For heavens sake, the clue is in the name. If you want a bike for deep mud, buy a deep mud bike (hint: cyclo-cross). If you want a bike to climb really steep hills, buy a really steep hill bike. A gravel bike is for gravel. And on gravel, it does really, really well.
Mullet drivetrain is the answer. And the SRAM AXS architecture? "This is the way" I have a Ti bespoke monstercross rig (dam thing doesn't know WHAT it is. 100mm sid fork, wide flared drop bars, AXS dropper post...) has a Ethirteen (purple ano of course) 9-50t rear-end shifted by an axs x01 rear mech, and shifted with force brifters. Getting turned with a Force 1x chainset running (purple ano) a 42t garburuk narrow wide chainring. It doesn't spin out at an absurdity low speed on flat pavement or gravel, and it gives you a better than 1:1 climbing gear for technical single-track climbs. I once did a 30 mile pavement ride with 4k of climbing to a trailhead, did a 10 mile no shit MTB trail loop (which had a 4 mile single-track flow trail decent with lots of air and a few wall rides) and rode 30 miles home on that thing. Mullet is love, Mullet is life. (Unless you are a cadence guy... I guess... I'm a seated power masher so being "between ratios" isn't a problem)
The versatility of the gravel bike is the appeal. I can hop on and off different surfaces, leaving my house on tarmac, getting on a crushed limestone rail trail, heading out to the country where I find varying degrees of light to chunky gravel on hills that can reach 15% gradient. As for tires, the Rene Herse Hurricane Ridge 48mm's are perfect for gravel while rolling smoothly over tarmac.
I've bought a hybrid bike for that reason. Does the same like a gravel for half the price. Only difference is that my hybrid bike has a slightly longer wheelbase
Agreed. I'm looking at a Marin DSX1 flat bar gravel bike mainly as a timesaver. So much quicker for a ride after work to ride a bike from house instead of loading up my mountain bike and driving to the local trails. Looking for a simple bike with a 1X drivetrain and a couple of mounts for water bottles.
@@frankking439 Hydration bags are much convenient than water bottles, especially if the water bottles are stuck in the holder and hard to pull them out. N9t t9 mention they are prone to be dirty especially off-road. Nowadays I use a Hydration bag for water and the bottle holder only for drinks which I would only drink when i am stopped and for drinks i would not put in the Hydration bag due to cleaning issues (like Cola) Meanwhile the Hydration Bags straw is right at me. Only issue is that sometimes its dripping but now i have one with an open/close lever and also it has a cap which easy to handle by one hand.
You can apply the same logic to any number of other bikes, from touring, hybrid or MTB to city bikes and traditional roadsters. They will all cope with roads, dirt roads and trails, woodland paths and the like. There are so many variations of the above, that there's pretty much a bike to suit everyone without buying a so called "gravel bike". And as not two manufacturers gravel bikes are alike, clearly they can't even agree what a gravel bike should be. 😂
As others have said - the gearing issue is pretty ridiculous. With a 1x setup on a 11-42, I really had to switch down to a 36T chainring - which is great, except it obviously leads me to spinning out when I’m just using it on steeper descents or for road-riding. For a bike that solidly works as both a bikepacking/gravel bike and road-capable all-arounder, I really think a wide-range 2x is the best option.
My bike came with a 2x. I don’t do any backpacking. Mostly Road and gravel, Gravel 48/31 with 40-11 cassette. For Road is 48/31 with 34-11 cassette. I have 2 wheel set with tires rotors and cassette on each. So it goes from Road to Gravel bike in 10min or less
You could eaaily switch cassette up a 11-46, maybe 10-46 even. Also keep chainring as is or move it up to 38t. I'm running 40t chainring, 9-52 kcnc cassette.
I never understood why people (or manufacturers) feel the need for a single chain ring setup if they're going to be riding a wide variety of terrain. There's a reason why bicycles developed two and three chain ring setups, and most people benefitted from them. Trying to cram a huge range of gearing solely on the back wheel leads to lots of compromises.
