Specialized S-Works Roubaix review | Cyclist

Specialized S-Works Roubaix review

VERDICT: The 2020 Specialized S-Works Roubaix is as comfortable as previous generations while matching the speed of the Tarmac SL6

RATING:

HIGHS: 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

LOWS: To buy an S-Works means nearly £10k, but cost is subjective...

PRICE: £9,499

The 2020 Specialized S-Works Roubaix is the latest in a long line of the Specialized Roubaix family. Over a decade and a half it has established itself as the bike of choice for those seeking a comfortable, lightweight, endurance road bike with a tall front end.

On the afternoon of Sunday 14th April 2019, Philippe Gilbert and I had something in common. As Paris-Roubaix reached its climax, we were both riding the same brand new Specialized S-Works Roubaix at more than 50kmh.

Where we differed was that Gilbert was on his way to adding a fourth Monument to his palmarès in northern France while I, according to Strava, was on my way to an unremarkable 891st place on some random segment as I descended from the mountains in Mallorca.

Gilbert was not the only one riding the Roubaix bike at Roubaix. There were three in the top five: Gilbert’s Deceuninck-QuickStep teammate Yves Lampaert in third and Peter Sagan in fifth.

In fact, there were five inside the top eight – the stuff of dreams for Specialized, which had only launched the bike to the public a few days prior. For me, though, that didn’t come as a huge shock.

Buy the Specialized S-Works Roubaix Di2 from Rutland Cycles for £9,499

It is about the bike

Having had a month or so road-testing the new S-Works Roubaix prior to its launch – including a week in Mallorca as well as riding it over much of the Roubaix race route a few weeks earlier – I was already convinced it would provide a significant advantage in the Queen of the Classics.

By Specialized’s own admission the old Roubaix had morphed into a bike far removed from the nature of the race it was originally built for.

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‘We had this bike that had these really innovative ways to deal with shock dampening and smooth out the ride, but our pros never wanted to race on it because, quite simply, it wasn’t light, fast or aggressive enough for them,’ says product manager John Cordoba.

This new version, then, was about pulling the Roubaix back into the performance sector – more aero, lighter and with geometry closer to the Tarmac – but somehow without sacrificing the comfort it had become renowned for.

I watched the final part of this year’s Paris-Roubaix in a cafe in Mallorca. The place was chock-full of cyclists, and despite many of them chattering about Gilbert’s new bike, when the race was over and people started leaving, not one of them noticed this test bike leaning against the railings outside.

My guess is that most mistook it for a Tarmac. That’s entirely understandable. By virtue of engineers targeting a racier fit and a reduction in both aero drag and weight, the Roubaix’s new aero tube profiles are almost identical to its thoroughbred sibling, but also Specialized has packaged the all-new Future Shock 2.0 suspension unit extremely neatly.

For starters, it’s barely noticeable beneath the smooth rubber cover. What is immediately perceptible on the road, though, aside from the significantly more aggressive riding position, is the improvement in the shock’s performance compared to its predecessor.

Shocking results

The original Future Shock – a spring at the top of the steerer, beneath the stem, which first appeared on the Roubaix in 2017 – felt somewhat too bouncy and frequently bottomed out as it had no damping whatsoever.

That’s been remedied, and while it is principally the same coil-sprung core with 20mm travel, there’s now an adjustable hydraulic damper to control both rebound and compression strokes.

A half-turn of the dial on the stem cap is all that’s required to alter the ride characteristics dramatically. The dial is easy to reach and use, even when bumping over cobbles. If you watch footage from Paris-Roubaix you can even see Gilbert doing this.

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Turning anti-clockwise opens the damper for the springiest ride feel, while clockwise stiffens it back up.

It’s not a complete lockout – the shock can still be compressed if you use a large enough force – but it’s sufficient that even when I was hauling on the bars in full sprint mode I couldn’t notice that it was sapping my speed in any way.

In terms of responsiveness and solidity the S-Works Roubaix feels every bit the race bike. What’s more, at 7.27kg it’s firmly in race bike territory, only 470g over the UCI weight limit despite the shock and disc brakes.

It certainly never felt lacking when I attacked long climbs such as Mallorca’s famed Sa Calobra. With the shock in ‘open’ mode the effect on comfort is profound. The movement feels refined and progressive, noticeably absorbing the force of sizable impacts.

