Share.

5 Comments

  1. You ever use bikeinsights.com? You can compare frame geometries between the bike you’re interested in and a bike that fits you.

  2. I think those labels are different to western sizing, so i guess their 48cm is equal to the usual 52cm

  3. Visual-Detective5802 on

    It’s a sloping frame so the traditional C-T measurement doesn’t really mean anything. Stack and reach are the figures you need and compare those to your old bike. Seems to be a racing geometry with low stack.

  4. Street_Glass_9212 on

    Try to book a fitting. I have 5 bikes and they are all different sizes. Really depends on the geometry of the bike and the riding position that feels most comfortable on that frame.

  5. Advanced_Ad8002 on

    What they indicate as size here is seat tube length. Which is also what was typically indicated as size for vintage bikes – but in the past, seat post length and (effective) top tube length were very similar, and the latter one size is the more relevant and fitting size: with a sloped top tube (as here), seat post length gets shorter despite the geometry being the same.

    So ideally: check for stack and reach, if you know your values.

    second best: go for effective top tube length (which is always measured horizontally, never sloped with sloped top tube).

    Here size 53.5 top tube is a size M-50.

Leave A Reply