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Just In: Raleigh’s Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

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Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

There is no denying the fact that over the past few years, Raleigh has really gotten their shift together. Through the sales and reorganizations of the company, the new bikes are looking better and better bringing the storied brand back into the game. The latest bike to find its way to the Bikerumor stable is the Revenio 4.0 carbon – a performance road bike with a relaxed fit, something Raleigh would categorize as Endurance Race. Equipped with full Ultegra Di2, the Revenio is backed up with some higher end, in-house parts for a complete build that looks as good in person as it does on  paper.

Get the rundown of the Revenio 4.0, next.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

On our 52cm Sm/Md test rig, the fork is set at a relatively slack 71°, with the range of sizes for the Revenio carbon falling in between 71 and 73°. The slacker fork combined with a taller, 145mm head tube is what gives the Revenio its Re²P, or Relaxed Ergonomic Effective Position, geometry. A steeper, 75° seat tube helps to shorten the top tube as well for a more upright, relaxed position. Relaxed doesn’t have to mean slow however, and to make sure the Revenio performs similar to its racier big brother the Militis, a full carbon monocoque fork sits in a 1.5 – 1 1/8″ tapered headtube for steering precision.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

As this is a Di2 equipped bike, the Revenio has all of the provisions for running Di2 internally and fairly discreetly. All of the rubber plugs in the frame for the wires are a very tight fit around the wire itself – meaning the wires won’t move unless you need to push some of the slack inside the frame, which makes managing extra cable simple. The batter is tucked up underneath the non-drive chainstay, just behind the bottom bracket where it’s out of the way, but still easy to access.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

On an “endurance” bike, I’m a bit surprised to see a 31.6 seat post, as usually the smaller posts offer a higher degree of compliance, but maybe that’s why there is a race at the end of Endurance Race. On Raleigh’s website the bike is speced with an Avenir Carbon Series seatpost, though post shown here is definitely aluminum – as they say, “specs subject to change.” Sitting on top of the post is an Avenir RMC saddle with carbon rails. First impressions are that it is a performance race saddle – definitely not as padded as what is typically considered an endurance road saddle.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

Avenir parts make up the rest of the cockpit with an Avenir Carbon stem (an upgrade from the Avenir 200 alloy stem speced), and an Avenir 200 Series alloy 31.8 bar with a short drop. Gel bar tape finishes it off, with a texture closest to Lizard Skin’s DSP.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

It’s nice to see a full Shimano Ultegra Di2 build throughout the bike – right down to the brake cables and housings. You won’t find a down-speced chain, or cassette, just Ultegra 6770/6700 all the way through.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

Gearing wise, the Revenio 4.0 carbon is equipped with a 50/34 compact double crank and an 11-28t cassette which should offer plenty of gearing for most riders. Once you’ve climbed to the top, the Revenio features longer stays and a lower bottom bracket to offer more predictable cornering on the way back down.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

Raleigh did a great job building a set of slick wheels that match the part for the Revenio, with Weinman DP18 all black rims wrapped in Vittoria Rubino Pro 23mm rubber and house branded hubs with red anodized nipples and black spokes.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

The wheels look great, though likely in an effort to keep the price down (you can find new Revenio 4.0 Carbons in shops for as low as $3,999), the wheels are probably the weakest link of the bike. The loose ball front Formula hub isn’t much better than you will find on $800-1,000 bikes, but Raleigh did include a much better rear hub where it matters, in the KT Alloy with 4 Sealed Bearings and 6 pawl engagement. It’s not like the front hub is going to blow up immediately, or slow you down – just make sure it is properly adjusted, something that the better shops will already have covered.

Just In: Raleigh's Relaxed Revenio 4.0 Carbon Endurance Road Bike

With a set of Ultegra pedals installed, the complete bike weighs in at 18.25 pounds – without the pedals it was around 17.5. Look for a full review on the Raleigh in the near future!

Just as a reminder, if you’re thinking of picking up a new carbon Raleigh for yourself, you still have a few days left to claim the $100 carbon rebate they’re offering!

