Velocio Alpha Merino Air Jacket deals

The name Velocio might not be as familiar to some of you as cycling stalwarts like Castelli and Assos, and the New England brand might have only been around since 2013, but it has made a good name for itself in the premium apparel sector. Named after French cyclist Paul de Vivie, who wrote under the name Velocio, the American brand was acquired by SRAM in 2022, but has remained a largely separate entity in terms of brand image and marketing.

Man wearing a purple jacket, navy tights and a pale helmet riding a black gravel bike towards the camera on a muddy track

(Image credit: Andy Jones)

Castelli’s Espresso Air.

And frankly, that is about that. It is a fairly simple design that relies heavily on the quality of the fabrics and the fit.

Van Rysel’s RCR-R Pro 4 Season jacket, and I was sceptical about Velocio’s -4°C temperature rating claim.

The medium fitted me very well, and in line with most other brands’ jackets, but it didn’t really look or feel like a particularly protective outer layer, so I was cautious about when to use it to start with. A short ride here, a little gravel loop there, in conditions that weren’t too arctic.

However, it passed every successive test with flying colours and so I eventually committed to a 100km gravel ride with a maximum forecast temperature of -3°C. With just a long-sleeved base layer underneath and the occasional addition of a gilet when stationary, the Alpha air kept me warm from frigid dawn to baltic dusk.

The next cold blast of Arctic air saw me deploy it for a 90km road ride, and again, it performed flawlessly, defying my initial misgivings about it.

Man wearing a purple jacket, navy tights and a pale helmet riding a black gravel bike 3/4 towards the camera on a muddy track

Perfect for hard efforts or high-tempo rides

(Image credit: Andy Jones)

The more I ride in different jackets of varying brands, fabrics and purposes, the more I am convinced that breathability is by far and away the key metric that defines a garment’s performance. All the insulation and/or weather protection is worthless if your sweat chills you from the inside out; this is the Alpha Air’s pièce de résistance. It is phenomenally breathable.

Those large fleece panels, of course, let plenty of moist air out through them, but so do the front-facing, Alpha-lined sections. In fact, I don’t think that these areas are even 100% windproof, but it doesn’t matter. They block enough breeze that, even in at -6°C (plus windchill), I never felt cold, and my base layer (and skin) remained perfectly dry. After most rides, I strip off my damp layers as soon as I enter the house, but with the Alpha Air, I was perfectly comfortable to make my coffee and poached eggs without feeling an urgent need to disrobe first.

Man wearing a purple jacket, black base layer and a pale helmet

With the alpha Air, my base layer stayed dry

(Image credit: Andy Jones)

There is no discernible DWR treatment on the outer, and even light mist wets the jacket, but because its breathability is so good, it also makes a perfect mid-layer to wear under a waterproof. Thus, rather than putting off when to put on an extra layer in the wet because you know that the boil-in-a-bag feeling is only minutes away, I was perfectly happy to put my Squall Shell or Shakedry over the Alpha Air.

It’s a versatile piece too, with an aesthetic that is perhaps slightly more gravel than road race and it would work very well for bikepacking, I think. Its warmth and moisture management capabilities make it ideal for cold starts and cool weather days, whilst its low weight means that it would be easy to pack away when not needed, albeit not in a jersey pocket.