De Rosa differences ...
#26
Junior Member
Joined: May 2014
Posts: 6
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Honestly I don't think I could pick a difference between EL/OS and Genius ride. If there is I think it would be swamped by the different set up in my bikes - tubular vs clincher, deep section vs shallow section rims, etc.
The ride on all of them (including the Nuovo Classico, which uses SLX new (aka TSX)) is sublime. And the geometry just seems to be perfect for confident descending. I do most of my fast riding on a Cannondale Six13 but on a winding descent I can push much harder on the De Rosas. I have never ridden any other italian bikes so maybe they're nothing special amongst the exotics, but my first ride on one blew me away and I've pretty much been a one brand guy ever since. For someone like me, a bright red and chrome Primato with Record 9 speed is like the 250 GTO of bikes.
The ride on all of them (including the Nuovo Classico, which uses SLX new (aka TSX)) is sublime. And the geometry just seems to be perfect for confident descending. I do most of my fast riding on a Cannondale Six13 but on a winding descent I can push much harder on the De Rosas. I have never ridden any other italian bikes so maybe they're nothing special amongst the exotics, but my first ride on one blew me away and I've pretty much been a one brand guy ever since. For someone like me, a bright red and chrome Primato with Record 9 speed is like the 250 GTO of bikes.
#27
Fat Guy on a Little Bike


Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 15,946
Likes: 371
From: Philadelphia, PA
Bikes: Two wheeled ones
I think there's a reason De Rosas are so well regarded among the Italians. Some of this is preference, and I'm a proponent of n+1 experimentation. Part of it is that De Rosa makes forks to each bike/size...I think that makes a noticeable difference.
I'm not sure what De Rosa did - but I wouldn't call a genius uni-crown De Rosa a Primato.
I'm not sure what De Rosa did - but I wouldn't call a genius uni-crown De Rosa a Primato.
#28
My Professional rides differently than my Nuovo Classico, the TSX tubes of the Classico feel a bit stiffer. But that might just be in my mind as they are each set up quite differently. Regardless, I love both bikes but I seem to ride the Professional more often.
#29
Thread Starter
Full Member
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 322
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From: lake Oswego, OR
Bikes: Colnago Mix, Dean El Diente Ti S&S, Lynskey Cooper CX Disc Ti S&S, Mondonico Futura Legerro, DeRosa Primato, Tommaisini Tecno, Ciöcc Mokva80, Colnago Classic, Brompton M6L, Bob Jackson Audax End-E
Assuming that they're all the same size, the white Primato. He's a great seller, it has all of the stuff you want it to have and there's just something about a white De Rosa. I'd pick the el OS professional second.
I'd wager few of us could tell the difference riding them, but EL OS has more snob appeal and was a little higher on the food chain.
I wish De Rosa made a MAX model.
I'd wager few of us could tell the difference riding them, but EL OS has more snob appeal and was a little higher on the food chain.
I wish De Rosa made a MAX model.
your two De Rosas are absolutely perfect. I couldn't choose between the two, if i could only save one in a fire. What about you? Which would you save from a fire if you could only save one???

what about MAX do you like? Isn't it for bigger heavier riders that makes for a harsher ride?
#31
Thread Starter
Full Member
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 322
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From: lake Oswego, OR
Bikes: Colnago Mix, Dean El Diente Ti S&S, Lynskey Cooper CX Disc Ti S&S, Mondonico Futura Legerro, DeRosa Primato, Tommaisini Tecno, Ciöcc Mokva80, Colnago Classic, Brompton M6L, Bob Jackson Audax End-E

is your Pro made of SLX?






