#46
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I quickly looked at the price tag of the Fray and it's $5500 for just the frame and fork (unless everyone's got some insider discount). That's arguably twice the price of a discounted Crux complete.
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#47
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I thought the pricing about similar to a Crux frame set unless you're looking at the Comp. No? I know that recently there've been some sales. Perhaps that's what you're using for comparison? Or it could well be that my memory is incorrect
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#48
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Okay, I was off with the numbers.
Enve lists the Fray at $5500 MSRP, but most retailers sell the frame for $4500. Specialized was blowing out some non-sworks Crux completes for $3300 or so (could get it down the $3k) for a while. Not a true apples to apples comparison, but still a grand or so cheaper. |
#49
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Those appear to be such different bikes in fit…31mm lower stack on the crux vs fray in 56.
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#50
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I find the Crux to feel a little better than the Dark Matter on paved roads. On gravel, I think it is a wash.
On paper, the two are very similar geometry wise. I think the Crux feels a little more nimble on the road because it is much lighter. That said, I am not sure there would be a significant difference between the two against the clock if all else were the same. At different times, I had both the Dark Matter and the Crux as my only bike and have done fast group rides on both. It is hard to recall any details because it has been a while but I don't remember struggling more on one than the other to keep up with the road bikes in the group. |
#51
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Quote:
The Crux is my go-to “any road” bike and I think it excels at that. I currently have 32c tires on it, and will also try 35c tires eventually. The sweet spot will be in between there. No less than 32c and no wider than 35c. |
#52
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Quote:
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#53
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On my Crux, I recently did a fairly big gravel ride one day and then a fairly big road ride the next day. Both lots of climbing (try and avoid it in VT). Both solo, so without the dynamism inherent to racing or groups. Only setup difference was wheels/tires/cassette - gravel setup is 25mm inner, 38mm deep wheels with G-One Speed 40s and 10-36 cassette, road wheels are 21mm inner, 46mm deep wheels with Conti 4000 28s (tubed, measure 31 on these wheels - I'd stocked up on these a while ago bc they're great) and 10-33 cassette.
Gravel terrain is very limited singletrack, lots of buff dirt roads, steeper climbs and descents, and some quite chunky Class 4 (minimally maintained) roads. I'm not really trying to drop bar mtb on this bike. Road is road, with long climbs and descents. I was struck by how much I felt like I was riding a road bike while on the road, and how much I felt like I was riding a gravel bike on gravel. If there was a way to very easily go +5mm headset spacer from where I have it for gravel and -5mm spacer from where I have it for road (so road stack would be -10 from gravel stack), that would be amazing. Apart from that, just switching the wheels does everything you need. |
#54
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Quote:
__________________
🏻* |
#55
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#56
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__________________
🏻* |
#57
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In my case, I have the bars set up at the exact same place between the two bikes (which requires me to run the full 30mm spacers plus a 10mm riser handlebar on the Crux).
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#58
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Another ride on the Crux. Another blissful day on the bike. Damn, I love that thing. 🫶🏼
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#59
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Add me to the list of converted retrogrouches.
This thread helped me to pick my one do-it-all bike. After several rides, road and gravel, I am really happy with how the bike turned out and performs. |
#60
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Another convert; I have not touched my other bikes in a while, thinking about selling some.
Mine looks kind of weird with a Hover Specialized bar but it is what it is at 60 years. |
Tags |
peter denk |
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