Christmas is about a lot of things – family, religion, rest – but it is also about presents and wishlists. For cyclists, that may mean asking for a new jersey, a good cycling book, or other fancy new tech for your bike.

We’ve already covered what real things we’re asking for in the tech team this Christmas, but the period of wishes and miracles got us thinking about something more: what about the things you can’t actually go out and buy, but we wish you could?

The bike industry is an extremely innovative and inventive one, but there are still things that haven’t quite materialised on the market – either because they’re still in the works, or maybe they’re actually impossible to create.

You may like

performance’ oriented they are.

You may like

Testing the best road bikes in the world in summer is excellent, but in winter, it can be an absolute drudgery. Mud, spray, manure, grit, grot, and grime all over my legs, feet, face and arse. Now that many aero bikes are able to handle 32c or even 35c tyres, it is maddening that I still cannot fit mudguards. The space is there in the frames, and it needs just a couple of riv nuts in the forks or easily blanked-out eyelets at the dropouts. Will it make the bike heavier? Yes, by a few grams. Will it make the bike less aero? Probably not, if you don’t fit them.

I understand that I may be in the minority here, but I bet you if the pros had the option to have a set of solid mudguards on their training bike for the winter, they’d take it, if they aren’t welded to Zwift. Yes, clip-on options exist, but they are so much worse.

Basically, mudguards are the best way to start to enjoy riding in the rain, rather than simply tolerating it, but I wish I didn’t have to always ride ‘the mudguard bike’ when the heavens open or the roads are filthy for 5 months.

Tom (Tech Writer)

A Shimano brake caliper and rotor

Lets keep those discs nice and quiet (Image credit: Tom Wieckowski)

I’m generally satisfied when it comes to personal bike tech currently, but one thing absolutely does my head in when it happens, and that is howling disc brake noise under braking.

One nice little improvement for all of us would be the elimination of that annoying, high-pitched squeal that can occur for a number of reasons. When it’s bad, it’s really bad, and it actively annoys me. There aren’t many things worse than the joy of a ride on a perfectly dialled and hopefully as quiet as possible bike being ruined by that loud squealing every time you pull the brakes.

It makes me brake in a different way to try and minimise it, distracts me, and depending on where you are, can be alarming for pedestrians, wildlife, other riders, passing planes, etc.

If cycling Santa could solve one thing for me this season, it would be to make howling disc brake squeal a thing of the past.

Canyon Endurace, Cannondale Synapse, BMC Roadmachine, Cervelo Caledonia, Trek Domane Carbon and Factor Monza. Out of those, the Factor Monza is the only aero road bike, and it’s on these performance bikes that I think tool storage makes the most sense. So let’s get those tools hidden in the frame for better aero, free up our jersey pockets and head out knowing our essential tools are always along for the ride.