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Factor Bike
One David Millar Special Edition eTap Road Bike

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Penchant for style.

Cycling history is full of champions whose feats in the saddle are only matched by their outsized personalities out of it—think guys like Coppi and Anquetil, whose extraordinary romances excited a great deal of scandal in their respective media. While David Millar doesn't have the salacious reputation of Il Campionissimo, he certainly matches those legends' penchant for style, and that fact is reflected in Factor Bikes' sartorially appointed One David Millar Special Edition eTap Complete Road Bike. The One is Factor's flagship model: a combination of off-the-front aerodynamics, climb- and sprint-happy stiffness, and the style of one of cycling's most mod rouleurs.


Factor's stated aim is "to be the best specialty racing bike company in the world"; with the aerodynamically advanced One, the brand may well have done it. The One combines every bit of aerodynamic technology and frame construction expertise from Factor's other models with one addition: the One Total Integration System (OTIS) front end.


OTIS enjoys the obvious benefits of presenting a minimal face to the wind (it's practically two-dimensional head-on) and—with the inclusion of an external fairing that rotates with the fork and bars—disturbing the air as little as possible. These features are designed to work in cahoots with the bifurcated down tube in order to take full advantage of the peculiar design, and without both elements, the significant claims of reduction in air resistance are void. OTIS's integrated bar/stem combo also does its part, increasing stiffness, boosting the frame's aerodynamic benefits yet further, and actually managing to reduce frontal surface area when compared to the concept bikes that the One owes its DNA to.


OTIS's final benefit runs contrary to everything we'd expect to see in an aerodynamic race frame: It contributes to handling that's so stable and sharp we experienced a brief adjustment period to it. The One never feels like it's going to drift off its line or twitch into a dangerous steering hiccup while arcing through sweeping descents, but it is definitely capable of diving for the inside line on a 90-degree crit corner and making tight adjustments at speed. There may very well be frames whose front ends more effectively balance stability and responsiveness, but we haven't found any. What we have found, though, is a minute amount of flex in a deep-dish front wheel that—until being mounted on the ONE—had felt unyielding during sprints and while redlining punchy Flemish walls.


Every bit of drag interfering with forward momentum represents wasted effort on your part, aerodynamics in cycling are arguably more important than in motor sport—at least, that's what we think when we're pulling the group into a headwind. Based on the brand's extensive testing, the One saves around one second for every kilometer traveled at race speeds around 24-28mph. These gains are based solely on the aerodynamic features built into the frame and its accompanying handlebar/stem construction, so any details like deep rims and a dialed rider position are just icing on the aero cake.


After the OTIS front end and bifurcated down tube, the One's most immediately obvious "aero" feature is the tube shaping, which incorporates the rounded face and truncated tailing edge that are populating the pointy end of the peloton these days. The shape babysits airflow from the point the frame encounters it till long after it's detached and dissipated into wake. The abbreviated rear face is especially important as it reduces the negative vacuum of trailing drag that traditional tube shapes produce, but it doesn't turn into a destabilizing parachute when crosswinds and road conditions shift the yaw angle outside of a NACA profile's near-zero comfort zone. The tube shapes are accompanied by a handful of classic aerodynamic features, including fork integration, an integrated seatpost clamp, a hidden, direct-mount rear brake, and internal cable routing.


The stiffness underwriting the OTIS fork is also general throughout the bike, with the down tube, bottom bracket, and built-up chainstays demonstrating similar efficiency. In fact, the frameset's drive spine—especially, again, the OTIS fork and head tube juncture—is so rigid that it really will expose otherwise undetectable amounts of flex in all but the stiffest carbon race wheels. Fortunately, Factor spares you the impossibility of finding an appropriately stiff stem/handlebar combination by including its own, which integrate as part of the OTIS system to further reduce drag and eliminate the possibility of a weak link anywhere in the drive spine.


