For triathletes logging aero miles
Hold aero. Check behind. You no longer have to pick one.
Training in the bars on open roads means every head check costs position, watts and line. A mirror inside the lens costs a glance.
Shop The ViewThe aero dilemma
90% of your race is trained alone, in the bars, on open roads.
The position you’re paying watts to hold is the position that can’t see backwards. Down in the extensions, a proper head check means lifting the torso, swinging the head, drifting off the line you were holding — and doing it every few minutes for four hours.
So you either break aero constantly, or you ride long stretches trusting that the road behind you is empty. Neither is training. Both are compromise.
What triathletes do now
Breaking position
Every check un-trains the exact posture you’re out there to lock in — and the watts leak out with it.
The helmet mirror
Stuck to an aero helmet, buzzing at 40 km/h, aimed at the sky the moment you move your head.
Trusting the road
Long, straight, fast roads are exactly where traffic closes on you quickest.

The fix
A mirror in the lens. Aero stays aero.
The View puts a small adjustable mirror inside the lens. From the extensions, the road behind is one eye-flick away — head down, torso locked, line held.
Set it once for your position, and it’s set for the season. Photochromic and polarized lenses cover 5 a.m. starts through midday heat, so one pair does every brick, every long ride, every week of the build.
See for yourself
This is what you see.
Set it once. Then chase the split.
- 1
Set the angle for your position
A fingertip, tuned to your aero tuck. It holds at speed.
- 2
Glance from the bars
The road behind, checked without lifting your head or your heart rate.
- 3
Bank the position
Four uninterrupted hours of the posture you’ll race in.
From the long Saturday ride
“I stopped counting how often I sat up to look. Then I got these and the number went to zero.”
Two rides to trust it. Then the check happens without leaving aero — every time.
What riders say
The mirror is stable and keeps me from constantly looking behind me. So useful for road cycling.
Complete game changer for road cycling. I refuse to ride without these now — bought two pairs.
Exceptionally clear mirror. I feel much safer knowing I can see what’s behind me at all times.
Every watt where it belongs.
The View — a rear-view mirror in the lens, built for the long miles.
Shop The ViewFree shipping · 30-day returns · 2-year warranty