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The Giant Trinity

The worst-kept secret in the cycling product arms race is finally out, there’s a new Giant Trinity in town. 


Legacy is the first word that comes to mind when you think of the Giant Trinity. The model first launched in the early 2000s, and has long since become a category leader. Welcome to the NEW Trinity and the continuation of a legacy. 


The previous edition of the Trinity launched in 2016, and in a disc brake world, it truly stood the test of time. The bike has carried some of cycling’s legends to some incredible victories. For Sync, our partnership with GreenEdeg Cycling has flourished with some heroic performances from Matteo Sobrero, Simon Yates, Luke Durbridge and of course, the latest recrute, Luke Plapp. 


The NEW Trinity is not all that Giant have launched this week, to accompany the new frame, CADEX have released a new version of the Aero Wheel System, with a revised quad-spoke and disc wheel. 


This wheel system completes the performance package and sees a significant step forward in all-round usability. 


The Giant Trinity


The worst-kept secret in the cycling product arms race is finally out, there’s a new Giant Trinity in town. 

Legacy is the first word that comes to mind when you think of the Giant Trinity. The model first launched in the early 2000s, and has long since become a category leader. 


The previous edition of the Trinity launched in 2016, and in a disc brake world, it truly stood the test of time. The bike has carried some of cycling’s legends to some incredible victories: Tom Dumoulin’s Giro d’Italia and World Championships winning the first that come to mind but there’s so many more.


Plappy’s countless Aussie TT titles, Sobrero’s Italian title, and Yates’ opening stage in the Giro. It’s also worth noting that the Trinity is a bloody good bike for amateurs too. It became the bike of choice for the British TT scene, the most professionally amateur race scene arguably in the world.


Olympics, World Tour, Kona, or Club 10, the Trinity is a true icon simply because it’s a bloody good bike. 


What’s New?


Disc Brakes

In one of its earlier designs, back in 2008, the Trinity was the first bike at the time to have an integrated front end with internal cables and integrated brakes. Cables are the nemesis of a TT bike - Shimano and SRAM have solved this problem thanks to Di2 and AXS respectively, and now the new Trinity sees the death of brake cables too. 


Whatever your opinion on disc brakes, there’s no doubt that they improve braking performance, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The consistency of brake performance is just as, if not more important than absolute stopping power.


Anyone who rode a rim brake TT bike in the last decade will know that brakes are extremely sensitive to cable wear, and they were a pain to route too. Any small imperfection would cause brake function to plummet - it wasn’t unheard of for riders to leave their rear brake so incredibly loose that it would hardly engage due to all these issues.


We’re preaching to the choir, but disc brakes solve this.


Real Estate

Frame real estate is an area that you might not think about at first, but it’s in fact very important. With the move to disc brakes, there is now freedom to manipulate the frame shape around the BB and fork crown, where previously the brake calipers had to be catered for. It turns out that moving the brake calipers to the drop outs does a great job of freeing up areas that are prone to clearance issues. 


At the back, this means more opportunities for playing with chainring sizes, without brake caliper clearance issues. The NEW Trinity is just in time for the 2024 / 2025 craze of large chainings. 


Rightfully so. Driveline gains are legit. 


Up front, the freedom to play with fork profiles has seen an expansion in the space around the front wheel and tyre. Gone are the days of a 19 mm front tyre. Enter the handling and rolling characteristics of larger rims and tyres. And on the CADEX front wheel, they have an updated set of TT wheels to complement the NEW Trinity. Wider rims, to better support the use of 26 and 28 mm tyres, yes please. 


Single Spacer

One of the most striking changes is the move to a single, central spacer. This has been driven largely by Giant’s investigations into aero performance. 


At Sync, from a consumer perspective, we applaud the centre-stack spacer design as it cleanly and elegantly allows us to achieve any width and offset that we desire. A single, central spacer makes a lot of sense, for the vast majority of people. 


A Tri Bike?

Modern-day TT bikes are also triathlon bikes too, and it ain’t a tri bike unless it has integrated hydration options. Giant have revamped the hydration offerings with their Trinity and in meaningful way. It’s now in the form of a removable tank above the bottom bracket, with a drinking straw that extends to the cockpit. 


Why? Because this bike caters for both UCI and Triathlon. This system simply makes a whole lot of sense and we have to tip our hats to them. 


Conclusion

The new Trinity is an upgrade on a classic. It brings in all of those timeless features that made it an iconic frameset back in the early 2000s, but with the engineering of modern-day aerodynamics. This could well be the bike that sees Giant through another nine-year product cycle. And that’s not a bad thing...


 
 
 

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