Merida Reacto 5000 Aero Carbon Road Bike with Ultegra DI2 and FFWD Carbon Wheelset - £4150


£1300 O.N.O


Size - Extra Small


Here we have an excellent Aero Carbon road bike which received rave reviews online even in its basic set-up. It was a £2000 bike new running Ultegra Mechanical groupset, FSA Crankset and standard Fulcrum aluminium wheelset, basically the bike was a shadow of its current self and was still scoring well in the tests! Since that review the groupset hjas been fully upgraded to 11 speed shimano di2 at a cost of £600, the crankset was upgraded to a ROTOR 3D crankset at a cost of £350 and the wheelset was upgraded to a set of Carbon FFWD F4R at a cost of £1100.


50/34 11/28 (170 cranks)


Fresh service from lbs.


Frame :- Reacto CF3 aero carbon frame, Nano matrix and flax fibres. Tapered head tube, internal cable routing, carbon dropouts and integrated seat clamp

Fork :- Full carbon fork with tapered steerer and direct brake mounting - Pro with double chamber technology

Derailleurs :- Shimano Ultegra DI2

Shifters :- Shimano Dura Ace DI2

Brakes Shimano 105 - direct mount

Chainset :- ROTOR 3D 50/34

Bottom bracket FSA Gossamer Pro

Chain KMC X11

Wheels :- FFWD F4R Carbon

Tyres :- Schwable One

Stem :- Merida Pro - oversize clamp - carbon face plate - 5 degree

Handlebar:- FSA Gossamer - oversize clamp - compact drop

Headset :- B47-4856 bearing neck pro

Seatpost :- Reacto Race carbon with S-Flex technology (Di2 battery ready)

Saddle :- Prologo Kappa 3


The following review is supplied by road.cc and is of the bike as standard

Merida Reacto 5000


VERDICT:

8

10


A fast and agile aero road bike with features that really do add comfort to the ride


The Merida Reacto 5000 is an aero road bike that combines plenty of speed with agile handling and a respectable amount of comfort. If you have £2,000 to spend on a race bike, you need to pay attention!

So it's quick?

In a word, yes. The Reacto 5000 is at its best on flat and rolling roads when you just want to get your head down and do some hard work. Slam it into a big gear, wind up the speed, and you bowl along beautifully.

Merida has included numerous aero features designed to help you cut through the wind. For a start, the Reacto 5000 is built around Merida's Fastback tube profiles which are based on the NACA (National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics) 0028 airfoil.


The tail of the profile is cut square, the idea being to maintain airflow stability without causing turbulence. This also keeps the weight down and allows Merida to keep the tube dimensions within the UCI's limits.

The seatstays join the seat tube lower than normal to reduce the size of the frontal area slightly, and they're positioned wide, well away from the rear wheel, to manage airflow in that area. The legs of Merida's full-carbon fork are widely spaced too, and the crown is integrated into the silhouette of the frame.


I won't list all of the Reacto's aero features here – go to our First Ride on the Merida Reacto Evo Team for more details on those.

The geometry is also set up to help you ride fast. I've been riding the 56cm model which comes with a 575mm top tube. That's unusually long for a bike of this size. The head tube isn't especially short at 184mm, but the stack height (the vertical distance from the centre of the bottom bracket to the top of the head tube) of 578mm and reach (the horizontal distance between those two points) of 398mm put me into a stretched and fairly low riding position. As usual, you can adjust things via headset spacers and/or swapping the stem, but this is a race bike and the geometry has been designed accordingly; you're not going to get a particularly relaxed setup here.


The overall result is a bike that carves through the air just a little bit more easily than a standard road bike. The difference isn't massive, but it is appreciable when you compare your riding speeds with wattage and heart rate.

What's it like on the hills?

Pick up some £2,000 bikes and you're surprised at just how light they are. Weighing in at 8.37kg (18.5lb), our Reacto 5000 isn't really like that. It's a decent weight, especially for an aero bike, but it's not mega-light. That deep-section tubing adds a little to the load compared with a bike that's designed with light weight primarily in mind, and the 35mm deep Fulcrum Racing Quattro aluminium wheels are the better part of 1,800g.

When you hit a small rise you don't even notice that slight weight penalty. If you get out of the saddle, brace yourself against the front end of the bike and fire your quads into action, the bottom bracket holds solidly in place and you're over the crest before you know it.


