The Wildest Taipei Cycle Show Tech and a Broken Factor One

[analyse_image type=”featured” src=”https://velo-cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Velo-Podcast-thumbnail-4-3-26.jpg”]

Josh Ross
Published April 3, 2026 09:56AM

Table of contents

    Get right to the audio episode!

Five minutes after walking in the door from Taiwan and the Taiwan Cycle Show I started talking with Mike Levy about what it was like being there. We immediately dive into the wildest tech from the show floor: what a $31,000 3D-printed titanium road bike actually looks like, whether those budget power meter pedals are legit or just vaporware, and the exact physics behind Pirelli’s claim that their new aero tire cuts drag without ruining rolling resistance. I also talk about the one Chinese brand I found at the show and how they’ve got a brand new gravel bike that’s half the price of a Western company.

Of course we do also drive into the 32-inch wheel standard. The first suspension fork for the standard hit the market at the show. Is this what you’ve been waiting for?

It wasn’t all walking trade show aisles, though. I spent a few days riding Factor’s futuristic One aero road bike through the Taipei jungle, and the experience taught me how much better road culture can be.

I was also planning to bring that bike home for a full review and further aero testing. Instead it stayed behind. We get into how the bike actually handles on the road, the aggressive geometry, and the ongoing mystery behind how I somehow managed to break it.

Subscribe to the Velo Podcast

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Listen on Spotify

Articles covered in this episode:

  • Why Cycling in Taipei Feels Safer Than in Portland
  • Pirelli Claims Up to 15 Watts Saved With the New P ZERO Race TLR SL-R
  • Affordable 3D-Printed Bibs, a Cartridge Ratchet Hub, and More Random Finds at the Taipei Cycle Show
  • XFusion Unveils the First 32-Inch Gravel Suspension Fork
  • Distressed Denim Paint and Custom Tabi Shoes: Trigon’s Wild AR01 Collaboration
  • First Look: Tavelo’s New Aero Gravel Race Bike Costs Just $1,880
  • Cast Junctions and Candy-Cane Tubes: T&K’s Radically Welded Titanium Frame
  • $400 Power Meter Pedals and CeramicSpeed Vision Wheels: Taipei Day 1 Tech Randoms
  • This 3D-Printed Titanium Aero Bike Has a 7mm Top Tube
  • I Expected a Parade of $14,000 Superbikes at a Taipei Group Ride. I Was Wrong.
Josh Ross
Published April 3, 2026 09:56AM

[analyse_source url=”https://velo.outsideonline.com/road/road-gear/velo-podcast-taiwan-bike-show/”]


Analyse


Post not analysed yet. Do the magic.