By Sam Challis

Published: Friday, 14 January 2022 at 12:00 am


The BikeRadar team has stormed into the second week of 2022 with a rip-roaring mix of news, reviews and features.

We kicked off the week with a fascinating (genuinely!) review of POC’s Consort Dungarees. These have a more than passing resemblance to Carhartt insulated dungarees, but will set you back considerably more than that workwear favourite, with a set coming in at a whopping £450 / $500 / €490. That is, objectively, a lot of money to spend on a pair of riding trousers, but tech editor Alex Evans thinks they could be worth the cost.

We then took a look at the bikes Harriet Harnden and Thomas Mein rode to victory at the 2022 British National Cyclocross Championships, as well as the custom Specialized Crux that Cameron Mason rode to second place in the men’s event.

We also put together a round-up of the best electric hybrid bikes we have tested and Thursday brought the launch of Argon 18’s all-new Sum road bike.

If that wasn’t quite enough to sate your appetite for tech, sit back and enjoy this week’s edition of First Look Friday – your weekly round-up of the best new kit to land at BikeRadar HQ.

100% Eastcraft and Westcraft sunglasses

"100%
The two new models adopt an Aviator-esque profile that may be, just may be, alright to wear casually.
Sam Challis / Immediate Media

100% seems to have taken a leaf out of London buses’ book recently – since the Hypercraft, fans of the brand have waited ages for a new model to arrive, and now two have come along at once.

The new Eastcraft and Westcraft models have an aviator-like silhouette, but the Westcraft design is rounded and the Eastcraft is squarer in shape, bearing a passing resemblance to Oakley’s Sutro sunglasses.

The sunglasses boast all of 100%’s usual design features. The 5.5-base, cylindrical lenses are said to be treated to repel water and muck, and the frames are made from durable TR90 Grilamid plastic.

100% also includes a hard case, microfibre cloth, alternate-fit nose pad and a clear-lens option as standard, which are all nice value-adds over similarly priced sunglasses for cycling.

Unusually, the Eastcrafts and Westcrafts can be used with both a singular shield lens and separate dual lenses. The glasses’ V-latch locking mechanism across the bridge of the nose secures both lens types, and contributes to a distinctive look that is unmistakably 100% in style.

The glasses also have side ‘shields’, which 100% says offer extra protection from the elements.

I’ll be honest, all I can see those protecting me from is my peripheral vision, so sensibly 100% has made them removable.

  • From £169.99, international pricing TBC