UCI considering scrapping 6.8kg bike weight limit

Governing body's technical manager descrbes the rule as "a relic of the past"

A commissaire weighs a bike at the Vuelta a Espana (Photo: Watson)

(Image credit: Watson)

With bike technology getting more and more advanced, the UCI is looking at scrapping the 6.8kg limit on minimum bike weight used in races.

First introduced in 2000, the minimum weight rule was originally intended to ensure safety at a time when there was considerable unease about new lightweight carbon bikes, but with advances in technology, and with some teams having to add lead weights to top tubes and drop chains down seat tubes for ballast, the rule has seemed increasingly out of date in reent years.

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In an interview with Australian website Cycling Tips (in which he also admitted that motorised bikes could have been used in WorldTour races), UCI technical manager Mark Barfield said that the world governing body was "a relic of the past" and "in our sights".

However this is not to say bike manufacturers will simply be giving free rein to develop the lightest bikes possible for professional riders, with the 6.8kg rule likely to be replaced with another standard.

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"[The new rule] will be a safety-based standard and not a weight. What we are looking at are the standards that are currently in place and seeing if they are fit for purpose. If they are fit for purpose then that might be a very simple and elegant solution. If they are not, then we need to see what has to be added to ensure what is fit for purpose"

Barfield also offered some supprt for the 6.8kg rule, saying that not only had it done a good job ensuring rider safety, but had also helped to fuel development in other areas since it was first introduced over 15 years ago.

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"For some manufacturers it provides some reassurance; they think that they can build aero bikes, that they can add electronic gearing or they can do whatever they like around the bike and it will still be 6.8kg."

So will we see the pros riding sub-6kg machines from the start of 2016? Well, unfortunately not, with the rule change looking to be a long-term rather than a short-term procedure, and Barfield stressing the need for cooperation between the UCI and bicycle manufacturers for the rule change to be successfully implemented.

When the change does come about, it will be the latest in a series of changes to the UCI's technical regulations in recent weeks, that has seen the wider introduction of disc brakes into the peloton, and the relaxation of rules governing downward tilted saddles that have been criticised by time triallists for a number of years.

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Henry Robertshaw began his time at Cycling Weekly working with the tech team, writing reviews, buying guides and appearing in videos advising on how to dress for the seasons. He later moved over to the news team, where his work focused on the professional peloton as well as legislation and provision for cycling. He's since moved his career in a new direction, with a role at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.