Bryton’s new bike computer, Prologo's first 3D-printed saddle, wild carbon wheels from BLK-TEC and more from the 2024 Taipei Cycle Show

Bryton’s new bike computer, Prologo's first 3D-printed saddle, wild carbon wheels from BLK-TEC and more from the 2024 Taipei Cycle Show

Warren's final round-up from Taipei teases unreleased tech

Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Published: March 25, 2024 at 5:00 pm

The Taipei Cycle Show always throws up plenty of new kit and components, before they are officially launched.

As well as being a show open to consumers, it’s also a place where lots of bike industry business gets done. With brands looking to complete specifications on new bikes for the coming year(s), component brands will showcase upcoming products before launching to the world.

In my final round-up from Taiwan, here are some of the new products I spotted from Bryton, Prologo, ReadyGo, Selle Italia and BLK-TEC.

You can check out the rest of my coverage from the Taipei Show, including:

Bryton Rider 460 computer, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Bryton has a new bike computer, the Rider 460. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Bryton’s new Rider 460 head unit has all of the features of the GPS brand’s premium models, the S800, Rider 750 and Rider 500, but contained within a simplified unit with a monochrome screen. 

ANT+ FE-C and Bluetooth connectivity ensure the computer can connect to your usual accessories and smart trainers. It also offers full turn-by-turn navigation, live tracking, power and cadence data and the option to set up multiple bike configurations (including electric bikes). 

The compact slimline case relocates the button controls to the unit’s flanks, rather than the base, which we found awkward to use on the premium Rider S800 unit. 

Pricing is not yet set, but Bryton aims to make the Rider 460 available at around $140, undercutting Garmin’s base-model Edge 130 Plus.

Prologo has a 3D-printed saddle coming

Prologo Nago R4 PAS 3D MES saddle, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Prologo is venturing into the world of 3D-printed saddles. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Prologo is the latest brand to move into the world of 3D-printed saddles with the upcoming Nago R4 PAS 3D MES. 

This saddle isn’t officially launching until later in the year, but we got the inside scoop from Prologo brand head Salvatore Truglio. 

“The new 3D MES takes our latest race shape, the Nago R4, and redesigns it with a complex 3D-mesh design,” said Truglio.

Prologo Nago R4 PAS 3D MES saddle, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
The saddle takes the shape of the Nago R4 saddle and reimagines it with a 3D-mesh design, according to Prologo's Salvatore Truglio. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

“We have used different patterns in the honeycomb to give the saddle the correct compliance and pressure relief from nose to tail.”

According to Truglio, the new saddle weighs 149g with carbon rails, making it, he claims, the lightest 3D-printed saddle in the world.

New tech to stop mountain bikers from slip-sliding

Prologo Proxim Nembo Slide Control saddle, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
This is Prologo's new Proxim Nembo Slide Control saddle. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Prologo also previewed a new mountain bike saddle, the Proxim Nembo Slide Control. 

The Nembo was developed with the Atherton Racing team. This new 245mm-long saddle comes in 135mm and 145mm widths, and features a new surface finish called ‘Slide Control’.

Prologo Proxim Nembo Slide Control saddle, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
It's aimed specifically at mountain bikers. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

This, Truglio says, is designed to offer similar grip and comfort to Prologo’s existing CPC surfacing.

Truglio adds: “It’s not quite as grippy as CPC, to enable riders to easily shift their position while racing, but still has enough grip to keep them positioned in bad weather conditions.”

The Nembo saddle weighs in at 213g for the 135mm width and 244g for the 145mm width.

New grips for mountain bikers, too

Prologo Cush grip, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
The Cush is the first of two new grips from Prologo. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Also added to Prologo’s off-road line-up are two new grips, both made from a material that combines a silicone-polymer outer skin with a recycled nylon core.

First up is the new Cush grip, 132mm long and weighing 93g for the pair, with a textured grip that’s noticeably soft in the hand, while maintaining a slim overall diameter. 

Prologo Hexa grip, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
The Hexa grip is new, too. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

The Hexa grip, meanwhile, is 134mm in length and has a larger overall diameter.

It has the same compliant feel as the Cush but without the textured surface. It instead uses a deeply channeled hexagonal pattern and a shape that narrows from its outer and then flares towards the inside edge. These weigh 95g for the pair.