But beyond just making the ride comfier, it undoubtedly helps reduce fatigue and enhances control too, as my own 10-hour ride around Roubaix demonstrated. I was able to carry more speed on the cobbles, feeling assured that I wasn’t about to get bucked into a ditch.

The shock’s benefits extend beyond the cobbles too. It’s sensitive enough to soak up high-frequency road buzz, and hence I still found plenty to be gained on my local lanes. It’s hard to see a downside when it takes just a fraction of a second to switch the settings on the go.

Comfort at the rear is taken care of by a new, slicker D-sectioned Pavé aero post, replacing the old (and in my opinion rather ugly) C-GR post.

Here too Specialized has managed to balance the conflicting demands of aerodynamics and compliance with enough comfort provided by the post to ensure the bike feels balanced to ride.

The post is clamped 65mm lower down inside the seat tube, resulting in plenty of flex to soak up bumps in the road. Crucially, though, there’s no tangible movement during normal pedalling.

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Smooth and fast

Don’t be misled. Just because the new Roubaix has an active suspension system it is not straying into gravel bike territory. Its geometry is too aggressive for that. Besides, there is only clearance for up to 33mm tyres, which limits it in that regard as well.

Compared to its predecessor, this new Roubaix feels a good deal faster. I can’t verify the data, but I’m prepared to believe Specialized when it says this bike is now a match aerodynamically for the Tarmac and faster than the original Venge.

All told, Specialized has taken lessons learned from the old Roubaix, combined them with the best bits of the Venge and Tarmac, and the result has impressed me immensely. In the past I definitely would not have considered myself a Roubaix customer, but now I’d have to reconsider.

Buy the Specialized S-Works Roubaix Di2 from Rutland Cycles for £9,499

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Spec

Frame S-Works Roubaix
Groupset Sram Red eTap AXS HRD
Brakes Sram Red eTap AXS HRD
Chainset Sram Red eTap AXS HRD
Cassette Sram Red eTap AXS HRD
Bars S-Works Carbon Hover 
Stem Specialized Future
Seatpost Specialized Pavé 
Saddle S-Works Power
Wheels Roval CLX32 Disc, Specialized Turbo Cotton Hell of the North 28mm tyres
Weight 7.27kg (56cm)
Contact specialized.com

All reviews are fully independent and no payments have been made by companies featured in reviews

First ride review: The all-new Specialized S-Works Roubaix

Stu Bowers

Over the past decade and a half, Specialized’s iconic Roubaix has established itself as the bike of choice for those seeking a comfortable, lightweight, endurance road bike with a tall front end.

In doing so, it has evolved considerably from the Spring Classics racing heritage it was originally founded upon – leaving Specialized with something of a dilemma.

‘We had this bike with some really innovative ways of dealing with shock damping and smoothing out the ride, but our pros weren’t keen to use it because quite simply it wasn’t light and fast or aggressive enough for them,’ Roubaix product manager John Cordoba told me when we initially spoke about the new design.

Buy the Specialized Roubaix from Sigma Sports

The goal with this new version, then, was to pull the Roubaix back into the performance sector – making it more aero, lighter and with geometry much closer to the race-focussed Tarmac – without sacrificing the comfort the Roubaix had become renowned for. An ambitious target indeed.

Shocking results

Since 2017, the headline act in the Roubaix’s endurance billing has been Specialized’s Future Shock, an active front suspension system consisting of a coil spring beneath the stem.

Developed by Specialized’s Chris D’Aluisio, it was a clever concept in theory. In reality, though, it had its limitations.

The most obvious, from my own experience in testing the old model, was a lack of any damping, which often led to the bike pogoing up and down in an uncontrolled manner on rougher surfaces.

That’s not to say it was ineffective at softening the blows over bumpy surfaces. It just lacked a little refinement.

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Enter the new Future Shock 2.0. It retains the same 20mm travel as before (a term Specialized prefers over axial compliance as it relates to actual vertical movement and not fore/aft compliance such as might be created by, say, flex in a fork).

The big difference, though, is the addition of a hydraulic damper controlled by a dial situated on the head tube, which enables you to fine-tune both rebound and compression damping.