You might get up steeper stuff a little quicker or easier on a superlight bike. The Reacto 5000 isn't quite as animated on this type of terrain as something a kilo lighter, say, but it's marginal and no single bike is going to be best in every situation. Nine times out of ten, you're going to gain more on the flat from riding this bike than you're going to lose on the hills. Aerodynamics trumps light weight.

Merida specs an FSA Gossamer Pro chainset with 52/36-tooth chainrings to help on the hills. Call it mid-compact, semi-compact or faux pro, this combo, matched up to the 11-28 cassette, means you have gears suitable for pretty much any race situation you're likely to encounter.


Once over the top, the Reacto 5000 proves itself to be highly flickable on the descents. It's not twitchy or jumpy but it is easy to manoeuvre when you want to weave through fast corners.

The rear brake is positioned below the chainstays, how does it behave?

Merida specs Shimano 105 direct mount brakes, meaning that the arms are attached directly to the frame and fork rather than via a central bolt.

The front brake is fixed to the front of the fork rather than hidden away around the back like it is on some aero road bikes. When I spoke to Merida's director of products Juergen Falke about this, he said the difference it makes to the aero performance is minimal.


What's more important, according to Merida, is that the rear brake is tucked away on the underside of the chainstays. This means there's no longer the need for a brake bridge between the seatstays, cleaning up the airflow in that area.


The downside is that on damp days the rear brake can get wetter and grittier than it would if sited in a conventional position. I've heard the noise of something small stuck between the brake pad and the wheel rim more than usual.

The other reason not to position the rear brake down there is that complicated cable routing can often result in a lack of power. I found the rear braking here to be a little more wooden than usual, but chances are you use your front brake far more often anyway. Due to the positioning of the internal routing port, it would probably work better for those who operate the rear brake with their right hand rather than their left.

Aero bikes aren't known for their comfort. What about this one?

Merida has worked hard to make the Reacto comfortable. First, it uses what it calls Bio Fiber Damping Compound. What the Dickens might that be? It means that flax fibres are woven into the carbon of the rear stays, the idea being to damp vibration.

Then there's the carbon S-Flex seatpost. You can see for yourself what's going on here. Merida moulds a massive notch into the aero-profile post, the idea being to allow more movement at the saddle. The elastomer insert doesn't actually affect the performance, it just fills the gap; it's the fact that the seatpost is slimmed down that's important.


The result of all this is that the Reacto 5000 feels pretty smooth out on the road. It's by no means as forgiving as some endurance bikes out there, but the features that Merida has included really do add to the comfort and you'll appreciate them more the longer you're in the saddle.

Overall

The Merida Reacto 5000 is a very good aero road bike. I'd prefer lighter wheels and better rear braking but there are always compromises. The positives far outweigh the negatives here. This bike is agile, it's comfortable and, above all, it's very quick.

Verdict

A fast and agile aero road bike with features that really do add comfort to the ride


road.cc test report

Make and model: Merida Reacto 5000

About the bike

State the frame and fork material and method of construction. List the components used to build up the bike.

Frame Reacto CF3 aero carbon frame, Nano matrix and flax fibres. Tapered head tube, internal cable routing, carbon dropouts and integrated seat clamp

Fork Full carbon fork with tapered steerer and direct brake mounting - Pro with double chamber technology

Derailleurs Shimano Ultegra

Shifters Shimano Ultegra

Brakes Shimano 105 - direct mount

Chainset FSA Gossamer Pro 52-36

Bottom bracket FSA Gossamer Pro

Chain KMC X11

Wheels Fulcrum Quattro 35

Tyres Continental Grand Sport Race 25c Kevlar bead

Stem Merida Pro - oversize clamp - carbon face plate - 5 degree

Handlebar FSA Gossamer - oversize clamp - compact drop

Headset B47-4856 bearing neck pro

Seatpost Reacto Race carbon with S-Flex technology (Di2 battery ready)

Saddle Prologo Kappa 3

Tell us what the bike is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about the bike?

It's an aero road bike primarily designed with racing in mind, although it'll suit anyone who wants to ride fast.


This is a very good bike at a very good price. It's a clear 8.

Overall rating: 8/10


Perfectly happy to post a bike which I have done so many times without issue, price will be £90 with full insurance