Home > Reviews > Bicycle Reviews

Review: Specialized Aethos Pro road bike outperforms (and redefines) its category

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo
42 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

The new Specialized Aethos is simultaneously simple and amazing. Much like an iPhone, it appears sleek and minimal on the outside, but with incredible technology and performance hiding inside.

Admittedly, Specialized just sort of brought back “a road bike”. But that oversimplification underserves just how good this bike is. Yes, it pushes the boundaries of how light a mass production (or even a full custom, boutique) road bike frame and fork can get. It also pushes the ride quality beyond what I’ve found on other bikes recently.

This thing is an absolute joy to ride, and I had a really, really hard time finding any faults with it. Like, any. OK, maybe one. But let’s look at the details first…

Aethos Frame & Tech Details

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

From a distance, you’d never know this was anything special. The Aethos’ presence is subdued, and I love it. On a recent group ride, I had two different friends ask what it was…the graphics are that subtle. Note the paint color in these photos…it’s blue, yet so thinly applied that you can still see the carbon through it. When the sun catches it just right, it’s gorgeous.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

Closer up, little curves and shapes appear. Slopes leading into the head tube…

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

…a slight flare the the base of the seat tube, tapering at the ends of the head tube…

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike has a threaded bottom bracket

…and even a little bump at the front of the chainstays as they wrap under the bottom bracket. The tubes are all comparatively thin by today’s standards, which is part of how this frame ends up so light. Claimed weight for the Pro and Expert models is just 699g for size 56, with paint.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

It does this with normal features and standards, like a BSA threaded bottom bracket.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

The frames are designed around electronic drivetrains, so you’ll only find wire ports on the complete bikes. It’s cleaner, and also less hardware to save weight. But, on the Pro and Expert versions, there are cable ports and hardware you can attach if you want to build up a frameset with a mechanical group. But whyyyyyyyy….?

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

Dropouts and thru axles are minimal…

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

…with beautifully recessed ends. Even the brake hose routing is clean, leaving almost nothing visible.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

The Alpinist seatpost only comes in 27.2mm diameters, to the top tube wraps around the thinner seat tube, directly into the seatstays. This wider stance gives the bike decent tire clearance (pics below), and more laterally/torsional rigidity.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

Just a couple pics of the carbon layers visible through the paint.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike closeup frame details

The front derailleur mount is removable, with a cover plate available for 1x setups.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike tire clearance

The bikes come with 700×26 tires, but Specialized says it’ll clear up to 700×32.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike cockpit details

The cockpit is comfortable, with their carbon handlebar with flattened ergonomic shaping on the tops.

specialized aethos pro ultregra di2 road bike with roval alpinist lightweight seatpost closeup

The Roval Alpinist seatpost is crazy light (claimed 136g), but you’ll want a saddle with a cutout in order to easily access the adjustment bolts.

Rounding out the spec are their Roval Alpinist CL wheels, which aren’t tubeless compatible. And this would be my only complaint – tubeless is the future.

The S-Works 120tpi Gripton tires have puncture protection, but that didn’t stop a piece of glass from cutting through to the tube and flatting me on my first ride.

As much as I love and prefer a tubeless setup, I’ll admit that these tires rode really well. And the wheels are so light, spooling up quickly and handling on par with expectations for a high end wheelset, maybe better considering their weight. More on their performance below.

Specialized Aethos Actual Weight

specialized aethos pro ultegra di2 road bike actual weight shown on a scale

I tested the Aethos Pro Ultegra Di2 in a size 58. Actual weight for this bike was 14.86lb (6.74kg). That’s without pedals, but does include the tubes in the tires as it comes out of the box.

Retail price for this model is $7,400. That gets you a complete Shimano Ultegra Di2 group, S-Works Short & Shallow carbon bar w/ Supacaz bar tape, Specialized alloy stem, and Body Geometry Pro saddle with hollow ti rails and carbon base. The standout components are the Roval Alpinist carbon seatpost, and their ultralight Alpinist CL wheels…which are not tubeless compatible, hence the tubes. They come wrapped with 700×26 Specialized S-Works Turbo 120tpi tires with BlackBelt puncture protection.

Aethos Ride Review

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo

As we’d expect from a featherweight bike, it climbs like a dream. It feels light, in a good way. There’s “bad” light, and then there’s a well-spec’d bike that feels and rides light without getting noodly or scary. The Aethos is the latter, offering a solid, stable ride while also being ridiculously light.

But let’s be real…a bike that’s a couple pounds lighter is like throwing your water bottle off before ascending. It’s the sum of the parts that makes a bike climb well, and this one’s got some good parts.

