Home > Bike Types > Gravel Bikes

All-new Campagnolo Ekar 1x, lightest gravel groupset available goes to 13-speed!

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, up close
34 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

Campagnolo has finally gone full gravel with their all-new 1x 13-speed Ekar gravel bike groupset. Building on a long history of racing since before paved roads were even a thing, the new wide-range mechanical Ekar gravel group reshapes some of the best modern Campy features with new gravel-specific tech thrown in. With that… Ekar 1×13 also claims to be the lightest gravel group available, it comes in cheaper than a Chorus 2×12 gruppo, and you can actually get ahold of it right now!

Campagnolo Ekar dedicated 1x 13-speed gravel bike groupset

Campagnolo reminds us that their component brand was “born before roads” in Italy – way back in 1933 – as they introduce their first dedicated gravel groupset. Named after Mt. Ekar a small mountain crisscrossed with gravel roads just north of Campy’s Vicenza, Italy HQ & factory – that’s where the new Ekar group was developed & tested, and where much of the new components are manufactured.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, off-road

The “born before roads” tagline sounds like a bit of a jump, after so many decades focusing on road racing. But those early road races really were on Italian gravel, and it is truly a major step for Campagnolo to start producing groupsets again that aren’t destined for professional road racing (Super Record and rim brakes are still alive & well suited for that, after a Tour de France win earlier this week under Tadej Pogačar.)

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, 3T Explor complete buildBut while racing heritage still carries over a bit into the all-new Ekar group, it’s more about accessible amateur gravel races, fast bikepacking, and just riding a bike over a wide mix of terrains. Campagnolo still wants their gravel group to go fast, but the focus in Ekar is supposedly more on durability, braking power & control, plus the ability to run wide gearing without having to worry about dropping the chain.

Campagnolo Ekar 1×13 gravel group – Tech details

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, studio groupset
studio images c. Campagnolo

To make all that work, Campy has pulled the best tech and features of their off-road capable road disc groups and given them a simplified 1x setup – with a clutched rear derailleur and another jump up to 13-speeds for smooth gear steps across a wide gearing range.

Going from 2×12 to 1×13 not only helps shed weight, it also makes the groupset more affordable. We’re still not talking about a budget groupset here. But Campagnolo consciously wanted to make Ekar more accessible to the younger crop of cyclists riding gravel (as opposed to the generally older crew of roadies who can afford Super Record EPS.) The result at 1700€ for a full EU-made groupset, Ekar is now the second cheapest complete group that Campagnolo makes, only more expensive than Centaur.

So what’s new in Ekar?

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, cranksetBesides the obviously new Ekar 1×13 graphics (that might take you a while to learn to read), the carbon crankset is an obvious place to start talking what’s new. It’s the first single chainring crank that Campagnolo has ever made outside of Pista track cranks, featuring relatively small for roadie-heritage rings of 38T for ‘adventure, 40T for ‘pure gravel’, 42T for ‘fast gravel’, and 44T for ‘e-gravel’ – with narrow wide shaping and tall teeth.

I personally think that companies over estimate gravel gearing for the majority of riders who tend to ride loaded bikes and up stupidly steep off-road tracks on their bikes, so most of us will probably prefer to stick with the 38T option.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, carbon crank

Once we get past the rings (which are of course a Campy-proprietary BCD… ugh!), the two piece UD carbon cranks look a lot like other recent angular carbon Campagnolo cranks. They use a standard 630 steel Ultra-Torque spindle with the Hirth-joint in the middle that requires a long 10mm hex for install & removal.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain

Bearings are still pressed directly onto each half axle, although with new & improved gravel seals.

The $360 / 347€ Ekar carbon cranks have Campy narrow 145.5mm Q-factor, and are available in 165, 170, 172.5 & 175mm lengths. They also include injection molded crank arm guards to protect against rock strikes, held on by rubber O-rings (and easily removable.)

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, rear derailleur

Beyond a 1x crankset, what makes Ekar unique is probably 13-speeds out back. Sure, Rotor has already taken us to 13sp, but only with their own hubs. Campagnolo 1×13 does require a special freehub body, but it is backwards-compatible with other Campy groups. And it is already available from 5 other notable wheel makers – not counting compatibility with many of Campagnolo & Fulcrum’s existing wheel offerings.

So what does 13-speed mean for Campagnolo Ekar?

