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Elite Wireless 'turbo' trainer

Elite's Wireless digital fluid trainer. Their latest home trainer is very quiet and quite expensive. But is it going to make training any more fun?


Posted: 25 January 2005
by Guy Andrews

Elite Wireless
Price: £260.00
From: Ultimate Pursuits
Tel: 08000183790

I'm sure I'm not unusual in being a bit daunted at the idea of using a turbo trainer. I always prefer to go out riding - partly because it's more stimulating but mainly because most turbo trainers are a pain to set up and have a riding quality of a shopping bike with the brakes on. But work and time constraints added to northern European weather means we have to train inside for most of the winter, a fact that the manufacturers have noticed as sales of indoor trainers are soaring.

Very few turbos I have used have a very smooth action and one that feels like the road. One that doesn't jerk would be good, so one that feels more like a set of track rollers (but with some resistance) or a King cycle (but doesn't cost several thousand). Something better than the standard rear wheel 'turbo' with less noise and less faffing around setting it up.

The unique frame design of the Elite Wireless gives a more natural feel and with less stress to your bike frame. It's designed to use the weight of the rider to provide the friction to keep the roller in touch with the tyre. There is also some flex built in which helsp add to the on-the-road feel of this trainer. The Elastogel roller is larger than the usual aluminium ones and has a 'softer' contact with the tyre and this not only wears the tyre less but it 'feels' little more like the road. Claimed to reduce tyre wear by 20%, it's noticeably less agressive on the tread. They also say that you can use it with knobblies, so it will be an option for warming up for a cross race.

Fans and magnet resisting turbos tend to amplify that jerky pedalling stroke so Elite have opted for fluid power, cooled by fins. There is a progressive feel to the resistance, you also get more resistance at lower RPMs for a more climbing style simulation. The lack of noise allows you to hear the music on your headphones and reduced vibration may mean you can use it on a first floor flat without driving the neighbours nuts as it is claimed to reduce noise by 50%. You may even get away with it at the start of an early morning time trial or road race without attracting the attention of angry residents.


use a Travel block, not the yellow pages

The Travel Block allows you to get the front wheel up and keep the bike level which saves guess work and stays put unlike a phone book or a pile of magazines.

This is also the first turbo of it's kind without any cables between resistance unit and digital console display. Which really adds user-appeal to this quickly set-up trainer – no wires and no spring plate to fiddle with. The fixing device works really well and as long as you have got the appropriate rear QR lever you can be riding in no time at all. The frame is wide too, so out of the saddle efforts don't see you edging across the floor like a washing machine on spin cycle. It's steady yet compact when folded up and quite light. Elite also make a really funky carbon fibre version of the Wireless, presumably for the Pro rider to use in his funky loft apartment. They cost loads and there are no plans to bring them in to the UK as yet...

All the data is transmitted from the resistance unit to the console via a radio transmitter installed in the resistance unit and a receiver installed in the digital console. There are 16 functions; speed, gradient percentage, wattage, elapsed time... the list goes on. Add your HRM and cadence computer to the handle bars and your bike starts looks like Cape Canaveral on launch day. The main advantage is that there are no extra wires or boxes on the floor and setting it all up takes no time at all, which features you decide to use can be switched between screens, how you use it is up to you. The wattage can't be 100% accurate as it isn't directly linked to your cranks, however it's a useful guide and seems to be pretty sensitive - it helps judge your effort and I can compare workouts so it has some sense.

I liked the Elite. I actually used it regularly (more than once anyway) which seems to be a first, it's one trainer that you actually look forward to setting up, partly because it's so easy and partly because it rides so well, just like the road really. In my opinion the Elite Wireless does more than it really needs to and the only drawback is the price, but if it's raining outside and you need to ride you can easily justify the price. If you're quite 'teccy' you'll like the options - I just prefer my training a little less complicated. Elite and Tacx are spending a lot of energy on making the Turbo experience better. Simulated real-time rides (better than the i-magic system) with bar mounted control screens and active braking (which make you feel like you are descendind and climbing) are the next steps and they are very advanced, and very expensive - but how long do you want to spend on one before your friends start to talk about your sanity?

So I'd like to see one with less features on the readout unit, just a basic one which uses the same Elastogel roller technology and the frame design as the ride qulaity is terrific - if only it could cost the same as budget trainers. A more 'competitive' version in this growing market would be a great success.


Good: Works well, feels like a road ride and kept my interest

Bad: It's still a turbo and the scenery stays the same... it's expensive too.


