The Haibike Q-Race RC (£900) has an aluminium frame and carbon fork, and a Tiagra triple groupset. The Claris-equipped SL version shares the frame and costs £650 - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The new Haibike Q-Race RC has Ryde DP18 rims, Shimano hubs and Tiagra brakes – we like the curvy top tube and seatstays - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The carbon Haibike Greed range starts with the £2,700 SL, with a SRAM SID RL fork and Shimano XT M615 brakes, and goes up to this £4,500 Team version – as raced by Sabine Spitz. Sharing the same mould but using a heavier grade of carbon is the Lite SL (£1,600) and RC (£1,850) - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
Greed Team branding carries neatly over to the bar on the 2014 Haibike Greed Team. Magura MT8 brakes are part of the package - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The Haibike Greed Team’s details include a Tune Kong hub in colour-matched blue - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
Haibike’s range of full-suspension mountain bikes is updated in the form of the headlining Heet RX. It’s available now with 650b (27.5in) and 29in wheels (2013’s model had 26in hoops. The new frame includes internal cabling and replaceable dropouts - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The Haibike Heet RX E.i (£5,600) includes an E.i shock, with the battery mounted on the down tube out of harm’s way - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
At £2,200 the Haibike Noon RX cyclocross bike has a full-carbon frame. Claimed weight for the complete bike (no pedals) is 7.9kg. Also available is the aluminium framed SL, at £1,300 - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The Haibike Noon RX has a tapered carbon, disc-specific fork - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
Interesting cross-bracing on the seatstays of the Haibike Noon RX. The spec includes a 105 groupset and CX70 46/36 chainset, both from Shimano - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
The Haibike Q-Race RC (£900) has an aluminium frame and carbon fork, and a Tiagra triple groupset. The Claris-equipped SL version shares the frame and costs £650 - Tom Marvin/Future Publishing
Haibike recently unveiled their 2014 UK road, cyclocross and mountain bikes at an event shared with sister companies Raleigh and Diamondback.
For next year, Haibike’s UK focus is to capitalise on their position as a premium brand and steadily make lower spec, cheaper models available to widen their breadth. Many of the bikes will also be available across Europe, but not all – exactly which models will cross over will be confirmed when Haibike’s full European launch takes place in August.
See our image gallery , right, for highlights of 2014 Haibike models available in the UK. And click here for information on Raleigh’s 2014 road, cyclocross and time trial bike lineup or Diamondback’s 2014 mountain bikes .