PINARELLO LUNGAVITA - 2012

The advent of fixed-gear bike culture pre-dates the current urban fashion of riding them by such a long way that the origins of the basic idea are unknown and undocumented. What we know, we've taken from the thought leaders such as the well-known Bike Snob NYC and the less-known but equally important Trackosaurus Rex. What is that basic idea? It's not what it seems — let's ride in traffic with no brakes and with limited ability to stop the crankset from turning. Pinarello Lungavita DetailRather, not unlike acoustic sets and restaurants keen on serving only what they grow, our best guess is that it's an embrace of simplicity in an ever-noisier, evermore needlessly overwrought world. No gears? That cures 75% of a bike's maintenance woes. No brakes? We appreciate the aesthetic simplicity brought on by the elimination of the rest of the cables. The resulting irony, of course, is that a bike stripped down to its essential moving parts — brainless to maintain, joyful to accessorize, minimally appealing to steal — becomes the ultimate urban weapon for battling the nemesis of the true urban dweller: those dreadful cars.

Have you ever ridden a fixed gear before? If not, it's a bit of a shocker how you naturally take for granted freewheel coasting, which can end up tossing you rodeo-style over the bars. The first few times you catch yourself, it's pretty terrifying. Terror, of course, is the best disciplinarian, so you learn quickly to stop indulging the freewheel instinct. We'll admit, though, that since our riding time is precious (we're in that kids + job phase of life), our preference for fine-tuning old skills takes precedence over learning new ones. This means (a) getting comfortable with the hardly-subtle nuances of a fixed drivetrain and (b) getting accustomed to dealing with traffic when brakes aren't in the cards. It's a shame, really, because the delight of a fixed gear is the simple, maintenance-free beauty, making it appealing on many levels. And this is why we have a bit of a crush on the Pinarello Lungavita. It lets you access those delights without forcing you to risk life and limb.

The Lungavita comes with a flip-flop rear hub. One side has a real-deal fixed cog, i.e. if the rear wheel is moving, your crankset will be moving. But the other side is a single-speed freewheel cog that allows you to do what you're used to doing — stop pedaling whenever you deem fit, exactly like your ability to coast on your regular, everyday geared bike. The other touch of risk management is the presence of small brake levers on the bar tops — like what you're attuned to seeing on cyclocross race bikes. After all, "Lungavita" means "long life" and we're not afraid of saying our days of doing overtly self-destructive things are pretty much behind us…

The Pinarello Lungavita frame is made from triple-butted 6061 T6 aluminum with a painted-to-match aluminum fork. It's available in five sizes and comes as a complete bike only, so all you'll need to add is pedals. It is geared with a 46 tooth chainring and 18 tooth rear cog for a total gear of 86.4 inches.

  • 6061 T6 aluminum offers a durable, quick-handling ride
  • Horizontal dropouts make chain tension adjustments a breeze
  • MOst alloy crankset and cockpit maintain the aesthetics of the bike while providing excellent performance
  • Pay close attention to the geometry chart –Pinarello uses a center-to-center seat tube measurement for this frame, which results in the nominal size listed in the dropdown


Lungavita - 2012 Price:   $1000.00

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2012 Pinarello Lungavita - 2012 Geometry

Size

Seat Tube
(c-t)

Top Tube
(TT)

Head Tube
(HT)

Head Tube
Angle (HT°)

Seat Angle
(ST°)

Chainstay
(CS)

Setback
(SB)

45.0 48.5 52.0 11.0 71.0 75.0 40.4 11.7
48.0 51.5 53.6 13.5 72.5 74.0 40.4 13.2
51.0 54.5 55.2 16.0 73.0 73.5 40.4 14.5
53.0 56.5 56.7 18.0 73.0 73.5 40.4 15.0
56.0 59.5 58.2 20.4 73.0 73.0 40.4 16.4

Pinarello geometry