My gravel bike is a Giant Escape 3 hybrid converted to a 9 speed 11-36 cassette with a triple up front 48/36/26, hydraulic brakes, 45mm Pirelli Cinturato's and 790mm flat bars. All for under £1000 including the bike itself (£415 Jan. '22). I have toured on it, forest trails and various bridle paths and what have you. My road bike, because I like a bit of comfort, is a Boardman 8.9ADV gravel bike with the original tyres removed, a Redshift stem and a set of 32's fitted. It doesn't have many attachment points, but I don't care. I live in a very hilly area so the standard gearing is ok but it wouldn't be any good at all if I loaded it up with bike packing stuff. In other words, there's a lot of marketing shite going on and I for one haven't fallen for it. What I've done is a bit of research, decided what suits me and ignored the bike industry.
@@gregbrown8503 Exactly my set up except I stick with 3x7 , works great, cheap to maintain, A £4000 gravel bike with a 1x setup wouldnt be so good for me as my £400 Giant, its great
@@zedddddful nothing stopping me other than when loaded up I want Granny gears. The bike is fine for any hill unloaded, but stick around 9 kilos more on it, which is the weight of my camping kit .................
I think gravel bikes splitting into two categories of adventure bikes AND race bikes is good. It leaves both to excel at their indented use. Id rather not compromise my bike for bikepacking so that a guy on the other side of the spectrum can do gravel racing with the same machine.
How many bike categories do we need? There are already a plethora of racing bikes and there are already a plethora of adventure, touring, hybrid, utility and off-road bikes. Why would people want to change the basic "gravel bike" identity? What you're basically saying is that the gravel bike isn't really a super idea. Which I agree with, as there are plenty of bikes that can already fulfill that niche, and they've been available for many, many years. This is what happens when marketing teams are told the company isn't selling enough bikes... a "new" and "better" category appears. And then disappears. 🙄
@@another3997anyone who rides though and even the bike industry themselves have conceded that gravel bikes are basically just revamped versions of old school mountain bikes. There’s nothing wrong with this concept really, obviously they get to market and profit off a “new” thing but I think the bike industry started to get way too high end and people wanted to get back to simpler times while maybe sticking with higher end parts.
Gravel bikes are cool. But they can be very expensive as you mentioned. I rented one, did 40 miles and felt the vibration of each one of those miles in my arms for a week. The cost to buy of that one was $1700. The owner showed me a better option with a suspension for $5000. It was too much for me. I did love it, so the idea that came to mind was that I was basically riding a MTB with drop bars. And I did just that, fixed my old MTB into a “gravel” bike with drop bars. It does great! And I only spent $360 fixing it and replacing old parts.
"vibration of each one of those miles in my arms" - can also have something to do with poor core muscles or bike fitting. Beginners often support/lean their body on the handlebars with their arms straight instead of holding the handlebars relatively loosely with their arms slightly bent. With your arms stretched straight, every bump in the road hits your joints and you'll notice that for a few days. There is more “spring” in the bent arm position.
Excellent points, but the gearing misconception is also valid for road bikes, as not everyone is a young, slim and fit pro rider and might use it for long bike packing days in the Alps. So lower gearing would help road bikes as well, but I agree that for gravel bikes it becomes even more obvious of how wrong the gearing is. For the last 4 decades I always looked for the bikes with the lowest gearing and modified my current road bike from an 11-34 cassette to a MTB cassette with 11-40.
Same here, 11-40 and even 11-42 work with a RoadLink DM derailleur hanger on my RX810-specced gravel bike. And yes, with a literal mountain range on my door step, it does make a difference 😅
@@phil4455 triples are irrelevant now. A 3x9 has 14 independent ratios, 2x11 has 14 independent ratios. That’s why it’s dead. A 30x28 is a bigger gear than a 34x32, so big range cassettes defeat its former use as well.
Same issue here. I would love it to use a GRX groupset. As I’m an roadie I love a wide range but I couldn’t find a good option. I was transforming an old Cannondale M500 mtb frame into a gravel bike. I like mechanical groupsets cos it’s easy to maintain travelling and no need for ‘special’ tools on the road. I ended up using Shimano Sora 2x9. Shimano levers, sora FD, Alivio long cage RD with a 11-42 microshift cassette. On the front I installed an old square tapered crank and I change the rings with Zephyr 42/34 rings. This was the best for me I could get with a low budget. Its not the lightest option ofc but in need you can always walk ;). I use shorty V-brakes aswell. It works really well. In my opinion there are too many people with overgeared bikes and stuff they don’t need for the things they do with bikes. But yea, if you have the money why not.
I’m so glad I still ride the original gravel bike, my atb (all-terrain-bike), a 1986 Zebra I bought new at Bicycle Habitat. I run 1.6 Continental Contacts.