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo

Everything starts with the frame. Specialized has all the charts and graphs to prove the Aethos (even the much lighter S-Works version) is stiff in all the right ways and places.

On the road, that translates into a bike that handles power input smoothly and efficiently. There are bikes that feel like they have more instantaneous acceleration, but I’ll take the pleasant smoothness of this bike any day. Don’t get me wrong, the Aethos is no slouch, it just doesn’t have to prove itself by hammering your backside.

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo

Its handling is spot on. Front to rear, it feels really well balanced and just drives through corners. I just want to keep saying smooth, smooth, smooth…but also precise. It just rolled into, around, and out of corners so well that I could really concentrate on my entry and exit points, maintain more speed, and not have to worry about whether the bike would obey my commands.

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo

2021 specialized aethos pro lightweight road bike review and action riding photo

Descending on the Aethos is equally enjoyable. The bike was every bit as stable at 42mph as at 15mph. We have one particularly fast, sweeping descent near a quarry here, where pebbles and grit often litter the road, the pavement’s less than perfect, and it’s easy to hit 40+mph curving into the bottom of it. I’ve never felt more stable hitting that section than on this bike.

As much as I try to avoid heaping glowing praise on something (because, you know, we’re supposed to be objective-bordering-on-snarky, right?), hot damn do I love this bike! It honestly does everything well, it’s comfortable, and it’s light as sin. Win, win, win.

Specialized.com

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

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

42 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
mudrock
mudrock
3 years ago

Such a fanboy you are, but that’s refreshing in the cycling press I suppose. Love that this bike stayed away from proprietary seat posts and cockpits. but the lack of tubeless compatibility is a huge mistake. Even the pros are going tubeless. So many advantages over tubes and sew-ups.

Gregory Thomas
Gregory Thomas
3 years ago
Reply to  mudrock

The Alpinist rims have a tubeless-style inner rim wall shape. Nobody intentionally designing a rim strictly for tubes would use that shape. Considering also that the Light-Bicycle equivalent rims (almost guaranteed to be the manufacturer) are labeled as tubeless compatible, my guess is that they were supposed to be for tubeless and for one reason or another didn’t pass Specialized’s internal testing for tubeless use. It could be something like, due to the ultralight construction, too much rim compression happens with tubeless beads, lowering the spoke tension too much, and the nipple seat area cannot handle the required increase in spoke tension. Or that same tubeless bead deforms the rim irregularly or inconsistently… Etc etc.

2pacfan187
3 years ago
Reply to  Gregory Thomas

Do you have any strong evidence that LB is making the rims for Roval/Specialized?

Greg
Greg
3 years ago
Reply to  2pacfan187

“Medium” evidence. Specialized releases a new wheel or rim, and Light Bicycle has a matching new rim at the exact same time (not months later). Also more than one former Specialized employee being “99% sure”.

Miclaroc
Miclaroc
3 years ago

So damned glad it’s not tubeless

Alex Ben
Alex Ben
3 years ago

Can you speak on the stiffness compared to the Tarmac SL7, thanks

dang3rtown
3 years ago

Other than in TT, tubeless is actually falling off a bit for road. The biggest reason is that it just doesn’t offer much of a real advantage over a standard clincher with a latex tube. Weight and RR appear to be slighter better with latex if anything and the puncture resistance is nice but not a big enough issue that it makes the hassle of tubeless worth it.

The other issue with tubeless is Freds have been destroying their nice carbon wheels at alarming rates by over-inflation. Outside a track exactly zero people need more than 80psi or so but fat old rich guys keep trying to ride tubeless at 100psi and their wheels are literally exploding.

scottg
scottg
3 years ago

Looking forward to SeaOtter 2022, with the new 7.85% lighter and 26.7% stiffer Aethos IIs
with 3.02% improved compliance. I have hefted a friends Aethos, best bike ever for roof rack
users.

Mac
Mac
3 years ago

As if you could never use a different pair of wheels. Come on, whiners!

Miclaroc
Miclaroc
3 years ago

Must also say having seen them in person and side-by-side with Sl7s the Aethos is so minimalist as to be downright “generic” looking and certainly boring compared to the sexiness of the Sl7 in relative terms. However, that being said, this bike does sound really promising and innovative and perhaps next iteration of the Sl7 (8?) will be some hybrid of the two. Either way I wish I could afford both…. I really wouldn’t know how to choose just one. It’s also kind of a shame going for ultra lightweight they don’t make the s works mechanical compatible nor rim brake compatible given the aim here…

DY
DY
3 years ago
Reply to  Miclaroc

I’d say it depends on the way you use it. If you race, get an SL7. It’ll be the faster bike.
If you don’t race and like to cruise along and enjoy being outdoors over maximum speed, I could see someone choosing the Aethos.

blahnblahblah
blahnblahblah
3 years ago

is it tcr good though?

