Factor’s original Ostro Gravel was quite pioneering, insofar as it was one of the first aero gravel bikes on the scene, along with the 3T Exploro, before aero gravel bikes were really a thing. Gravel racing has come on a long way since 2023, and while the Ostro Gravel still is a competitive machine, it’s starting to seem a little long in the tooth.

In the lead-up to Unbound, much like the flurry of new bikes that arrive before the Tour de France, we get some new gravelly machines to pore over before their actual releases. Factor has posted a couple of videos on its official Instagram page following the Santa Vall gravel race that show Romain Bardet and Norwegian gravel champion, Magnus Bak Klaris, aboard what appears to be an overhauled Ostro Gravel model. Whether it’s ‘hiding in plain sight’ or ‘deliberate leak to generate media interest’, we will leave up to you, but whatever the tactic, the end result is the same.

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Specialized Diverge, or the Lauf Seigla in the tyre department. Personally, I also found the old OG quite uncomfortable. The frame is extremely stiff, and wider tyres would have been of great benefit.

The new version looks to have a far wider fork, and both Bardet and Klaris look to be using a tyre around 50mm wide. From the side, it looks like there would be plenty of room for more rubber, but a more front-on view of Bardet’s machine reveals sloping shoulders that likely form the pinch point for the front end.

Rear-end clearance is often the harder thing to achieve, and the new version looks to have dropped the chainstays to add more room. Even so, the rear tyre is perilously close to the seatpost at the size they are running, so even if front-end clearance goes up larger, it may be unlikely that it will at the rear end. From the side view in the lead image of the article there does appear to be slightly more room however.

The fork legs themselves, as well as being wider set, are also deeper in profile, with a flatter top tube and perhaps a slightly deeper downtube to add to the aero package. The head tube is clearly different, with a very pronounced hourglass figure to it, which is a hallmark of modern aero machines.

While we can’t be sure from the images, it seems likely that the bike will be a 1x-only machine. Factor’s new do-it-all Aluto remains 2x compatible, but front derailleurs impact tyre clearance quite severely, as well as being less aero, so we wouldn’t be surprised to see Factor ditching the inner ring completely here.

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Factor ostro gravelThe DNA of the old version is still there, but the new OG looks much more on-trend(Image credit: Factor)Factor ostro gravelThe top tube is flatter, and the rear clearance is quite tight with what looks like a 50mm or maybe a 55mm tyre. (Image credit: Factor)Factor ostro gravelThe fork is deeper and wider, but the sloped shoulders look to be the pinch point. (Image credit: Factor)Factor ostro gravelThe down tube is perhaps a bit deeper, but not by much. (Image credit: Factor)Factor ostro gravelBardet and Klaris were using different cockpits, and deep wheels, but expect production models to have integrated cockpits only. (Image credit: Factor)