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Bike Check: Alberto Contador’s Specialized SL3

  • By Paul Moore
  • Published May 17, 2011

When it comes to riding a road bike, they don’t come much faster than Alberto Contador. But what is the bike that the Spaniard rides? Caley Fritz took a look at the Tour de France champions Specialized SL3 on the final day of last week’s Giro d’Italia.

Written By: Caley Fritz
Contador rode for Specialized last year, only he did so for his old Astana squad. Some of the small details on his bike have remained the same, pointing to a few personal preferences, but a few of the small mechanical and aesthetic touches used on his Astana SL3 last year are gone.

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Alberto Contador's Specialized SL3

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Alberto Contador’s Specialized SL3. Photo: Caley Fretz

The oversized Berner pulleys are gone, replaced with standard SRAM pulleys on his yellow accented Tour edition Red rear derailleur. Also gone are last year’s Look Keo Blade pedals, replaced with Speedplays.

The “Pistolero” motif is more subdued, losing the giant pointed finger solute at the head tube in favor of smaller matte-on-glossy hand pistols within the Specialized logos and on a strip down the top tube.

Sticking around are those Alligator I-Link cable housings, even though Contador is the only Saxo rider to that is using them at this year’s Giro. The I-Links are known to provide crisper shifting thanks to their compressionless design, which fits a series small aluminum cones together in a row (similar to Nokon, for those familiar). Contador is still on an FSA K-Force cockpit and seatpost as well.

The rest of the bike appears relatively standard, and Contador’s mechanics weren’t about to divulge any little changes they had hidden away.

The components are SRAM, and all in the yellow Tour de France colors. A Specialized SRM harnesses the Spaniard’s power, though the chainrings are off a SRAM Red crank. Unlike last year, the front derailleur cage has been swapped for steel (rather than the Ti normally used on Red).

Wheels are Zipp 202′s, as they were for Saturday’s stage, glued up with Veloflex Record tubulars.

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Paul Moore

Paul Moore

Paul Moore is the Online Editor for Triathlete Europe. When not glued to a computer he can be found writing books - most recently Ultimate Triathlon: A complete training guide for long-distance triathletes which you can buy on Amazon