I've got a gravel bike, it has brilliant gearing, all the mounting points i could ever need, mud guard mounts, pannier rack mounts, and running g one all rounds and its great on the road and the trail.. 👍
Thats why most touring bikes use triple chainrings up front. I get 17 gear inches when using the 22 on the front and 34 on the back. 17 gear inches will get you up almost anything.
@@JohnDough-yr2zt If your chainring is too small, top speed downhill can be reduced. Thus, depending on the personal requirements, a smaller chainring might just do the job, but it can also be insufficient.
@@lesand5484 Depending on 1 chainring to be as good for top speed, and low gears for the steep stuff, doesnt work, it never will. But 1000's argue every day that 1X is the only way there is. Bicycle and parts makers HAVE to have a new system to sell pretty often, for now 1X is the big push...................After all these years with sketchy 2X shifting up front, now that 2X works perfect, shifts as fast as rear shifting? Now is the time to say it doesnt work right, too complicated, and go 1X.
This video can be summed up by the following: Gravel bikes are the adjustable wrench of bikes, and while it works almost everywhere, the experience is typically better with a set of wrenches i.e. bikes designed for the specific use case. Also, there aren't enough tire options.
I built a bike to maximize riding fun on my home terrain. It looks like a gravel bike. If you did the same for where you live, your bike might NOT look like a gravel bike. I also have a vintage hardtail, a vintage road bike and a touring bike. The “gravel bike” is a daily rider for getting away on short notice. My build was “expensive,” but the bike you want might cost more than you think. Nobody is making big money in bikes these days, especially dealers and mechanics.
lol the low gearing on a modern gravel bike running a 10-52 12speed in the rear is lower than most any 2x road setup. Also tops out with enough speed to ride on the road for all but A cat riders. About the tires, the difference in rolling resistance between a gp 5000 and a challenge pro or a pathfinder is like 15 watts. That’s a 32c road tire vs a 40c gravel tire with any terrain capabilities. There is a website that provides these numbers. New gravel tires don’t have the loss you think.
Not many gravel bikes actually come with 10-52 as standard though, unfortunately. (two that do, which I'm grateful for, are the Marin Gestalt XR, & Headlands 2 - I'm considering either of these right now). I know there's the Shimano 10-51 as well.
One of the point Gravel bike better than touring/ hybrid bike is the weight usually sit between 8.5kg to 10.5kg, plus drop bar provide different handling positions and more aero, in a long distance it saves a lot of energy, and reduce chance of fatigue In terms of mounting bolts, there are two types gravel bike, for example gravel “road” bike like Specialized Crux and Specialized Diverge which is on the touring adventure side which has as much as mounting points as touring bike Then gear raito, 1x setup is very enough for a average 9kg ish gravel bike, although touring/ mountain bike got a lower ratio, they are also from 12kg up, so that that 3kg different makes up a lot more room for luggage if you are doing bikepacking (touring) Tyre clearance, new disc brake road bike can usually fit up to 35mm tyres, but on rougher gravel road, 35mm is not enough unless you are pro…..plus bottom bracket of gravel bike sits a bit higher than road bike, which does a better job when you are riding on forest terrain, also the vibration absorption of the frame is much better than a road bike
Taking notes... But agree to disagree on many levels... My main concern is why to say or supply a electronic shifting on a gravel bike... That is destined for the most harder longer and distant places to ride... When you need is not micro smooth shifting you need is a long last durable group set that has not limited battery... Except your legs... Ergo a lot of potential in gears... For many different cadences and comfort.
@@_MPP_ I can believe that’s just the number I have heard shimano say. I know I only charge mine about twice a year but I loose track with indoor time and when they sit.
Poseidon Redwood: Cheap Room for big, aggressive tyres Wide range 11-48 cassette Lots of mounts including rack mounts Heavy stock wheels... well, I guess you can't win 'em all!