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, cassette optionsCampy’s idea with jumping to 13 (and leaving the perfect number 12 behind!) essentially amounts to matching 2x range without the complexity and extra weight of a double, but also without sacrificing smooth gear steps in the middle of the cassette where you spend most of the time riding.

To get that mega range, Ekar goes down to a 9-tooth cog in two of three cassette options. There is some obvious loss of efficiency & pedal smoothness there. But Campy thinks that for gravel riding, when you shift down all the way… it’s a matter of not spinning out on the descents, so the compromise makes sense.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, cassette gear spacing

Three gearing combinations are available: Endurance 9-36T (400%), Gravel Race 9-42T (467%) & Gravel Adventure 10-44T (440%). Gear spacing remains tight & relatively constant in the middle ranges of gearing for smooth cadence steps, then shift jumps get bigger as you are looking for bailout gears to get up steep climbs.

Endurance 9-36T (9-10-11-12-13-14-16-18-20-23-27-31-36), Gravel Race 9-42T (9-10-11-12-13-14-16-18-21-25-30-36-42) & Gravel Adventure 10-44T (10-11-12-13-14-15-17-19-22-26-32-39-44)
Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, cassette profiles

Each of the $274 / 265€ cassettes are machined from two blocks of steel for light weight & durability, with the upper 9 cogs sitting on an aluminum carrier. The cassettes require the new N3W Campagnolo freehub body to fit those smaller cogs behind a lockring, but the 13-speeds fit within the same width as Campy 12, so there’s no change to hub spacing or wheel dish.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, N3W new freehub body standard

The N3W driver body is Campagnolo’s new freehub standard. Essentially it is a new open standard that chops off the outer ~.5cm of the regular current Campy freehub. Using a bolt on extension, you can use the N3W body with any 11, 12 or 13sp Campy cassette, but now the new smaller 9 & 10 tooth cogs can fit.

Campagnolo opened up the N3W spec earlier this summer, and there are already N3W-ready freehubs available in DT Swiss, GW, Newmen, Roval & Tune hubs, with more expected in the near future. The latest Campagnolo Shamal Carbon wheels were the first to include N3W standard, but Campy says all new mixed-surface appropriate Campagnolo & Fulcrum wheels from now on will get the new freehub, while pretty much every current wheel from both brands can be retrofitted.

What about that clutched Ekar 1x derailleur?

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, derailleur detailProbably the most tech-heavy component in the new Ekar group is the new rear derailleur – if only for its first inclusion of a Campagnolo clutch. Campy doesn’t reveal much about what tech is going inside, but we can say that it does a solid job of maintaining chain tension (and preventing dropped chains) over quite rough terrain. And it is not adjustable.

The $256 / 247€ Ekar 13-speed mechanical derailleur uses a “2D parallelogram trajectory” as it moves close to ensure smooth shifts over the wide-ranging cassettes. Just one cage length with 12T upper & 14T lower composite pulleys, works for all three cassette options. The Ekar derailleur features carbon-reinforced composite P & B knuckles, with a mix of 7075 & 6082 alloy for the parallelogram links, clutch & pulley cages. Stainless bolts hold everything together, and a clutch/return spring catch lets you lock the derailleur in a vertical position for easier wheel removal.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, Ergopower controls

Up front/top, Ekar Ergopower levers manage shifting & braking needs. For the most part you get the same proven Campagnolo ergonomics here, with comfortable Vari-Cushion rubber hoods and alloy brake levers with laser-etched graphics/texture.

Ekar uses classic Campy One-Lever-One-Action controls with the lever behind the brake sweeping to shift up the cassette with Ultra-Shift – up to three easier gears at a time.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, Ergopower

The Campy thumb release lever to shift into smaller, harder cogs is even longer than usual, and actually is easier to use from the tops, hoods & drops. But you can only shift to one harder gear at a time, requiring multiple individual clicks once you crest the top of a climb.

You do still get brake/shift lever reach adjust (great for riders with smaller hands). But there is no brake leverage/modulation adjust like on the premium road disc groups. Ergopower levers are sold separately – $395 / 382€ for the Right-hand setup including lever, hose, caliper & oil, or $316 / 304€ for the brake-only Left-hand assembly.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, flat mount brake caliper

Inside the Ekar Ergopowers are a slightly tweaked master cylinder (that will likely replace the other road disc versions in the future) using the same proven Magura hydraulic system design concept. The newly re-optimized hydraulics share the same basic design, but are now entirely developed in-house by Campagnolo’s engineers. And we’ve heard that these will essentially set the stage for the next generation on the road, as well.

