Over the weekend in Emporia, Kansas, riders on the new Crux 5 from Specialized claimed the top three spots in the elite men’s 200-mile race and the top two in the elite women’s 200-mile race.
It marks an opening weekend of blockbuster proportions for a bike that launched to the public less than 48 hours before the race got underway.
Among the many steps along the way to this result was testing in the Flint Hills both in and out of competition.
Matt Beers, winner of four Cape Epics and now second at this year’s Unbound was involved in both efforts. Early on in the process, Beers and 2021 Unbound winner Ian Boswell were recruited for some tests that pitted the previous Crux against one of Specialized’s other gravel bikes, the Diverge STR, which features a small suspension device at the rear.
“We came out [to Emporia] in 2024,” Beers told Cyclingnews. “We came out here and we tested the Crux versus the STR which has the rear compliance in the seatpost. And we tested that with a bunch of sensors on each bike doing recon. Ian Boswell and myself.”
This testing was followed up a year later with a sensor-equipped Diverge race bike that Beers rode in the 2025 edition of Unbound, where he gathered data about where and how the rough terrain of the Flint Hills was translating into fatigue for riders.
As the Crux evolved from a pure cyclo-cross machine to a gravel racer, it was crucial to know where comfort could be gained without sacrificing stiffness and power transfer.
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“We had a little black box on the saddle that took data from the race. I raced with that. The more vibrations that go through you, the more fatigue, so trying to figure that out and trying to eliminate that.”
According to the brand, this is part of its ‘Equation of Speed’, which essentially aims to replicate Formula 1’s lap times technology and measure everything between the power in at the pedals and how that translates to speed. This involves the well-known metrics like aerodynamics, rolling resistance and…
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