by huw williams » Tue Dec 05, 2006 11:19 am
Here is my review on the Minoura from next weeks CW in case it helps.
These cost about £200 in the UK but with the weak dollar and US mail order firms its possible to get one sent over for around £140 - but I didn't tell you that!
Minoura VFS G turbo trainer
I’ve always hated turbo trainers. They’re noisy, they take too long to set up correctly and unlike a bicycle, you don’t get anywhere when riding on them, surely the point of cycling in the first place. They are however a fantastic training aid and as at time of writing there is a force 9 gale driving rain sideways across my lawn outside, a convenient way of continuing to train during the winter months. As we know, most serious road racers and all time trialists have a pathological inability to stop training during the winter whatever the conditions. It’s a good job then that we don’t live on the Siberian tundra.
If you do, you could do a lot worse than check out this latest combined fluid/magnetic turbo from Minoura, which would happily negate training in the permafrost. It uses a clever load-bearing central hinge system that lowers the bike onto the roller under its own weight, thereby replicating road conditions more accurately than a standard turbo. Efforts in or out of the saddle realistically weight and un-weight the rear wheel as they would on the road. This also does away with painful hours of set-up time trying to position the bike properly. On a standard turbo too little pressure on the roller will quickly wear your tyres out – not a problem here. The same hinge system also contributes to quick storage of the trainer as it folds away flat without having to undo any bolts or quick release levers. There’s a heavy duty QR skewer included to replace your expensive lightweight titanium one and a 7 level, bar-mounted remote lever to control resistance although my standard pattern of gears proved so realistic that I barely switched from the medium setting.
So far so good then but where the VFS ‘G’ really scores is in how quiet it is. The build quality is impressively tight and ‘chunky’ so there’s nothing rattling around even under high stress. Unlike any turbo I’ve ever tried I couldn’t get this one to sound remotely offensive. So quiet is it that I initially thought it was set up incorrectly or I wasn’t trying hard enough but no, even biggest gear at high-speed mosh testing still proved impossible to upset my flat mate let alone the neighbours. That’s particularly important if you live on the Siberian Tundra where after a hard days surviving, the native Yakut are partial to an early night. Very highly recommended.