Roubaix
A carbon frame endurance bike with mid-range components and hydraulic disc brakes.
Compare the full range
Manufacturer Price
$2,600Frame | Carbon |
---|---|
Suspension | Hardtail |
Fork | Carbon |
Wheels | 700c Aluminum |
Drivetrain | 2 × 10 |
Groupset | Tiagra, Praxis |
Brakes | Hydraulic Disc |
For This Bike
Based on build material and quality level of the frame, fork, wheelset, groupset, suspension system, and more.
Compare the full Roubaix model range
View ComparisonSep 2022 · Will Jones
A lack of mudguard mounts holds it back from being the ultimate ‘real world’ road bike
The Future Shock is genuinely brilliant
Seatpost flex makes long rides a breeze
Race levels of stiffness and power transfer
No mudguard mounts
Difficult to work on
Expensive
Oct 2021 · Ben Delaney
Shimano’s latest R9200 Dura-Ace group has a few options, but none of them include mechanical shifting; it’s Di2 only for Shimano’s top racing group from here on out. At Paris-Roubaix, Peter Sagan has voted with his bike that he prefers still mechanical shifting for the world’s hardest cobblestone race, thank you very much. In 2018, … Continued
Oct 2021 · David Kennedy
REVAMPED AND STILL A WINNER
Jun 2020 · Stu Bowers
The 2020 Specialized S-Works Roubaix is as comfortable as previous generations while matching the speed of the Tarmac SL6
Nipping at the Tarmac's heel in terms of performance
But with much greater comfort and increased versatility at the turn of a dial
Impressively light
Fantastic control
To buy an S-Works means nearly £10k
But cost is subjective
Jun 2020 · Warren Rossiter
This Future Shock-equipped bike promises comfort and speed, and is one of our Endurance Bike of the Year 2020 contenders
Road smoothing
Speedy handling
Not the greatest-value proposition when it comes to the wheels
Mar 2020 · James Bracey
The latest Roubaix has more versatility with a promise of better performance. Does it deliver?
Ride performance
Frame quality
Future shock does a good job of smoothing out the road
Heavy wheels suck away potential speed
Feb 2020 · Stu Kerton
Fast, sweet-handling bike with great comfort levels, but I'd like some control over the spring rate
Handling unaffected by rough roads at speed
Ultegra Di2 groupset is faultless in use
No lockout on Future Shock, which means it bounces under hard efforts
Apr 2019
At the peak of the Spring Classics, we had the chance to put Specialized’s all-new Future Shock 2.0 front suspension Roubaix endurance road bike to a true test on the bergs, pavé & wind swept roads that define those iconic one-day races. While the Roubaix certainly proved its mettle with Phillipe Gilbert winning Paris-Roubaix on …
Frame | FACT 10R, Rider First Engineered™ (RFE), FreeFoil Shape Library tubes, threaded BB, 12x142mm thru-axle, flat-mount disc BB Standard: BSA, 68mm, Threaded Colors: Gloss Tarmac Black / Abalone; Gloss Sky Blue / Tarmac Black; Gloss Raspberry / Tarmac Black |
---|---|
Fork | Future Shock 1.5 w/ Smooth Boot, 12x100mm thru-axle, flat-mount disc |
Bottom Bracket | Praxis 68mm BSA |
Stem | Future Stem, Comp |
Handlebar | Specialized Hover Comp, Alloy, 125mm Drop, 75mm Reach w/Di2 Hole |
Saddle | Body Geometry Power Sport, steel rails |
Seatpost | S-Works Pave Type: Rigid |
Rear Derailleur | Shimano Tiagra, GS cage, 10-speed |
---|---|
Front Derailleur | Shimano Tiagra, braze-on |
Crank | Praxis Alba, 50/34T |
Shifters | Shimano Tiagra hydraulic disc, ST4725 |
Cassette | Shimano Tiagra, 10-speed, 11-34t |
Chain | KMC X10, 10-Speed |
Brakes | Hydraulic Disc Type: Hydraulic Disc |
Rims | Front: Axis Elite Disc, Rear: Axis Elite Disc |
---|---|
Tires | Front: Specialized Espoir Sport, 60TPI, wire bead, double BlackBelt protection, 700x28mm, Rear: Specialized Espoir Sport, 60TPI, wire bead, double BlackBelt protection, 700x28mm |
Last updated July 30
Not listed for 643 days