 

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bass pete
bass pete
10 years ago

four grand? FOUR GRAND?? 18 .25 lbs? We are 85 percent casual riders. How about $1500 kick ass carbon bikes?

Alex
Alex
10 years ago

Can’t wait to get mine ! Looks even better in person. Pete, get the regular shifting bike and save $$$$ !

Nick Burklow
10 years ago

@bass pete – I think you will enjoy the review bike I have coming soon. I am recovering from injury currently, but should have something soon, for $1500, in carbon, with a SRAM Rival build. Stay tuned.

Chainwhipped
Chainwhipped
10 years ago

“How about $1500 kick ass carbon bikes?” – bass pete

How about a dose of reality? The thing has an electronic grouppo that costs well over $2000 by itself and Carbon frames have to be hand made. People get paid to do their jobs, even in China.

“Kick-ass” is pretty subjective. If you think Nick’s next review is going to feature a “kick-ass carbon bike” with a full Ultegra kit and a sub-18 Lb riding weight at $1500, you’re delusional. And I wouldn’t trust the <$400 frame/fork you'd have to use to build a complete carbon bike at that price. Can you say "eminent recall"?

wheelguy
wheelguy
10 years ago

4 grand for a carbon bike with full Ultegra Di2 equipped bike is a great deal. Cheap wheels are pretty standard for a bike in this price-range and I actually prefer they go cheap on the wheels and make the rest of the bike quality so that I can upgrade to a higher-end set of wheels of my choice (carbon, aero, etc depending on my needs and where I live). Same thing goes for saddles.

vectorbug
vectorbug
10 years ago

Raleigh Revenio Carbon 1.0 Bike $1699 at REI. Apparently we are casual googlers too.

TheRhys
TheRhys
10 years ago

Raleigh killing it again! I think we can all agree that they have been doing what every other company wishes they could. Release bikes designed by cyclists, for cyclists, and at reasonable prices. I have seen this bike in person and it looks great. So excited for their cyclocross offerings and the new Militus is awesome as well! GIT SUM RALEIGH!!

Psi Squared
Psi Squared
10 years ago

Standard price range for Ultegra Di2 equipped bikes: $3500-4000 or so. Kudos to Raleigh.

mike
mike
10 years ago

The entire Raleigh USA Line up of bikes is Outstanding. Take the Time and Compare Price vs. Spec to the big three. Your mind will be blown…..Better bikes at better prices. I can only Imagine Raleigh is walking a very thin line with their margins or everything else is way over priced.

Speedy
Speedy
10 years ago
Chainwhipped
Chainwhipped
10 years ago

@vectorbug – That’s odd. I googled that bike, listed for $1900 at REI . . . with Tiagra.
http://www.rei.com/product/830017/raleigh-revenio-carbon-10-bike-2012?cm_mmc=cse_froogle-_-pla-_-product-_-830017&mr:referralID=aa662d24-98e2-11e2-9dea-001b2166becc

I tip my hat to Raleigh USA, though. Impressive component spec for $4k on a passable frame. Normally, an Ultegra Di2 bike at that price is on sale.

I’d sooner go for a more reputable frame with Ultegra Mechanical for that price, but this is a pretty nice bike.

bass pete
bass pete
10 years ago

Thank you Nick Burklow and Alex for the positive responses.

I am actually a big fan of Raleigh, I have owned about 5 Raleighs as I grew up in Europe. If money was no option I would get the Raleigh international but the bike above looks great.

As for Chainwhipped. . lower that blood pressure buddy… 4 g’s is a lot of doe, that’s all i was saying.

Johny-O
Johny-O
10 years ago

While this bike is out of my league, I bought a Revenio 3.0 Aluminum last year and enjoy it thoroughly. Keep up the great work Raleigh!! Thanks for the review.

Hector Cerra
Hector Cerra
3 years ago

Well a few years later….I still ride my Revenio. Upgrades include Mavic Ksyrium SSL, carbon seatpost and carbon handlebar. Many many fast, confortable and happy miles.

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