Plus, exceptions to conventional hill climbing wisdom from the slopes of the Struggle

By Jack Evans

Published: Wednesday, 01 November 2023 at 17:30 PM


The UK hill climb scene showcases radical, verging on excessive, ways to save weight from bikes in the battle against gravity.

This year’s UK National Hill Climb Championships on the unusually long 4km ascent of the Struggle, in the Lake District, was no different.

But the tech trends we noticed on the Cumbrian hillside show weight might not be absolutely everything, even when racing uphill.

  1. A disc brake win

Andrew Feather's hill climb bike 2
For the first time ever, a disc brake-equipped bike has won a UK Hill Climb National Championship.
BikeRadar / Our Media

The UK hill climb scene is usually a safe space for rim brakes, but that might be about to change.

Andrew Feather became the first rider to win the UK National Hill Climb Championships on disc brakes. Runner-up Ed Laverack was also on disc brakes, as he was last year.

Feather’s Cannondale SuperSix EVO Lab71 rolled on Hunt Hill Climb SL Disc Tubular wheels but still weighed less than 6kg.

As the four-time national champion told Liam Cahill in a BikeRadar YouTube video, to harness the latest technology he had to switch to discs, even if it meant an additional 200g to 300g.

So we should expect disc brakes to become more popular, at least among the elite hill climbers, to the dismay of rim-brake devotees.