Ekar flat mount brake calipers are functionally the same as other Campy road discs (a good thing!), but now have their own uniquely angular caliper shaping and share the same caliper for both front & rear, 140mm & 160mm brakes. What that means is the calipers are a bit lighter, but each will now require an adapter plate and extra set of bolts for more universal fit.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, 160mm 140mm rotor

Ekar rotors also look quite similar to Campy road discs in 160mm & 140mm versions. But the $41 / 36€ gravel group rotors actually use a slightly heavier & more durable steel AFS/centerlock carrier to secure the 1.85mm thick stainless brake track – and withstand heavier braking. Ekar will work with the alloy carrier rotors too though, so you can always shed a few extra grams here.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, C13 chain

Ekar also gets a new $46 / 44€ C13 chain that is ever-so-slightly thinner to work with the tighter spacing. More than just thinner pins & rollers, the side plates had to be optimized for the tighter spacing & narrow-wide rings, as well.

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, Campy Quick Link

The biggest news though is a Campagnolo 13-speed chain that includes a reusable quick link, or in Campy speak… a C-link. For some reason Campagnolo will still offer a one-time-use pinned version (which will require a new chain too… ugh), and actually charges $2 / 2€ extra for the C-Link option.

I can’t imagine why anyone would knowingly pick the pinned version any more…

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, sealed bottom bracket

Last up in the new components, a new series of bottom brackets. Developed special for gravel to keep mud, sand, grit & water out, the new $33 / 33€ ProTech BBs seal an additional composite plastic tube between otherwise standard cups to protect the sealed stainless bearings that get pressed onto the cranks spindles themselves. Available for BSA, ITA & T47 threaded or BB86, BB30, BB30A, BB386, PF30 & BB RIGHT pressfit, there’s surely one for your gravel bike.

So how much will Ekar 1×13 cost? And how much does it really weigh?

Campagnolo Campy Ekar 1x13 gravel bike component breakdown, studio gruppo

Complete groupset pricing will vary a bit depending on the ultimate configuration that you choose, but Campagnolo says a full Ekar group will cost you around 1700€. Pit that against the most recent gravel-capable, sub-compact Chorus 2×12 Disc at 1830€, and Ekar already starts to look like a good deal for a Campy build.

Then, compare the lightest claimed Ekar groupset configuration weight of 2385g (with a 9-36T cassette) to the lightest setup from Shimano, SRAM, or Rotor and we come away rather impressed, even a bit surprised actually.

Campagnolo Campy Ekar 1x13 gravel bike component breakdown, complete 3T gravel bike Actual Weight

Directly comparing a bunch of different gravel groups on weight is always a little tough (or an exercise in futility) as things like chainring & cassette size vary, as do what bottom bracket or even crank length is figured in.

But suffice it to say, Ekar 1×13 with a 400% range cassette is lighter than pretty much every gravel group on the market today without sacrificing on gearing. Compare it to GRX 1×11 at 2728g (11-42T), SRAM Force AXS 1×12 at 2627g (10-33T), SRAM Force 1×11 at 2471g (10-42T), or even Rotor 1×13 at 2430g with Aldhu cranks (10-36T) –  and you’ll shave some grams off your current gravel setup.

And the Ekar 467% build doesn’t add many extra grams either.

When can you actually get a new Campy Ekar 1×13 group?

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, test riding

Campagnolo may have not been the first to the road disc, or now to the gravel bike party but they are killing it on actual availability. This long-rumored gravel groupset is available now.

As in, the complete new groups are already sitting in-stock in a number of bike shops around the world. Messy COVID-impacted logistics does mean there a some places where you will still have to wait a little bit for the mail to arrive. But it shouldn’t be long even there.

2021 Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel bikes, Ridley Kanzo Fast

And as for complete bikes, Campagnolo has partnered with several of the best gravel bike makers in the world. And premium carbon gravel bikes fitted with the new Campy Ekar group as OEM are already built up and ready to ship this week from the likes of 3T, Pinarello, Ridley, Specialized, and Wilier.

Looks like it is time to give Campagnolo Ekar a try on your gravel roads…

Campagnolo Ekar 1x13 gravel group, 13-speed gravel bike drivetrain, test racing

And that’s exactly what we’ve been up to the last month or so. I’ve been riding (and secretly racing) the new gravel group for several weeks, and will share my first impressions soon. Suffice it to say, Ekar delivers the excellent Campagnolo braking & ergonomics I’ve come to love off-road, paired with simple and reliable shift performance.

