Cube attain slx

3 min read

£1,599.99 Borderline racy road bike with comfort in mind and room for mudguards

Weight 9.64kg (53cm) Frame Aluminium Fork Carbon Gears Shimano 105 11-speed (11-34t, 50/34t) Brakes Shimano 105 hydraulic disc, 160mm rotors Wheels Cube RA 1.9 Aero Disc Finishing kit Cube Performance SLX stem, Cube Compact Race bar, Cube Performance 27.2mm seatpost, Natural Fit Nuance saddle, Continental Ultra Sport 3 SL tyres

In spite of a price that undercuts much of the opposition, Cube has managed to spec a complete Shimano 105 hydraulic groupset (albeit the older 11-speed version). You can also fit mudguards, though the frame is limited to 28mm tyres, but that’s the only real issue I found with the bike. It flies on the flat, is nippy on hills, quick and nimble on descents and, in spite of its quite narrow rubber, comfort is impeccable. And while the geometry is surprisingly racy, Cube takes the edge off with swept-back bars so you’re not too stretched out.

Fine frame

The frameset has all the features you’d expect for a mid-priced road bike. The smooth-welded 6061 aluminium frame is compact and made from double-butted tubes to keep the weight down, with slimline dropped seatstays for comfort. Cabling is all routed internally. Since it’s a more road-based design, the only mounts are the usual two sets of bottle cage bosses.

Mudguard fittings are similarly minimalist: at the bottom of the fork and rear dropouts and there’s a bridge across the chainstays. Cube makes its own lightweight Attain Disc Mudguard Set that has a bridge section built on to the top of the rear guard to keep it sufficiently rigid, but other full-length guards will fit.

Cube has by far the most aggressive geometry of the three bikes on test. In fact, the frame angles – 74° seat angle, 72° head angle on our test bike – aren’t that far removed from those of a classic race bike. The same is true of the wheelbase, which is just 1mm longer than Cube’s Agree. Tyre clearances are very limited too, just 28mm, which is modest these days.

The very neatly finished frame has the Shimano 105 chainset, unlike the pricier Cannondale Synapse 1, which uses a less expensive, heavier chainset. Shimano’s workhorse 105 groupset delivers its usual slick and efficient performance, with a wide range of gears and light-acting, powerful hydraulic disc brakes. Cube has specced the compact 50-34t chainset and wide-ranging 50/34t cassette. The one-to-one-ratio bottom gear should please pretty much all of us most of the time on climbs. The braking is as good as

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