Continuing the momentum generated from the classic, the new U.P. was designed to be lighter than the original. Still the Jack of All Trades we all fell in love with, the new U.P. can be ridden with 700c or 650b/27.5" wheels, with slick road tires or knobby trail tires, and with drop handlebars or flat MTB bars.
Discover The OPEN U.P.If you hadn't been paying attention to the world of mountain biking for the past several years, you may have missed it, but there’s a name you should know, and know well: Pivot.
See our PIVOT MTB line hereHumpback Whales. Golf Balls. Power Tools. It's new ways of thinking and radical design that fuel Zipp 858 NSW, the next evolution in wheels.
Discover Zipp 858 NSWHarness every watt with Garmin Vector 3 dual-sensing power meter. Accurate measurement of your power output is as simple as changing pedals.
Discover Garmin Vector 3German company SRM developed the concept of power training and the first power meter around the same time. Founded by engineer Ulrich Schoberer in 1986 - Schoberer had previously spent years experimenting with ways to measure an athlete's power output on the pedals under real conditions.
Limitless options.
Interchangeable spindles, adjustable crank arm length, flexible chainring combinations, rechargeable battery option and compatible with road, mountain and gravel frames.
Unparallelled Accuracy.
The highest accuracy on the market - within +/- 1%. SRM’s credentials are backed at the highest level - used in today’s pro peloton, and historically by greats such as Lemond, Cippollini, Zabel, Cavendish and more.
Lightweight speed and durability.
Accuracy is important, but it should not come at the expense of a high performance crankset. SRM Origins power meters are crafted around cutting-edge carbon or lightweight aluminium crank arms, offering a superior stiffness to weight ratio.
Cutting edge technology.
SRM Origins cranksets are Bluetooth compatible and utilizes an ANT+ signal that can sync with any head unit, phone, or tablet. The battery will last for 100 hours at a time before charging is needed. Access a full suite of statistics including power, cadence, speed, heart rate, distance, energy, and time.
Power is the most consistent and quantifiable measure of training and race performance. This differs from measurements like heart rate - an aerobic response that is an indicator of effort and conditioning - or speed / cadence - a result influenced by many factors.