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Tech gallery: Highlights from the 2025 Core Bike trade show

Tech gallery: Highlights from the 2025 Core Bike trade show

One of the UK's longest-running tradeshows reveals plenty on the horizon for 2025.

Now in its 20th year, Core Bike is one of the UK's premier trade shows and comes a few weeks after Ice Bike. Hosted at Whittlebury Hall, just a stone's throw from the Silverstone racing circuit in Northamptonshire, the show attracts a lot of attention from the UK cycle retailer scene. After a long and testing winter, Core Bike's place on the calendar acts as the start of the cycling season for many in the UK with spring (hopefully) just around the corner.

To find out what we can expect to see coming our way in 2025 I took a trip to the show to see what was on offer. Through the maze of small rooms, corridors, and passageways I found one theme rose above the rest. Small-run, limited-edition batches of premium products seem to be on the rise. Both Oakley and Open Cycles, along with other brands launching products coming shortly, have taken this approach.

What was pleasantly surprising was the number of attendees present. Compared to events of recent years, there seemed to be a palpable buzz with the energy across the show a hopeful glimmer of a recovering industry.

2025 looks to be full of new and exciting products across the industry. Here are some of my favourite picks from Core Bike.

Oakley's new helmet collection

Oakley is not new to the helmet game – the brand already has a range of both road and mountain bike helmets. For 2025, the Tudor Pro Cycling team has paired with the brand, turning to Oakley to create the fastest helmets possible.

The exact performance of the helmet has not yet been revealed but interestingly the helmet foregoes a Mips liner, as per the riders' requests, to lower the helmet's weight and increase comfort and cooling. Both the aero and vented helmets look very similar in profile, with the aero helmet adding two small fins at the rear that presumably have a positive aerodynamic effect.

Bliz hits the mid-tier 

A recent acquisition to the Oakley portfolio (which itself is owned by Essilor Luxottica) is the Swedish eyewear brand Bliz. Although the brand now falls under a bigger umbrella, it will be keeping its own identity, remaining as an independent brand with no carry-over between product ranges.

This means that Bliz will continue to use its own lens technology and design cues to create a purposeful separation between itself and Oakley. Expect a range of colours, designs, and sizes. In terms of market position, Bliz looks to fill the gap beneath Oakley's range with prices starting at around £70 (approx US$90).

SDG’s boldest saddles to date

If you want to have a tiger print saddle, SDG is the brand for you.

SDG is well known for its Bel Air saddle which has been part of the brand's range in one guise or another for over 20 years. For 2025, the brand is returning to some wild old and potentially questionable designs. However, a leopard print saddle may just be what your custom build needs – I won't judge.

Equally, if you wanted something similarly alternative but with more of an armchair-and-smoking-jacket vibe, the Bel Air III has this base covered too. Maybe one best kept for drier café rides.

POC's new helmet looks to be on its way 

The sight of this new helmet from Poc can be traced back to last year's Tour de France where a number of riders from EF Pro Cycling were seen using the new lid. Since then, nothing more has come of the helmet, and many (myself included) had largely forgotten about the helmet's existence.

Although no details were disclosed at the event, I did get to see the new heavily vented helmet in the flesh. Much like the Oakley helmet, this looks to go without Mips, potentially to increase the helmet's ventilation. The top cross-section of the helmet uses a carbon fibre construction spanning between the EPS core. Given that the helmet is now being shown at trade shows it is fair to expect an official release sometime soon.

Open Upper Concept 

Open is a brand that has been around for over a decade, with its most well-known model the U.P. gravel bike the first of its kind when it launched. The brand was founded by Andy Kessler and Gerard Vroomen, Kessler the former CEO of BMC, and Vroomen, the co-founder of Cervélo.

New for 2025, the brand is launching the U.P.'s successor in the shape of the U.P.PER. Currently, the bike is only available in very small numbers with only 19 coming to the UK in either a medium or large with the ready-to-paint frameset retailing for £4,700. After these have sold the standard model U.P.PER. will become available as a frameset. With clearance for a 46 mm tyre it isn't pushing the boundaries but it is a good-looking bike.

Enduro Bearings press and extraction tools

On the tool front, Enduro Bearings was showing off its latest bearing tool. Enduro has long provided ways to extract bearings cleanly without the need for a hammer, and the new BRT-040 is just a further example of that. When combined with Enduro's own hub presses, it allows for the extraction of bottom bracket bearings, most press-fit bottom bracket cups, and some hub bearings, too.

Elsewhere at the show

Beyond the bigger brands showcasing their latest products, there was plenty of new or interesting tech on display from across the industry. Some of my favourites from the show included Fizik's first wide-fit mountain bike shoe and Ortlieb's custom-design bags.

Ortlieb had a series of custom-printed Velocity 23 bags. Second from the right is a design in collaboration with trash-free trails which reads; 1. Choose somewhere you love and record your route. 2. Remove every single-use-plastic item you see when following your path. 3. Tally every item you pick up by using our tally sheet. 4. Don't forget to note down any hotspots. 5. Submit your data to the SoOT report. 6. Repeat every time you run, ride or roam.
Fizik has expanded its wide-fit range to now include off-road shoes. Until now the brand has offered wide-fit in its road shoes exclusively. There has been a growing trend in cycling with brands expanding the wide-fit offering in their collections. This move will hopefully provide a more comfortable fit for a greater range of riders.
Topeak was showing its new Team Issue Prepstation. With plenty of space for extra tools and spares it makes for a well-organised travelling workstation. Given its size and £1,200 price tag, it is more than a bit surprising to see it didn't contain a spoke key.
Aeron was displaying its TPU tubes that are heat bonded together instead of the more typical method of using an adhesive. The brand says that this can extend the life of the tube as there is no adhesive to break down over time, something that can be an issue for spare tubes kept in saddle bags for months at a time. With a starting price of £18.99, the tubes sit at the more affordable end of the TPU spectrum.
Arguably one of the most recognisable bikes on the internet. Danny MacAskill's custom Santa Cruz trials bike was positioned to greet people into the PON hall. The scuffs, scratches and paint chips are all signs of the bike's hard life.

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