Follow along our complete in-depth Campy Ekar coverage here, including how much the new components really weight, and what the quickest way to get on the new group swill be. Then, keep an eye out for our first riding impressions of the new groupset, coming soon!

Campagnolo.com/Ekar

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

34 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Trybo Bike Tech
Trybo Bike Tech
4 years ago

That 9-36 cassette coupled to a 40-ish ring is a 1xX road setup right there.

Antoine Martin
Antoine Martin
4 years ago

That Ekar gruppo is cool, might make a nice road 1X setup too ! MSRP are high but effective prices might be better.
I’m suffering looking at this poor lad trying to do mtb on this 3T, “Gravel” is always here to give you occasions to laugh a bit.

Oliver
Oliver
4 years ago

This looks awesome. However, I really can’t see myself going back from the Juin Tech GT-F cable operated hydraulic calipers. Power is at least as good as Ultegra, modulation very good, they’re ultra light, and most importantly, are super easy to bleed & service, with better reliability than full hydro systems … which is a major consideration if you’re travelling, as I often am.

Can you modify Campag hydro levers to work with cable, or would it require them to release a cable SKU? Or is the gearing indexed at the RD and I can just use a Chorus or Record cable Ergo with an Ekar RD and cassette?

I’d really like to run Ekar and have my first Campag Gruppo .. but this is a potential stumbling block.

Buddy
Buddy
4 years ago

FYI the C-Link closing link is not reusable according to the tech doc they gave us. I think this is pretty standard with quick links.

Bret
Bret
4 years ago
Reply to  Buddy

Correct, I think every brand says this about their quick links;

Johan
Johan
4 years ago
Reply to  Bret

KMC make reusable quick links – usually the part number ends with an “R” for resuable

Some guy
Some guy
4 years ago

The cranks will not work on some gravel bikes with very wide tire clearance. Did a chorus 2×12 drivetrain on a Trek checkpoint and the crank arm would hit the non drive chainstay. The q factor is the same on both cranks so I would assume it would have the same issue. Ultimately had to run a Sram AXS 2×12 crank to make the build work

Erik Hemstad
Erik Hemstad
4 years ago

why not electronic?

Nobody
Nobody
4 years ago

So, you provide weights for every other group on the market in your comparison, but neglect to give us the weight of the group that the entire article is about. Come on…

Bret
Bret
4 years ago

My thoughts exactly. I’ve already joined the 1x road club with 44t 11-32, but this would be the perfect group. 1x for life.

Ron
Ron
4 years ago

Yes! This looks just sick. Kudos for them. The C boys are roaring back into the game. Now the industry just needs to get that bike-assembly hub in eastern europe going to get some OEM spec away from the asian manufacturers.

Sevo
Sevo
4 years ago

You can’t modify levers to go from hydro to cable. Only adapters to go cable to hyrdro.

The Juin Tech stuff is nice, and I tested early samples of the four piston variant. Better than a lot of cable actuated discs and some early hydro discs from others. But the GRX I have on my Otso made me never want to go back to cable actuated brakes. I’d also take SRAM’s hydro brakes over even the 4 piston Juin’s any day.

Knowing that Magura helped develop the campy disc brake line too gives me nothing but confidence as well.

Again, the Juin stuff is nice and out performs the other mechanical discs on the market, but it isn’t even close to modern hydraulics. It is s a great inexpensive replacement.

Oliver
Oliver
4 years ago
Reply to  Sevo

I dunno what ‘early’ version you tested, but what I have on my bike gives up no power to Ultegra. All the reviews and feedback (or of the derivative Yokozuna Ultimos) have also suggested it’s directly comparable in other people’s eyes. It’s better than any of the SRAM road / gravel equipped stuff I’ve tried, and by some margin.

Anyway, I’d happily give up some stopping power for the ease of service and reliability. But I don’t have to, because it has both.

It’s near enough to make no difference re: performance compared to Ultegra, is massively easier to service, and the design inherently has fewer points of failure. Feel is different, but I wouldn’t say it’s lacking.

Dockboy
Dockboy
4 years ago
Reply to  Oliver

How is a hybrid system easier to service? You have to bleed it (like hydraulic systems), trim housing (like all systems), and maintain or adjust cables (like mechanical systems). I see more complexity, not less.

G T
G T
4 years ago
Reply to  Dockboy

I agree, it doesn’t get much easier than bleeding the latest gravel/road stuff from Shimano.