Jorge Tomé
Jorge Tomé
3 years ago

The weight is really not impressive…
At 6740g without bottle cages, without pedals, without GPS support…
Almost achieved to underpass my gravel bike weight with 29er 2.1 tyres, including 2 pedals, 2 bottle cages, GPS support and rear light support.
Well done Spezy!

E B
E B
3 years ago

I was looking at this in a shop the other day. It is beautiful. But the price tag… ouch.
I have an original Cervelo R3. I’ve used a Dremel daintily to remove the original cable stops, and consulted with a carbon repair guy on where the most “meat” was on the layup when I couldn’t re-use the rivet hole. Anyway, I’ve Di2’d it.
Rides amazing.
Lighter as a complete bike than the Atheos as pictured.
Has tubeless, but lacks disc brakes.
Anyway, the point is you can achieve beautiful light nice riding bikes in different ways than expunging all the cash from your wallet. It feels new again, or just renewed.

Erol Orhun
3 years ago
Reply to  E B

Interesting, can you tell a bit more about what mods you´ve done to your Cervélo?

2pacfan187
3 years ago

Do you have any strong evidence that LB is manufacturing rims for Roval/Specialized?

jason d west
jason d west
3 years ago
Reply to  2pacfan187

I was always under the impression that LB are a seller of high quality carbon hoops and not an actual manufacturer of carbon goods.

tinkertowncycle
3 years ago

This is pathetic. It’s just another UGLY black-out (specialized) bike. It’s just a road bike! Nothing special. This bike is not doing anything (other than disc brakes) that a bike from a 100 years ago has already done. I like checking out bikerumor now to get a kick out of the advertising like this.

You all do realize this is just another road bike? A cheaply made carbon toy. NOTHING SPECIAL GOING ON WITH THIS BIKE. NOTHING. Maybe designed complications, but it’s not SPECIAL.

If anything it’s another specialized down grade.

Why don’t ya’ll do some research into real bikes? Save up some money for a little while and get a real bike you love not a piece of garbage you’ll be sick of in a few months to maybe two years.

Robin
Robin
3 years ago

Can you define what a “real bike” is? Please be specific.

jason d west
jason d west
3 years ago

Which bike should l be getting?

tinkertowncycle
3 years ago
Reply to  jason d west

Nobillete, Moots, Eriksen, Wiegle, Parlee, Gunnar, or anything bike made by a human being you can shake hands with. Doesn’t even have to be a “brand” anyone has heard of, but I’d say stay away from large brands like Specialized, Trek, etc. It’s like going to McDonalds, BurgeKing, Wendys, Etc. for what you think is a great burger.

Robin
Robin
3 years ago

You do realize, don’t you, that humans do the carbon fiber layup, don’t you?

Special Ized
1 year ago

I get it. You want a bike that gives you a warm fuzzy feeling. Specialized, Trek, Giant etc. spends more money on R&D than all those brands put together. As a result offer bikes that are far more advanced. I bet you still have a VHS in the house and a cassette in the car. It’s time to move on. Get you a big screen with wireless and an electric car and start streaming. Oh and a Carbon Fiber bike.

Tom
Tom
3 years ago

That’s a pretty strong reaction. You do realize that there is convergence in bikes, correct? Using the same set of constraints (materials, form factor) and goals, bikes will become more alike. But there is certainly more difference between this and the SL7, vs the old Italian/French/American steel bikes that we all used to fetishize. maybe you are tired of the relentless commercialization of bikes. Guess what, that’s how the world has always/will always work in a consumer market. Ignore it or have an aneurysm, your choice. And no, I’m not a Spec fan boi, have never owned one. But I think they make good stuff. I just never got a bro deal, and never felt like dropping the $ for one.

Burn
Burn
3 years ago
Reply to  Tom

Convergence. Exactly. Thus our economy. Thus the American economy.

Involuntary Soul
Involuntary Soul
3 years ago

nothing to see here, Cannondale did the same with supersix 10 years ago

https://www.velonews.com/gear/road-gear/a-detailed-look-at-cannondales-supersix-evo/

MTB guy
MTB guy
3 years ago

Was thinking the same thing when I was reading the article, then thought about BB30…dooo

Martin Hayman
Martin Hayman
3 years ago

What an interesting story! And, since I already own one of these Cannondales, it saves me the grief of wishing for this latest — very attractive — Spesh model. Oh, and no trouble ever with the Pressfit bb.

