Winspace is a Chinese direct-to-consumer carbon road bike brand that has quietly built a strong following among serious riders who want high-end frame quality without paying for a European distributor margin. If you've been looking at the T1600 or T1550 and trying to figure out whether the brand delivers on its specs, here's a clear breakdown.
The Brand
Winspace produces its frames in China and sells globally through its own channels and through authorised dealers. It also owns the Lùn wheel brand, which comes spec'd on most of its complete bike builds. The direct-to-consumer model means the price gap versus equivalent-spec bikes from Trek, Specialized or Cervélo is significant — and it's a gap that holds up when you compare the actual carbon quality and component builds side by side.
The T1600: Aero Road Bike
The T1600 is the aero road bike. It uses deeper, truncated-aerofoil tube profiles designed to reduce drag at typical racing speeds. The frame geometry is aggressive — suited to riders who spend long periods in an aero position. It comes with a fully integrated cockpit, internal cable routing throughout, and disc brakes. On flat and rolling terrain it is a fast, direct machine. The T1600 competes in the same category as the Trek Madone, the Cervélo S5, and the Specialized Venge — bikes designed for days when the wind matters as much as the gradient.
The T1550: Lightweight Climbing Bike
The T1550 is the lightweight climbing bike. It uses a lighter carbon layup and more conventional round tube shapes, resulting in a frameset weight in the sub-900 g range. The complete bike builds out close to the UCI 6.8 kg minimum. For riders whose routes involve sustained climbs — Alpine or Pyrénéan gradients, multi-hour mountain passes — the T1550 is the more logical choice. The weight advantage over the T1600 is meaningful above 6 to 7 percent gradient, where rotational and total mass matter more than aerodynamics.
Specs, Builds and Pricing
Both models are available in five sizes (XS through XL) and in multiple groupset configurations. The builds stocked at Bikeroom use Shimano Di2 electronic shifting across 105, Ultegra, and Dura-Ace tiers, all paired with Lùn Hyper 3 wheels. How It Compares
To put that in context: a Trek Madone SLR 9 with Dura-Ace Di2 — a direct comparable in terms of category and groupset — lists at €12,494 in the same market. That is roughly double the price for a bike that occupies the same role and uses the same drivetrain. The difference is brand equity and the support infrastructure that comes with it — dealer networks, warranty handling, resale value. For a rider who values the ride itself and is comfortable buying direct, the Winspace proposition is straightforward.
Winspace does not currently sponsor a WorldTour team. Its user base skews toward serious amateur and semi-professional riders, gran fondo competitors, and racers at continental level. The bikes appear on the secondary market when riders upgrade, and at their original pricing they hold value reasonably well.
Which One to Choose
If you are choosing between the T1600 and T1550, the decision comes down to where you ride. Mixed terrain with regular flat stages favours the T1600. If your riding is dominated by long climbs, the T1550 is the better tool. Either way, both models represent a serious performance proposition at a price that the major brands cannot currently match through their standard retail channels.
