#16
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this is an interesting observation.. my only true gravel bike has been a 2022 Giant Revolt rolling on Maxxis 40mm tires.. it never felt particularly quick or spry, despite the Revolt being known as more of a roadish gravel bike to my knowledge.. previous to this, my non-MTB dirt road travels had been on true cross bikes that always felt quick and nimble.. of course, they had narrower tires, higher bb, steeper HT, probably shorter chainstays.. I typically had a blast on those bikes on the local flowy trails in San Diego.. think I was running 35mm Conti Speed tires? Hmm.. maybe I just need to get another cross bike..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#17
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I just had a custom gravel bike made for me this year. I've had the same custom road bike for the last 15 (?!) years I've been happy with but went to a local experienced shop for a fitting before I finalized the gravel bike geo. I felt that the shop was doing more of a "road fit" than a "gravel fit." I guess like everything, it depends on where/how you are going to ride your bike. My best advice is ride/demo as many bikes as you can and see what you like/don't like.
My gravel bike is kind of a pig on road, but feels great off road. |
#18
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I also think the type of riding a person does, impacts the geometry. If you are riding really technical trails, with lots of steep downhills, a very slack geometry and long wheelbase would be preferred. If you are riding mainly flats trails, with road to connect sections, road bike geometry with bigger tires can work great.
There is no one geometry that works for all gravel. |
#19
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It probably depends on what else you ride as well. If I ride my fat bike 1 day a week it's probably impossible for any type of gravel bike to feel like a pig for me. It's probably going to be true if you have any mountain bike you regularly ride, maybe with the exception of a high end race focused XC bike.
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#20
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Interesting conversation.
It's all lost on me. Way back in the stone ages, when "gravel bikes" were not a thing, people were riding the dirt roads of new england and elsewhere on cobbled together touring bikes, mountain bikes and cyclocross bikes. When I got my first real gravel bike, I went to a custom builder and ordered, basically a road bike with clearance for wide tires. That was one of the real reasons to go custom back then, to get a gravel bike with road manners. I don't see why I would want anything other than a copy of my road fit for gravel, allowing wider tires, but I'm far from enlightened.
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#21
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Quote:
If your gravel is unmaintained, chunky forest access roads, then something a little more monstercross-y might be warranted. This the longer TT/reach, slacker HTA and longer WB seen in some of the newer bikes. Which isn't to say you can't rife those chunky roads on the more road-focused bike, it just will be a bit sketchy. And then you get into oddities like Leadville - it used to be a mountain bike race. But, if it was created today, it would probably be a gravel race (maybe). And the top guys are riding XC mountain bikes converted back into gravel bikes (drop bars, big chainrings, etc). |
#22
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I think the other thing that gets lost in the "Pro Gravelers are all on 2.2" Tires" discussion is that the lead pack at say, Big Sugar or Steamboat are doing 24-25mph in a group, it's dusty, they can't really see where they are going and nailing a rock wrong and ruining a tire or going down means no podium. Bigger tires mitigate that somewhat. There is also very little pavement on most courses in the US gravel scene, so you won't pay too badly for your bigger knobbier tires. I would evaluate whether the tradeoffs the pros are making for their specific use case are right for your own non-race riding.
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#23
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It's probably important to not conflate fit and geometry.
You can put your contact places in identical places on a MTB, Gravel Bike, and Road bike and yet they can have substantially different geometry. That might not be the perfect bike fit for all three but you can definitely do it and still have 3 different bikes. All the other differences that don't affect your contact points still matter and make those bikes handle differently, handle different terrain differently, have different strengths and weaknesses, etc.. |
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