Given its British heritage and David Millar's imprimatur, it's no surprise that the One's geometry exhibits some slight variations from the current crop of top Italian models. These changes manifest as slightly lower stack, longer reach, and a steeper seat tube than the all-purpose frames used by cycling's biggest teams. These deviations demonstrate that, though many of the Continental brands privilege tradition over innovation, Factor has no qualms about building a bike that meets the needs of scrappy fastmen like co-founder Baden Cooke, smooth rouleurs like Millar, and the current pros at AG2R La Mondiale. With carbon guru Rob Gitelis on board, Factor enjoys the freedom to continuously tweak the geometry and make unreasonable demands of the factory in order to deliver. And the brand has certainly taken advantage of it.


Ultimately, the geometry changes situate the rider forward on the bike, helping you stay on top of the pedal stroke and rolling your hips forward to increase power output. This posture isn't about endurance-ride noodles or sportive waffle rides; it's meant for hammering to keep pace in a crit peloton or sacrificing yourself on the altar of the kind of long, grueling solo moves where the frame's aerodynamics really come into play.


The system's uncompromising efficiency is equal parts tube design and carbon lay-up, with Factor pairing the former with the latter's three-modulus blend. Two of these moduli are of the quality we see in most top-tier racing frames, but the third, Pitch Fibre (oh so British), is the lightest, stiffest material that can be shaped into a bike frame. You might assume three things here: 1) Pitch Fibre is extremely difficult to work with, 2) it's very expensive, and 3) Factor jealously guards the exact details of its lay-up schedule. You'd be correct on all fronts.


The one insight Factor gives into its process is the use of a program called Fibersim, which Factor uses to "ensure that we put the waste into the garbage can and not into the frame." Fibersim helps the brand keep material to a minimum, resulting in fabric cuts and precise construction as meticulous as brand-ambassador Millar's mod-inspired wardrobe.


The frame itself is a well-dressed affair, too, spec'd by Millar himself. That includes a special edition Brooks saddle, a nod to the classical heritage of cycling, and SRAM's Red eTap drivetrain, a nod to cycling's future. Ceramic bearings are sprinkled throughout, and the rims are provided by sister company Black Inc., extending Gitelis' carbon know-how to the hoops. In a final touch of bespoke luxury, those rims are laced to DT Swiss' 240s hubs.


Details

  • A superlative race bike with David Millar's bespoke styling
  • OTIS front end multiplies responsive handling and aerodynamics
  • Twin Vane down tube manages airflow coming off front wheel
  • Modified NACA tube shapes are faster and more stable
  • Integrated rear brake and seatpost clamp further reduce drag
  • Meticulous carbon lay-up capitalizes weight loss and stiffness
  • Developed in partnership with a motorsport design firm
  • Factor Bikes is set to redefine race frames at the highest level
  • Item #FCB0008
Frame Material
EM2 Rgi Carbon Fiber
Fork
OTIS
Fork Material
EM2 RGi Carbon Fiber
Headset
Ceramic Speed
Shifters
SRAM Red eTap
Front Derailleur
SRAM Red eTap
Rear Derailleur
SRAM Red eTap
Crankset
SRAM Red
Bottom Bracket
Ceramic Speed BB386EVO
Cassette
11 - 28t SRAM XG-1190
Chain
SRAM Red 22
Brakeset
EE direct-mount
Brake Type
rim
Handlebar
Factor OTIS RGi Carbon integrated aero system
Bar Tape
Factor Hi Grip
Saddle
Brooks Cambium C13 Chpt./// Limited Edition
Seatpost
Factor
Wheelset
[rims] Black Inc. Fifty
Hubs
DT Swiss 240s
Front Axle
9mm quick-release
Rear Axle
130mm quick-release
Tires
Vittoria Corsa
Tire Size
700c x 25mm
Pedals
not included
Recommended Use
road cycling
Manufacturer Warranty
limited lifetime

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