Wheels

(Greg DeLong) #1
and the damnation of the Scultura, the
ride felt just the same. These are sweet
wheels, though the wet braking is poor.
The terrible, Merida-badged underslung
rear brake is partly to blame, as there was
little power even on the alloy Mavics.
What’s more, this bike is expensive.
For extra hundreds, you could have a
sensational Bianchi Specialissima with
Campagnolo Super Record. I rode one
back-to-back with the Merida: it blew
it away and feels so much more, well,
special. Or, for half the cash, you could
have a Canyon Ultimate CF SLX 9.0 with
the same spec and a far superior frame.
Each weighs the same as the Scultura.
I spoke to Jürgen Falke, product
director at Merida R&D in Germany.
He accepted our criticism but said
the bike is for ‘weight weenies’ and
that it’s impossible to make a frame
this light without losing stiffness.
Yet Bianchi and Canyon, plus others
such as Cervélo and Scott, don’t
have that problem. Their super-light
bikes perform brilliantly. If a 700g
frame had to be this flexy then
there would be nothing to criticise.
Merida simply didn’t get this right.

Only three sizes are offered and
the geometry is long and low, so
it may be tricky for some riders to
get comfortable. We’ll cut to it – the
Scultura 9000 is not that good. There
is a very tangible lack of stiffness,
especially in the fork, headtube
and rear triangle. The steering
lacks precision, wandering around
slightly over imperfect surfaces at
speed, and sprint efforts are not
met with crisp responses. And
it’s only averagely comfortable.
The DT Swiss Mon Chasseral RC28C
wheels are very light for clinchers (1,271g
on our scales). Their eager acceleration
flatters the frame but I wondered if
they’re too light and responsible for some
of the flex. To find out, I swapped in a
set of Mavic’s brilliant and super-stiff
R-Sys SLRs. To the credit of the DTs,

The scultura is Merida’s superlight
climbing bike. At 6.14kg for this size
L, it is indeed feathery, though this
isn’t the lightest in the range. That
would be the 9000 LTD, a £10k halo
model equipped with freaky-light
carbon fibre parts from AX Lightness
to tip the scales at 4.55kg and claim
the title of world’s lightest production
bike. This 9000 uses the same 680g
frame, built with SRAM Red 22, DT
Swiss RC28C wheels, an FSA cockpit
and a carbon Selle Italia SLR saddle.
The choice of a compact 50/34
chainset makes sense for a climbing-
focused bike though the 11-28 cassette
has some big and unpleasant jumps
in the top half. It can be useful to have
that winch-like bottom gear for extreme
events but if this were my bike I’d get
an 11-25 for the rest of the time.

Great wheel; good
components; light

PROS
Disappointing lack of
frame stiffness; weak
rear brake

CONS
Way off the pace at this
price. Or half of it

VERDICT

The DT Swiss Mon
Chasseral RC28C
wheelset is a highlight
and goes some way
to mitigating the frame

http://www.merida-bike.com

Merida Scultura 9000


74 // March 2016
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