ChrisF
ChrisF
3 years ago

Please god don’t say “Pinarello” LOL

Robin
Robin
3 years ago

That’s “medium” evidence? That sounds like rumor and poorly quantified and possibly spurious correlation.

Pedro
Pedro
3 years ago

What is your frame size? 49? Does your “gravel” bike have disc brakes? What brand is it?

Bryin
Bryin
3 years ago

A good bike? Yes… Worth $7400? No way. This is a made in China bike (also wheels, bar, stem) with an Ultegra group. Costs Specialized about $1000 to make without marketing costs. We will see how “great” the frame is when Luther Teknick cuts one apart on YouTube. I have NOTHING against the bike or Specialized but the value of package is very low.

Onrhodes
3 years ago

And with this mentality don’t but a Ford, Toyota, Honda, Chevy, etc. Buy a car from the small fabrication shop down the street. You’ll be fine.

There is absolutely no reason not to buy a bike from a big manufacturer. Nor is there a reason not to go buy a moots, IF, Seven, etc. I think the big guys/gals like Specialized, Trek and Cannondale have way more $ to push engineering and test concepts. I can’t really think of the last time a small time builder really changed how the industry builds bikes.

Robin
Robin
3 years ago
Reply to  Onrhodes

^This. Buy what you want and makes you happy, not what some anonymous commenter in an internet comment section says you need to buy. His agenda won’t necessarily make you happy or give you the ride you want.

nphone
nphone
3 years ago

My Roval Alpinist CL HG Wheelset box says made in Taiwan. Light Bicycle is in Xiamen, China.
Are you sure they are the same? At $1600 with US warranty at any dealer vs $1300 from light, you don’t save much.

FYI The test sheet is in traditional Chinese, not Simplified.

lolo
lolo
3 years ago

My 2017 Cannondale SuperSix Evo HiMod Disc is in fact lighter (6.85 kg complete with pedals, 2 water bottles, Garmin mount & cadence sensor), built with mechanical Dura-Ace and Mavic Cosmic wheels. It is also originally minimal/old school without the Ethos hype for the trendy ones.

Bennett Shane
Bennett Shane
3 years ago

If you already had an aero race bike for fast group rides, and wanted a second road bike for super long and hilly days on mixed quality roads, would you rather have an Aethos, or a Canyon Endurace?

Chris
Chris
3 years ago
Reply to  Bennett Shane

Aethos. But I do not know Canyon. Aethos is just so light that hilly rides feel flat. My husband has a Roubaix for longer endurance rides on less than smooth roads. He loves that. But it is about 2kg heavier than Aethos.

Jeff
Jeff
3 years ago
Reply to  Bennett Shane

I owned a Canyon Endurace…. The geometry didn’t suit me. If you are used to race bike geometry, you might not like endurance bike geometry. I don’t know how to describe the Endurace other than not too exciting.

The Aethos is a dream if you want aggressive geometry but comfort and light weight. I just got mine (Pro) and have just a few rides on it, but love it. And yes, it does remind me my old SuperSix Evo… If only they had internally routed cabling down the tubes and didn’t have the odd thru axle in front, QR in back on the disc models. The Aethos feels like what the SuperSix could have been, but it’s definitely better than the previous generation S6.

Chris
Chris
3 years ago

I bought the Aethos S-works Dura Ace Di2 last weekend. My first ride was an absolute dream – 84km around the lake here and was still wishing I could do more. I cannot get myself off the thing now and I look forward to biking everyday. Totally different bike than what I am used to, which is the Turbo Creo SL that I use for commuting (I live in Switzerland and do not have a flat ride into work). I do not regret for a second the purchase despite the horrifyingly high price tag. I tried the Pro model Aethos as well before deciding to go with S-Works. The weight difference between the two is almost not noticeable. Both are insanely light (especially when I compare it with my Creo!). The S-Works just felt better to me, so that’s what I went with. I have already ridden in a downpour on slick roads downhill, and I have to say that I felt more stable on the Aethos than I do on my Creo gravel, which was surprising to me. I will keep the Creo as my commuter bike so I don’t turn up to work a complete sweaty mess, but will ride the Aethos for workouts and fun the rest of the time.

Jonathan Coleman
Jonathan Coleman
2 years ago

If you’re riding a 58cm can I ask how tall you are? I’m between a 58 and a 61 and can’t decide. I’m 6ft 1.5 with long legs and short body

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.