I’ve already got a few other Favero Assioma sets I’ve bought over the years that I use around the DCR Cave. Oh, speaking of which, these are media loaner units, and both sets will go back to Favero afterwards. So that’s what I’m focusing on in this review. But with that comes final packaging and all the final goodness you’d expect. More recently I got the final production version in, which…are exactly the same internally as well. Quietly removing them before photoshoots, but otherwise using them just like any other Favero Assioma pedal (because, they are exactly the same). On and off (literally and figuratively), compared to a wide range of power meters, bikes, and smart trainers. In any case, I’ve actually been quietly testing them for more than a *year*. Don’t worry, we’ll talk about that in a second. The bad news is you’ve got an arts and crafts project, plus some other technical things to consider. The good news there is that makes this product roughly $500-$600 cheaper than Garmin’s Rally SPD-SL variant. You’ll need to go out and buy the Shimano SPD-SL compatibility pedals of your own choosing. See, while that’s the end-point, the DUO-Shi product is actually just the pedal spindles (for $589USD or ~589EUR including VAT (VAT inclusive pricing varies based on exact EU country). Favero has launched their newest Assioma variant today, the DUO-Shi, which simply takes the existing Favero Assioma pedals, but now with Shimano SPD-SL compatibility.
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