It’s a vast improvement on the old system – in fact, functionally it’s night and day, with the added bonus of being sleeker-looking than before, and minimally intrusive.

My initial rides on the Roubaix were quick jaunts around my local lanes, intended merely as an introduction to the bike ahead of something far bigger and gnarlier. Yet the dramatic improvements in the new design were evident from the very first pedal strokes – and the very first turn of that handily located damping adjuster.

With those initial introductions out of the way, it was time to take the Roubaix on a pilgrimage back to the bike’s heartland – the cobbled streets of northern France used by the Queen of the Classics, Paris-Roubaix.

Fast and smooth

A single ride lasting more than 10 hours – a good amount of which was on some of northern France’s most iconic cobbled secteurs – provided more than enough time to get to know the Roubaix intimately.

I’ve ridden the official Paris-Roubaix Sportive in the past and finished with my body in a state of ruin – especially my hands, which were left blistered and bloodied – so I’m well aware of the kind of torture the cobbles can dish out.

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And with conditions on the day proving about as bad as they can get – it was blowing a gale and pouring with rain – it proved an extreme test of both the bike’s capabilities and my own.

Yet despite my misgivings, at the end of a long day in the saddle spent hitting cobbled sectors at full gas over and over, my hands, arms and the rest of me were still in a surprisingly good state by the end.

It was a hugely telling endorsement of the new Roubaix’s unquestionable – and I’d go so far as to say unmatched, on an equivalent road bike anyway – ability to deal with the full spectrum of bump forces.

And I don’t just mean at the bars. The rear end was impressive too, but I’ll come back to that shortly.

Reducing fatigue and physical damage is one thing, but it’s all too easy for compliance and comfort to come at the expense of an equally vital characteristic on any bike – control.

Yet even on slick and greasy cobbles, I still felt confident pushing hard on the Roubaix.

Buy the Specialized Roubaix from Sigma Sports

It’s a simple fact that riding a bike that feels jittery and twitchy on a rough surface makes a rider more likely to back off, especially through corners.

Conversely, then, a bike that feels stable and planted will give you the confidence to ride at higher speeds and take corners faster and with more confidence.

Not only did I feel completely in control on the new Roubaix thanks to not being battered as much, but the feedback through the bike was excellent, letting me know exactly where I stood in terms of grip and road handling at all times.

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I was undoubtedly carrying more speed on the Roubaix S-Works into cobbled turns and sectors, such as the treacherous Trouée d’Arenberg, than I would have on a more rigid, harsh-feeling road bike.

I would certainly concur with Specialized’s tag line, ‘smooth is fast’. This bike is without doubt both.

Crucially, though, when I was back on smoother surfaces and wanted to get my head down and up the power, there was no sense of the bike reacting like a wallowy, soft, comfort bike.

A flick of the dial and the Roubaix was instantly capable of delivering a far punchier and more aggressive feel, much more along the lines of – you’ve guessed it – the Tarmac.

It’s certainly faster than the previous Roubaix, and by a good margin too (on the basis that if you can really feel and notice a difference then it’s clearly not a small one).

I certainly have no reason to disbelieve Specialized’s suggestion (based on its own wind-tunnel data) that the new Roubaix is as quick aerodynamically as both the first generation Venge and the current Tarmac SL6.

That’s not to say it’s likely to become the die-hard racer’s favourite in Specialized’s stable. Those with a purely racing mentality will still be best off on the Tarmac (unless some of that racing is taking place on cobbles, that is).

Road not gravel

On the other hand, the new Roubaix doesn’t feel like it is straying too far into gravel bike territory either. Its geometry is simply too aggressive to be a specialist off-road machine, regardless of the active suspension system. Besides, there is only clearance for up to 33mm tyres.

The previous Roubaix was one of the first bikes to utilise the concept of clamping the seatpost much lower down inside the frame to allow the post to flex over more of its length than just the exposed part.

The new Pave seatpost continues on the same vein, and why not? It was an ingenious idea that many other brands have since imitated.

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Like what you see? Fancy riding the new Roubaix? Come to the Cyclist Track Days where you will get the chance to ride the world’s best bike, including the all-new S-Works Roubaix.

Tickets are available here.

