ICAN TT017
https://www.icanbikes.com/Products-list/carbon-tt-bike-frame/Flybike / Carbonda FM1366
Same frame afaik. Unsure whether one OEMs for the other, or if ICAN may be getting the frames from another OEM. But I suspect it's simple, and Flybike sells to ICAN.
You can email Wing & Crystal about it.
They dont have size Medium until December, apparently.
Tantan does have TT bikes btw.
http://tantancycling.com/index.php?_m=mod_product&_a=view&p_id=1122TT912, TT913.
Someone on this forum says his TT912 does clear 32C. The 913 is much newer.
Miracle bikes also has TT bikes:
http://mira-factory.com/Product/detail/id/14.html (same as Tantan 912, afaik, so probably an open mould?)
On brands, i wouldnt spend money on Trifox Airwolf or twitter. Yoeleo is a brand selling 500 frames for 1000, so not a value play. Lightcarbon is making me anxious with the horrid QC of some of the frames they've shipped to people on this forum - Velobuild, for eg, hasn't had that kind of bad press in years, as far as i can tell on this forum....
Ican is a brand, but the quote i got for the TT017 is competitive, so definitely considering them.
I've built 2 winow frames. Not the biggest fan, better tolerances & better sales rep interaction with Long Teng.
Elves, never.
That's purely my perspective, not meant to be gospel.
Me wanting something that is "newer tech" costs in western branded frames 3 times as much like the latest P-series or shiv. Both difficult to get in frames but will take 30c and run disc's.
Do you mean that there are brands that are up to date in terms of tyre width best practices, and they're so niche they're even more expensive than Specialized and the likes? Very curious to see their products & marketing.
I don't want to sound like a coolaid drinker, but i've rebuilt my rim supersix hi mod with 25mm (expensive) tubulars, whole bike weighs 6kg, and done a couple of rides on it, after riding my LT268 for the whole season. It feels bad descending because it's jittery AF (tyres), it feels bad on bad tarmac (tyres), i'm not materially faster uphill (comparing max efforts). That frame is the himod model from 2015, which Sagan raced on (ie highest tier carbon). Wheels are Campagnolo bora one. Sram red crank. Expensive tubulars. Rebuilt myself. And it feels great to ride a 6kg bike, and on good asphalt, you're tempted to surge out of the saddle on every little climb, i feels super stiff & agile (probably mostly because of the 105psi tyres and 6kg weight), vs my Tractor is just that: a tractor. The tractor climbing at 10kmh doesnt feel as nice. But it's at worst not slower uphill (limited data, but i doubt i'm wrong), and absolutely faster downhill & on the flat (quite dramatically).
I also sold earlier in the year my giant propel set up with 25mm GP5000 clinchers because the Tractor was so much nicer to ride on the same roads so i figured i wouldn't really want to ride the giant anymore.
And so, it bothers me to hear that TT / triathlon dudes are happy with 23 and 25mm tyres. Especially triathletes, where the whole point is to do a sustainable effort and getting every bit of speed out of a given effort (rather than maybe a short TT where somehow you feel like, maybe like a hill climb, that you want a super stiff bike blablabla. You can't underplay comfort in triathlon context.
Btw, 36cm bars are shit to sprint with, but i'd rather go downhill with my tractor w 36cm bars than my supersix with 42cm bars. You dont need wide bars to control a descent, and very few routes / races where you take your TT bike have sketchy downhills. But every second of every minute where you have a 40 or 42cm bar vs a 36cm one, you have more frontal area catching the wind and doing nothing for you.