KB
KB
4 years ago
Reply to  Oliver

Looked into Juins for a single speed build I did. Nearly all reviews state exactly what is said above: they are amongst the best mechanical disc brakes, but nowhere near as good as any modern hydro. Same story with the various hybrid TRP offerings.

Buddy
Buddy
4 years ago

@Some Guy
The Ekar crank has the same Q-factor but a different shape to the arm that has much more clearance near the spindle. The Chorus 12 crank arm chicanes inward toward the stays and the Ekar does the opposite. CH12 is still a road group and was not meant to fit large clearance modern gravel frames.

DaveBarnes
DaveBarnes
4 years ago

!x sounds good.
My latest bike is 1×1 (63-inch gearing)

Tyni Tyres
Tyni Tyres
4 years ago

When I calculate the percentage of first 2 tooth jump on the 10-44 cassette, I get 13.33% which agrees with the value calculated by Sheldon Brown’s gear calculator. But on that graph that data point is closer to 10% than it is to 15%. Are they using a different formula to calculate this? Or cheating a bit? Or is this within the margin of error and I am just nitpicking here?

metalate
metalate
4 years ago

Seems like they are calculating % change from the larger gear, not the smaller one. The 15-17 shift is 2/17 = 11.8% of 17 (And 13.3% of 15, as you calculated) . I suppose neither number more right that the other.

Robin
Robin
4 years ago

Actually KMC specifies, I think, that some of their links are reusable while some aren’t.

I’ve been using a SRAM Eagle 12 speed quick link on my Campy 12 speed chain without issue and have disconnected and reassembled through 8 chain waxings.

Dan
Dan
4 years ago
Reply to  Robin

Agreed. Wippermann Connex chain links are also re-usable and even advertised to be by the manufacturer.

nathan b
nathan b
4 years ago

all those gears and they still had to walk up that hill….

Chris
Chris
4 years ago

Bike shop guy here. Generally not super into Campy when the others seem to work better or cost/weigh less and be more compatible with other parts, but MAN this stuff looks great! I mean, their stuff always looks great, but this is really cool and something I would be more likely to recommend to a rider or ride myself.

mudrock
mudrock
4 years ago

I think Campy blew by not going to direct mount rings. That’s a big advantage Sram has over Shimano, and now Campy. Someone will always want to go lower than 38. Gravel/single track gets way steeper than pavement, plus you have to stay seated for traction. Super low gears are a must.

Plus those boots with the rubber band are silly, and the tabs detract from the look of that beautiful crank.

Dylan Sutton
Dylan Sutton
4 years ago
Reply to  mudrock

Agreed on needing lower gears. 30/46 sub-compact double with the 10-44 would give old-school loaded-touring worthy gear ratios and not give up any top end speed. The rubber crank boot isn’t going to come off with your pedal attached, so it beats my why the rubber band is needed!

None Given
None Given
4 years ago

Robin – I also have a SRAM QuickLink on a SuperRecord(?) 12sp with zero issues at all.

threeringcircus
threeringcircus
4 years ago

“I personally think that companies over estimate gravel gearing for the majority of riders who tend to ride loaded bikes and up stupidly steep off-road tracks on their bikes…” Amen. Companies over estimate gearing needs for the majority of riders across all disciplines, IMO.

Btotheizzle
Btotheizzle
4 years ago

YBN and Wippermann advertise theirs as reusable, but correct, no drivetrain manufacturer advertises reusability.

Johan
Johan
4 years ago

I think it would be very difficult, if not impossible to convert hydro shifters to cable. Also indexing would be done in the shifters, so if you want to run the 1×13 setup you will have to buy the complete group.

Johan
Johan
4 years ago

KMC also do reusable links

I_do
I_do
4 years ago

I fail to see how something can be easier to service than something that doesn’t need servicing at all. I was dumb enough to buy a shimano bleed kit for a trip in case I would need it. Guess what is still in the shed completelty unused?
Can you explain what you mean? I”ve heard about some unlucky sram users needing to bleed regulalrly, but other than that there is almost no maintenance required on modern discs. So I see zero room to improve. Let alone so much room to improve you wouldn want a full hydrolic setup.

Dinger
Dinger
4 years ago

There’s so much drag loss in a 10 or 9 (even an 11) that this is for most practical purposes, a 10 speed cassette. I don’t get why they’ve gone this way when this inefficiency is well known. These tiny cogs aren’t really useful.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.