There’s a palpable downwards and rearward motion on bigger strikes, and although no movement is apparent during normal pedalling, it seems to deal well with diffusing the high frequency buzz from the road surface.

It’s certainly as good as the older CG-R post, and to my mind a much neater-looking package – in truth I’ve never been a fan of that odd-looking Z-shaped design.

The seatpost plays an important role in helping the Roubaix strike a necessary balance from front to rear. Being superbly sprung just at the front end would feel disjointed if the rear end was, by contrast, still harsh.

Thankfully, Specialized has achieved enough compliance in the rear to manage this aspect well too.

Dial it up

Which brings us to the dial adjustment for the damper, which sits neatly in place of the stem cap, and is really intuitive and easy to use.

Product manager Cordoba said he felt most riders would likely set the dial to either fully on or off, but I’m not so sure I agree.

I regularly found myself trying out various points in the graded scale of damping (the dial clicks with each step of adjustment), and I often found the sweet spot to be somewhere in the middle of the scale, or a few clicks back from full.

I guess this will vary based on the terrain and a rider’s weight and riding style, but my point is it’s not as simple as an on/off switch. It’s way more progressive than that, which is a good thing.

I should point out that even when set to maximum, the system is still never fully locked out. It’s always possible to overcome the damper to some degree and achieve some movement.

However, you’ll be unlikely to notice it on the road – not if you’re anywhere near my (69kg) body weight anyway.

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The groupset on this S-Works model is Sram’s latest Red eTap AXS 12-speed and it makes an ideal partner for this bike.

Not only does the wireless shifting lend the bike a super-clean aesthetic but the clutched rear derailleur proved a noticeable asset on the cobbles. I was genuinely surprised by how quiet the bike was. There was no chain slap or chatter to speak of.

The wheels are equally well suited to the overall package. I’ve reviewed the Roval CLX 32 wheels in the past, and found them to be superb. Roval – Specialized’s in-house wheel brand – has really upped its game and is able to go shoulder-to-shoulder with the big guns these days.

The Roubaix came specced with Specialized’s own cotton Turbo 28mm ‘Hell of the North’ tyres, and I stuck with the supplied inner tubes for my early testing.

However, the wheels are tubeless ready (and are supplied with the valves), which makes the upgrade to tubeless quick and easy. This is an upgrade I fully plan to make in due course, as I feel it could potentially make the bike feel quicker still, and will only add to the overall comfort.

If there’s anything I would want to change, it’s the handlebars. The riser-bar Specialized fits on the Roubaix as standard isn’t for me, but that’s a tiny gripe, and easily addressed.

For some, though, it might even be seen as a positive, as it keeps the front end from being overly low and aggressive straight out of the box.

Verdict

Overall, I can’t deny this new Roubaix S-Works has impressed me immensely.

I wouldn’t previously have considered myself a potential Roubaix customer, but now I have to reconsider.

Specialized has done an excellent job of drawing on the vast expertise it has gained from building super-fast aero machines like the Venge, not to mention its outright racer, the Tarmac.

Buy the Specialized Roubaix from Sigma Sports

And let’s not forget that with its older generations of the Roubaix and its all-road Diverge it knows a thing or two about comfort too.

The new Specialized S-Works Roubaix really feels like a successful convergence of all these platforms.

I can’t see too many downsides, unless you are an outright racer who cares for very little besides saving every possible gram of weight in the pursuit of every last ounce of performance.

If so, the Tarmac will still be the better choice for. But for nearly anyone else, this new Roubaix is going to tick a lot of boxes.

It’s fast and racy when it needs to be, but dial round that damper and the plush feel of the Future Shock comes through, transforming it into a highly capable and versatile beast that you can enjoy going fast on for the long haul.

All reviews are fully independent and no payments have been made by companies featured in reviews

Stu Bowers

Stu Bowers

Stu Bowers is the former editor of Cyclist Off-Road and former editor-at-large for Cyclist. His journey, since puberty, has been all about the bike, and he's an expert on all things cycling. Having previously worked at the forefront of bicycle retail, whilst juggling racing commitments that saw him represent Team GB in two separate disciplines, Stu went on to wield the spanners for the GB cycling team too. He also has a Sports Science degree. Stu left Cyclist in 2021 for another role in the bike industry, leaving big shoes to fill. 

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