Brave New Velo is a journal documenting the progress of building a new Soma Smoothie bicycle and the experience of such an endeavor for the first time. Thoughts, discoveries, trials and tribulations will be shared.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Mission...Control: Campagnolo Centaur Ultra Shift

By comparing the blog entry dates one can tell I'm not a prolific writer by any means. I created this journal not out of a love for blogging, but a desire to record the progress of the making of a bicycle from the ground up. The coming together of parts has been a slow process. This has been in part due to research and price comparison and primarily because of a lack of funds to put into the project. This set of Campagnolo Centaur Ultra-Shift levers I've had for some months, just haven't gotten around to including them here until now. When I decided on a Campy gruppo I had set my sights on the Chorus components for their high performance qualities, but after some pricing of the parts I quickly learned I would have to consider the next model down the Campy line, Centaur. Reading many reviews of the 2009 Centaur group by both industry professionals and amateur cyclists put my mind at ease about the downgrade. The quality of this edition of Campagnolo's middle of the pack model is ideal for the amateur bicyclist who needs excellent performance in a price range that won't drain the wallet. The refinements of Record, Super Record and Chorus will not benefit me much at my level of experience and ability. The commonly held opinion of these Centaur shifter/levers is that they are of the same quality of the Record shifter/levers of a couple of years ago. This makes sense being the level of design and performance trickles down to the lower models over the years of product development.

There was a significant enough difference in price between the alloy levers and the carbon Centaur incarnation to influence my decision. The small saving in weight is not important to me either. With this piece of the puzzle in place I have a clear picture of a classic bicycle adorned with shiny steel and aluminum components. I've admitted to romanticizing about this bike capturing the style and aesthetic of the two-wheeled machines of yore, and now my vision of the completed build is ever more exciting. I may not have the skill and ability of Coppi or Merckx, but I will have a classic machine in the fashion of theirs.