CPC for handlebar tape

Prologo CPC handlebar tape, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Here's some prototype handlebar tape from Prologo. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Truglio also showed us some prototype handlebar tape that features Prologo’s CPC tech. The CPC surfacing has been around on saddles since 2014 and on gloves since 2016. It’s a rubber-like material consisting of thousands of minute chimney-like shapes, designed to add comfort and stability. 

Up until now, it's been an expensive material to manufacture – prohibitively so in bar tape – but Truglio says advancements in Prologo’s production mean this new CPC tape can be made more cost-effectively. 

No confirmed retail price is yet set, but Truglio says it will be around the $45-50 mark, or £40-45 in the UK. It's premium, no doubt about that, but in the ballpark of brands such as Supacaz and Lizard Skins, and undercutting the likes of Silca and Wolf Tooth.

BLK-TEC’s wild carbon wheels

2024 Taipei Cycle Show – Inner Bicycles GR101 titanium road bike
Wild wheels from BLK-TEC. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

BLK-TEC has only been around since 2023, but the company’s products found their way onto a number of bikes at the Taipei show, including show-stealing titanium bikes from Inner and Ora.

BLK-TEC’s most striking component is, without a doubt, the C1D wheelset. The radical star-shaped design combines both the spokes and the hub flanges into a single carbon moulding. 

BLK-TEC claims this configuration makes for a rigid, no-flex construction.

BLK-TEC carbon rim, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
The rim is hookless. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

The C1D’s 40mm-deep rim shape combines a 20.7mm internal rim width and 27.4mm outer. 

Due to the design of the wheel, the hookless rim has a smooth, solid bed, eliminating the need for tape for tubeless compatibility. 

BLK-TEC hub, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Yours for a cool $4,880. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

BLK-TEC says the rim is optimised for tyres up to 35mm wide – and with a claimed weight of 695g for the front and 796g for the rear, they’re competitively light for a 40mm-deep disc wheelset. 

These are seriously expensive, though, priced at $4,880 a pair.

BLK-TEC carbon handlebar, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
This carbon handlebar is new from BLK-TEC, too. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Elsewhere, BLK-TEC’s new R8 one-piece bar was designed in collaboration with Token components to be compatible with Token’s Cable Box headset system (used by bike brands including Look, Ceepo, ENVE, Pardus, Isaac and Fara).

The $610 R8 bar works with both fully and semi-integrated cable routing, and is available in widths of 38cm, 40cm and 42cm, and effective stem lengths of 90/100/110/120/130mm.

The claimed weight of a 40cm handlebar is 320g.

ReadyGo’s DF3 will solve your bar-space woes

ReadyGo DF3 mount, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Struggling for space? ReadyGo may have the answer. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

ReadyGo showed a new out-front mount with a modular system to enable you to incorporate a multitude of additional mounts. 

Alongside a standard GPS computer mount – with options for all the major units (Wahoo, Garmin, Bryton, Hammerhead) – it also has the provision to add a phone mount, GoPro camera, bike light and even a bell. 

So, if you're increasingly short of space on your handlebar, the DF3 could be the smart space-saver you’ve been looking for.

Selle Italia branches out into urban saddles

Selle Italia GT 1 saddle base, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Selle Italia is now offering an urban saddle with the GT 1. - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

Selle Italia is known for its legendary racing products, such as the Flite, Novus, and more recently, SLR and Boost saddles. So it was something of a surprise that the big announcement for Taipei was the brand’s foray into urban and commuting saddles. 

However, the new GT 1 contains a lot of new tech that we expect to see on future Selle Italia products.

The new EVA upper is formed in a single mould, incorporating both the padding and cover. This, Selle Italia claims, removes any unnecessary weight and removes the need for bonding agents between the padding and cover, meaning the EVA upper is easy to recycle. 

Selle Italia GT 1 saddle base, Taipei Cycle Show 2024
Could this be a sign of things to come from Selle Italia? - Warren Rossiter / Our Media

The next innovation is a bond/glue/staple-free attachment to the saddle base, meaning the user can replace a worn or damaged cover by unhooking the top from the base. Selle Italia calls this the Lock-On system. 

Selle Italia is looking to introduce these key design features across a wider range of saddles, including some of the performance models we’re more familiar with. 

Still, with its pressure-relieving shape, 180mm width and 250mm length, the GT 1 looks far less bulky than we’re used to seeing on trekking/urban saddles. 

We’ve requested a test sample to fit to a commuter bike, to see how this smart new saddle design fares.