turned in 110mm from the centre.
His mid-arm rests on the top of the bars, which he double wraps the tape on to boost comfort. He then hooks his fifth fingers underneath the shifters.
"My weight is being held by my pinky finger and I’m able to brake and shift with my front two fingers," says Roatta.
Roatta commissioned artist Curtis Bullock to paint the frame he received from his sponsor Cannondale.
"It's wacky, colourful, attention-drawing. It's a loud and playful, attractive style," says Roatta.
"When he sent back the bike, I unboxed it and was blown away."
The custom paintjob cost $1,000, bringing the total value of the ‘killer gravel bike’ to about $8,000, reckons Roatta.
Roatta uses the stock Cannondale Topstone Lefty single-bladed fork and Kingpin seatpost.
He says: "When I slam the saddle forward to be over the bottom bracket, it helps to have extra damping in the seatpost.
"The dual suspension of the bike helps me stay comfortable in my aggressive, aero position."
He predicts that gravel bike suspension will soon become the norm for the genre.
While optimal for fast, flat gravel races, such as the Unbound 200, Roatta says he wouldn't use his current setup for "bombing down descents".
He will switch to a 27cm Worx handlebar for more stability in the UCI World Gravel Championship qualifiers.
Roatta prefers to carry four bottles, since dropping one is common in gravel races. It also means he doesn't have to wear a hydration pack, which would interfere with his aero position.
Despite one being mounted to the top tube, it doesn't leak, according to Roatta.
However, a race the length of Unbound may require him to carry a bladder taped to the inside of his skinsuit.
"Hydration is so important and these races are becoming eating contests. The more you eat, the more you need to drink. If you eat 500kcal an hour, you’ll need to drink a litre an hour," says Roatta.
Roatta's wheels are hand-built in Germany by Protens.
For Roatta's most aero setup, he chooses 51mm-deep wheels with a heavier carbon layup to make them stiff and heavier. He says this gives them a higher rotational mass to go faster and use fewer spokes "for less rotational drag".
The rainbow titanium spokes are at the highest tension possible. This stops the wheel going out of true, according to Roatta. They are shod with Specialized Pathfinder 2Bliss Ready tyres.
The Trailmech hubs with asymmetric hub geometry are made in Ukraine. Roatta adds: "When you see the inside of the hubs, you’ll freak. It's really cool."
The hubs use an unusual conical-shaped 50-tooth ratchet with a six-degree angle engagement.
Roatta now trains specifically for gravel racing, with interval sessions on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
He also runs a fruit company with his partner, Edelle Schlegel. Miami Fruit grows "unique varieties and ships crazy fruits" all over North America.
At the outset, he hauled up to 225kg of fruit on a steel touring bike hooked up to a bike trailer. His longest round trip was 130km from farms to markets across Miami.
He adds: "I was doing lots of zone two training, hauling large quantities of fruit on my bike. That was my stubborn and passionate desire to keep the fruit as local as possible and be sustainable."
He stopped transporting his produce by bike when the weight reached 450kg.
Digital Writer
Jack Evans is a digital writer for BikeRadar.com Jack learnt to ride on rough Cotswold trails before switching to tarmac in his teens. Gravel riding and cyclocross racing (badly) has since taken him back to his roots. Most at home scaling south Wales climbs, Jack more commonly escapes his home in Birmingham via the lanes and bridleways of Worcestershire, riding either his Canyon Ultimate road bike or Canyon Grail gravel bike. He wishes he was as good at riding as he is drinking espresso. But he has completed the 296km Dragon Devil sportive in under 10 hours and finished in the top 100 at the 2022 UK National Hill Climb Championships. Jack is an NCTJ-trained journalist and a former press agency hack with bylines in The Times, Daily Telegraph and Daily Mirror. He was once electrocuted for a Sun frontpage exclusive and taste-tested camel milk for The Times.
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