At 120 years old, Olympia certainly has some history. The brand that is now relatively unknown in the US also has some history here as well, being imported through a bike shop in New York in the 70’s and 80’s. After a long hiatus, Olympia is continuing their resurgence in North America through the hands of Stage Race Distribution. Designed and made in Italy, the Olympia 949 is a prime example of the brand’s line up which includes everything from e-bikes to road bikes.
We were offered a chance to check out this sub 18lb race machine that was equipped with Xentis Squad CC carbon wheels. How could we say no?
Our review bike was equipped with a full XX1 drivetrain, DT Swiss XRR470 carbon fork, and a combination of Ritchey WCS parts that made up the cockpit. This is pretty close to the stock XX1 build with the exception of the Xentis Squad 2.5 wheels. At 17.6 pounds with a rigid fork, there are lighter 29ers out there (mostly custom), but the weight was achieved without going to extremes for the components – and come on, it’s under 18 pounds! Of course, the 949g weight of the frame (hence the name) means you could build it up lighter if you tried.
Something most super light frames don’t have though, is a 12×142 rear axle – and at 64 grams it’s one of the lightest we’ve seen. With such a light frame, the thru axle at the rear is part of what makes the bike so efficient. Little flex or wind up is detectable in the frame even during full sprints. In order to clean up the look for 1x drivetrains, the frame features a removable e-type front derailleur mount.
Cable routing is mostly external with the exception of the rear derailleur cable routed through the seat stay. It pops out of the stay just in front of the rear derailleur for a nice line to the stop.
The frame itself is a beautiful Italian made carbon design that is laid up in a single mold without any joints using a vacuum bag technique for a true monocoque frame. Like most carbon frames the 949 is built from different types of carbon including UD M30 in places for longitudinal stiffness, Toray T700 multiaxial carbon for improved torsional rigidity, and a Kevlar/carbon twill for vibration deadening.
As the only downer we ran into with the bike, we had a bit of trouble getting the headset to stay in adjustment. We were assured this was just a fluke, and not something they’ve encountered before. The 949 has a tapered head tube that was running a reducer headset for the 1 1/8″ fork.
Olympia opts for a press fit BB92 bottom bracket system rather than a BB30 or PF30. Also note the huge tire clearance.
