2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak

2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak
2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak; Photography by bike-room.com

I’ve only been riding two bikes since the early 1980’s. For the past 10 years, I’ve been riding an Eddy Merckx restomod. Before that, I had been riding a De Rosa Professional that I built up in the 1984. I decided to finally buy a modern bike.

I wanted a carbon frame De Rosa. I had been looking at the Merak but I thought it was wack to pay $17,800 from a De Rosa North America dealer. When I looked at Cicli Corsa, the Italian online bike shop, their price for a De Rosa Merak Super Record EPS bike was close to $9600 LESS than buying it from a US dealer. But it would take 75 days to build and ship.

2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak, ex Jesús Herrada López
Photography by bike-room.com

I found that Bike Room (which I highly recommend), another Italian online bike shop, had started offering De Rosa Merak Team Cofidis bikes from the 2022 season. I bought the size 54 bike that was used by Team Cofidis rider Jesús Herrada López, who won Stage 7 of the 2022 Vuelta a España (on what was now MY bike, maybe!). I received my new bike seven days after I ordered it.

The used bike was in great condition and came with Campagnolo 12 speed Super Record EPS v4 components, Fulcrum Airbeat 400 wheels, 700×28 Vittoria Rubino Pro tubeless ready tires, Vision Metron 5D integrated bars and a Selle Italia Novus Evo Pro Team saddle.

2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak chainstay, ex Jesús Herrada López
Photography by bike-room.com

Jesús Herrada and I are about the same height, 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) but I’ve got him by about 21.3 kg (47 lbs) and 38 years. I had to make a few changes to the bike to accommodate my 71 year old, 93.75 kg body to ride a bike built for a 32 year old world class cyclist competing on the UCI WorldTour. I’m old and I’m pushing a lot of weight up hills.

For the drivetrain changes, I installed Campagnolo Super Record 50/34 chainrings (from 53/39) and a Campagnolo Chorus 12 speed 11-34 cassette (from a Record 11-29 cassette).

Also because of my weight, I installed a 160 mm (from 140 mm) Campagnolo 03 rotor for the rear disc.

2022 Team Cofidis De Rosa Merak, ex Jesús Herrada López
Photography by bike-room.com

The Vision Metron 5D integrated bars are 130×420 mm, appropriate for a World Tour racing bike and for a then 32 year old world class cyclist. It is a slight stretch for me to reach the bars. Remarkably my back has also not yet complained about the drop. A more suitable reach for me might be the 100×420 mm bars. But with Metron 5D bars running $650 and having to replumb the brakes and wiring going through the bars and stem, changing them has held me back.

The bike feels amazingly light compared to my 40 year old steel bikes. And on 7% and steeper hills, it climbs like the so called dream. If only it had a better engine.

Angler’s Roost, New York City

Anglers Roost 9′ 4-5 wt fly rod

I was looking at one of my prized fly fishing rods that was purchased by my friend Kenny, at Angler’s Roost in New York City. When I lived in New York, the small fly fishing shop was in an office building at 141 E 44th St, just off of Lexington Ave. It was a one man shop owned and run by Jim Deren.


Angler’s Roost was one of those places where the merchandise was scattered all over the place, packed to the walls, in seemingly disarray. Jim Deren probably knew where everything was. I always thought that if you moved something a foot away, he’d never be able to find it.

Photograph of Jim Deren at Angers Roost by picketpin52


Once I asked him about a fluorescent orange fly line I’d read about and I received a very stem lecture about the trout’s color vision and colors in nature.


Jim Deren died in 1983 and the shop closed. I was lucky enough to buy some fishing gear at the Anglers Roost tag sale and liquidation.


If you have a subscription, there’s a profile of Jim Deren in the April 19, 1982 issue of The New Yorker.

Fix for a Slipping Carbon Seatpost

My De Rosa Merak has a carbon fiber seat post secured by a wedge type clamp. When I first started riding it (I bought the bike used), the seatpost kept slipping. I completely cleaned the seat post and the seat tube and used Finish Line Fiber Grip Carbon Fiber Bicycle Assembly Gel (affiliate link). The seat post still slipped when I torqued the bolt to the max 6 N⋅m.

I don’t know if I imagined seeing it done before but I thought that a piece of sandpaper glued to the back of the seatpost might help.

I completely cleaned the back of the seat post and using wood glue, I glued a piece of 120 grit sandpaper about 2.5″ long and 3/4″ wide to the back of the seat post. I aligned the top edge of the sandpaper just below the top tube, where the clamp applies pressure. The seat post hasn’t slipped again; maybe it works as a shim and it definitely adds more friction.

King Kong Balloon on the Empire State Building

King Kong Balloon on the Empire State Building
This view of the King Kong Balloon on the Empire State Building in New York City in April 1993, is looking south towards the twin towers of the World Trade Center.Camera scan from the original transparency.Credit must be given to: Leslie Wong

In the spring of 1983, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the release of the 1933 film King Kong, Harry Helmsley, the owner of the Empire State Building, decided to hang a King Kong balloon on the building above the 86th floor. Two of my friends (Joe McNally, John Roca) and I chipped in to rent a helicopter so we could take some photos of it.

There were problems fully inflating the balloon, but it was still a memorable image.

King Kong Balloon on the Empire State Building
This view of the King Kong Balloon on the Empire State Building in New York City in April 1993, is looking west towards Weehawken, New Jersey.Camera scan from the original transparency.Credit must be given to: Leslie Wong