Performance:
5/5
Value:
3/5


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This is possibly the best winter training aid money can buy! We set one of these up in the shop on Friday afternoon, by Saturday morning it had racked up 35 miles of its own accord. Just think, you can have the turbo do the miles for you while sitting on yir arse eatting cake in front of the tv. Fantastic! Well, maybe not. It would appear the turbo picks up a rouge signal - possibly from a broadband connection, something that cheaper hard-wired Elite turbo's don't suffer from. Just why do you need a wireless equiped turbo anyway?
Posted: 31/01/2005 14:45


M@
When I looked at one, I thought it looked really cheap and nasty, the whole display and computer bit.
Posted: 31/01/2005 14:59

I have to agree with you there. The idea of using the weight of bike and rider to put pressure on the roller and thus do away with a large spring-loading mechanism is good but the components look and feel on the cheap side. Getting the resistance unit mounted exactly square takes patience due to an absence of any reference marks or possitive location tabs. Having bought the digital mag equiped unit last year I must say it is quiet in comparison with the older metal roller type units but the digital display eats batteries faster than I eat Go bars. Several customers have also had problems with faulty displays on the wired units so the build quality can be an issue.
Posted: 02/02/2005 10:09

Which is why I'd want a simple one. With better made plastic bits. Especially for this much. Idon't see the point in all the display stuff. Unless you want to get really 'into' zones and settings. Life's too short.

I actually like using it though. An hour goes in no time and the ride quality is superb even if the finish is a bit on the cheap side.
Posted: 02/02/2005 10:43

so which turbo for 100 bar and do i need a new wheel?
Posted: 26/04/2005 19:24

When you say 100 bar are you thinking of 100 psi as your tyre pressure? Any turbo should be capable of working with this, I've never seen any mention of tyre pressure restrictions in the instructions of the ones I've delt with. A new rear wheel isn't an absolute requirement but the turbo's roller will be hard on your rear tyre so having a spare rear wheel set-up (get the cheepest wheel, cassette, tyre and tube that is relavent to your bike) takes the stress off your good kit. I know some who have an old bike that is only used on the turbo (the sort of bike that's too worn out to trust on the road) Turbos place a lot of stress not just on the rear tyre but also the frame and bottom bracket of a bike so you may be cheeper in the long run to buy some old 5 speed 'racer' and set it up in the shed.
Posted: 27/04/2005 09:00

bar is a word for pounds my friend.... how often would i have to use it to damage my bike, it is a spesh allez so the aluminum frame should be ok, i have an old MTB that i could use.
Posted: 27/04/2005 15:40

All turbos are pants in my considered opinion and belted rollers are where it's at. Almost entirely natural feel, zero set up time, leave your bike computer on, your mates can come round and do comparative LT testing on it and no ill effects on your bike. My Tacx folds so i can take it in the car and use it to warm up for hill-climbs and tt's. It was 80 quid for the rollers and the turbo attachment is another 50ish.
Posted: 27/04/2005 22:12

what so track rollers with an attatchement to make them resist?
Posted: 28/04/2005 14:33

That's it exactly. Tacx used to do one with 110mm rollers which would be the one to have if you can find one new-old-stock or second hand. Mine are 80mm, i think, which is not as strong but they are still fine to use.
Posted: 02/05/2005 15:10

what is the model number? why is it better than a turbo?
Posted: 02/05/2005 17:25

Sorry, no numbers on it and I threw the box away ages ago. Any good Tacx dealer (I got mine from Knobblies in Exmouth) should be able to show you one in a catologue and Tacx must have a website.

Basically, it will do everything that a turbo will do except hold you upright. I think that's an advantage because the riding rythmn and the way the bike moves underneath you is so natural on rollers. It's just like riding along a bit of tarmac 40cm wide. There are no unusual stresses on your bike frame either, so you can use your best bike without worrying that you'll damage it. The best bit though, is that it's a lot less fag because the setting up time is zero; you just plonk the bike on the rollers and climb on. In my case that can make the difference between doing an indoor sesh and not bothering!
Posted: 03/05/2005 18:43

is it not really unstable cos you are not moving? they do sound good, can i change resistance?
Posted: 04/05/2005 15:56

Hi, 'scuse the delay, just been on me hols.

Stability is relative to speed just as on the road. Uprightness on rollers is maintained through the same giroscope effect which keeps any bike upright.
I reckon you need to try one! Someone in your club is sure to have a set of rollers.
Posted: 13/05/2005 18:29

Forgot to say that, yes, the resistance can be altered provided you buy the accessory turbo.
Posted: 13/05/2005 18:32

Just wanted to dig this thread up again as I reckon I'm up for buying some rollers, but don't particularly like their reputation as not providing much of a workout - anybody else have experience with putting belts on them etc.?
Posted: 09/11/2005 11:40

I'd just like to say having both,that I find rollers a lot less boring and the feel is so much more like being on the road. Give me the rollers any day (any wet day that is).After a bit of practice you'll love them.
Posted: 23/11/2005 21:31

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