Ever wondered how your road bike actually compares to the “Formula 1” machines of the professional peloton? We take a deep dive into five key differences that set Tour de France bikes apart, ranging from massive gearing and strict UCI weight limits to the high-maintenance world of ceramic bearings and waxed chains. Watch as we explain why these elite bikes require an army of mechanics to keep them running at peak performance.

Chapters: ⏱️
00:00 – The Formula 1 of Cycling
00:36 – 1. The Gearing
02:07 – 2. The Weight
03:31 – 3. Cleanliness & Maintenance
04:32 – 4. The Drivetrain & Bearings
05:59 – 5. The Secret Spare Bikes
07:27 – Final Thoughts

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Which of these pro-level features would you most want to have on your own bike—the massive gearing, the ceramic bearings, or would you just settle for a team mechanic to wash it for you every single day? Let us know in the comments! 👇

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48 Comments

  1. Got a rather light weight 8,5kg carbon gravel bike after riding a 11kg aluminium bike.
    Difference is nice, but in still a terrible performer on a bike

  2. I've been riding a road bike since I was 11 years old (my first 'ten speed' was a child-sized Peugeot). Currently I ride a 2014 Giant Defy after spending 20 years on a Trek 1200 aluminum frame. I'm not mechanically inclined so I just trust my local shop to take care of me (though I can change a tire and I do try to keep my chain oiled!). I honestly couldn't tell you how many teeth are on the chain ring or what's in the cassette — my devotion to riding has nothing to do with any of that. And when I watch the Tour, I just watch the highlight reels on YouTube (cause who has time for all that?). But the astonishing thing to me is: despite ALL THOSE DIFFERENCES, and knowing that I am on the near opposite end of the spectrum from those riders in terms of ability or commitment, when I am on my own bike, I feel like I might as well be keeping up with the peloton, and when I watch those riders, I can feel in my body what they are doing. Worlds apart, in so many ways, but in some essential way, really just the same.

  3. When the last two inches matters after 150 miles and 6000 feet of climb, I guess you need all that stuff.
    Me, I need a traffic light sensor and a dog diverter.

  4. 🤔 got to think a moment… expensive ceramic bearings being jet washed every day.
    Either the seals are better than we think, or the teams are spending extra replacing those bearings…

  5. My bike is very different from a TdF bike, largely because it is designed for bike touring with rear and sometimes front panniers and a handlebar bag. Double-butted chrome-moly steel, fenders, bar end shifters, 44-32-22 triple crank set and an 11-32 9-speed cassette. Gears for grinding up mountain roads loaded with gear, and coasting down hill. Not fast, but I have traveled many thousands of miles on it and climbed many tens of thousands of meters.

  6. 0:55

    so let me get this straight….the speeds on the average TdF are getting faster…..on slightly heavier bikes (due to disk brakes and tubeless tire setups)….

    ….faster than the age of Festina and Lance Armstrong….

    and you’re gonna tell me there’s no doping in cycling anymore.

    SURE.

  7. I love the way you downplay your achievements of not only riding as a pro, but riding and finishing the Tour de France. Quite a few club riders should take note and realise they aren't an elite cyclist just because they can afford a £15k bike 🤣🤣

  8. They make us believe that the differences are significant, so that we put our last pennies into bicycles instead of sustainable and much more important investments in our own homes.

  9. My 2003 Sarcen road bike with panniers is a world away but I love it. Saracen don't make road bikes now. The build quality of my road bike is impressive and I still love cycling even after all these decades. I must say that for true professionals as the tour de France they must be unbelievably fit. A downside on UK roads are the silly, often rude bunches of lycra types who are thoughtless, hold up traffic and give cylists a bad name trying to ape the professionals..

  10. is it possible thoose spare bike donated to me to go to work?😁😁😁
    i really struglling to buy gas for my motorcycle to the work now, the price is high, and the gas is now a really rare item

    i rode a cheap bike to the work as sport teacher for elemtary school

  11. How do they configure the Shimano neutral bikes as gar as pedals and frame sizes? Or is it you get what you get or do they place certain cars closer to specific riders if team cars aren't avaliable?

  12. 0:47 I actually think road compact cranksets are if anything still bigger than what would best suit most riders. I think something like a 44/28 road double crankset would be very popular among mortals who live in hilly areas. 44/11 at 100 rpm is more than 50 km/h, how many mortals are sustaining that on the flats for more than a minute? While meanwhile a 28/34 or so is a nice really low gear that lets you tackle nearly any paved climb and also opens up possibilities for loaded touring. I feel like Shimano et al have been slow-rolling the arrival of genuinely sane road drivetrains for more than a decade now, and while GRX's 46/30 crankset is definitely a step in the right direction, I just want to see them go full send and sell a really small crankset with a road chainline.

  13. My bike was higher spec that a tdf bike (and every other bike in the club) because l had a 50-40-28, not a 52-39..my fancy bike always got a lot of comments on a clubrun

  14. Which of these pro-level features would you most want to have on your own bike—the massive gearing, the ceramic bearings, or would you just settle for a team mechanic to wash it for you every single day? Let us know in the comments! 👇

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