Ya!!! Finally, intelligence !! Extreme low gearing, isn't offered. Which is most important system on bicycle. I added triple crank , shamano 9020 ,22 x30x40 ,to my rei adv 3.2 10spd cassette 11 to 36. And dropped weight.650b x50mm .20lbfront 23rear. Comfortable, Very efficient. Hauls large, heavy loads. Total confidence. Gearing,I would like to play with 11x40. I've never pushed, guess some enjoy pushing. Many new bickers, get discouraged (can't get up hill ,or even crash. Enter electric market. No thanks,for me!!! 👍😁
A gravel bike will not do *everything* great, but will do better than most other options over the full range of possible use of "a bike"; yes an XC bike would be a better choice on rough and super steep terrains, but have you tried riding a century on one? Yes, a pure aero road bike will get you faster on tarmac, but have you tried riding one in the woods over roots and cobbles? A gravel bike can do all this, so you can plan for longer rides on mixed terrains with a good confidence the bike will get you through. That's big when you think about it.
Bought a Treck checkpoint ALR 5 2 years ago. Had not done more than the odd mountain bike ride in the last 20 years. I’m hooked again. The bike is nothing short of awesome. It’s on the smart trainer in winter and on the road and gravel the rest of the year. Our roads are not the best. I bought an aero bike last year and had a puncture the very first ride. I’m super careful where I ride it now. The other thing is I like the rigidity of the Aluminum frame in some situations. Yes the aero is far faster, but the gravel bike does pretty much everything. The company that I looked at hiring a bike for the North coast 500 used that exact model. If it’s robust enough to be a rental and versatile enough for that ride, it can’t be bad. Got me back into cycling and I’m so grateful for that.
The Checkpoints are great bikes! I own a 2023 Trek Checkpoint ALR5. I upgraded to a Shockstop suspension stem, mounted a pannier rack (this bike still has mounts for pannier racks) and it’s one of the most versatile and comfortable bikes I’ve owned.
I haven't yet felt to buy a dedicated gravel bike. When I'm afraid to leave the tarmac with my road bike, or winter approaches, I just put some cyclocross tires on like you said. When I want to go on trails, I take my mountainbike. And for longer tours I have my trekking bike fit with Schwalbe Marathon tour plus for rougher terrain and mounts for four saddle bags.
@@Pionirish If you are logical : flat bars (or drops), 50mm+ tyres clearance, stronger tubing, longer chainstay and more relaxed position. Here in France we used to call such elongated and sturdier road bike "randonneuse" (female hiker) before they disaperead... Only for them to come back 30-40 years later with a vengeance 😅
Gravel bikes are still riding the wave of "newness" they came in on. They started as roadbikes that took fatter tires, a little fatter. Now they are the "only bike needed" for some, they are mt bikes, they are road bikes. Not me. ------------------ The 1X thing, will always be what it is. Either has no low gear, or no top gear, or lacking in both. This is said to be a triumph and its all we need. Marketing can be assnine, but it works. "a strong rider doesnt need low gears for hills" is the standard justification for 1X.
Some of these issues, like the gearing can be solved by not going for an out-of-the-box solution, but mix and matching different components. I know most people are not bike mechanics to be able to do this at home, but shouldn't be a huge deal to have it done in a bike service shop.
Spot On. Going for the adventure side I went for a Bombtrack Beyond, 36t 11/42, and fitted Smart Sam's 2.1. Plenty of attach points. Very happy about this setup. But found the EUR 2600 price tag a bit pricey...
BRILLIANT I TOTALLY agree with everything you said, I live on the edge of Dartmoor and ride mostly off road on an amazing variety of terrains from dismantled mineral railways to moorland, all just outside my door, my bikes get a hammering but I never spend a fortune, my favourite bike at the moment is a used Giant Escape that I picked up for £150, I fitted drop bars and shifters, I ALWAYS fit a carrier as I always need to carry clothing/tools/ food etc and the Giant has frame mounts front and rear (as you say WHY leave them off??) it has a triple chainset (26/36/46) with a 7 speed screw on freewheel (14-28 recently replaced for £15) and I can climb anything with that and also have a decent top gear for the road, and I ALWAYS fit mudguards otherwise I would get plastered in crud much of the time and have never found a problem with using them, the Giant has loads of clearance and I use 700x38c tyres, I could go much bigger and still have room for mudguards, so yea, for me gravel bikes are an expensive fad, they wont last, Even a cheap Carrera Crossfire Hybrid from Halfords would be a better choice for me most of the time, I have tried mountain bikes but I much prefer 700c wheels for the extra pace and there are just loads of great used Hybrids about and the frame construction on even cheap Hybrids is up to the job now, I have never broken a frame
Done something similar with my Escape. They're as tough as old boots these bikes, and comfy with it. My gravel bike is a Giant Escape 3 hybrid converted to a 9 speed 11-36 cassette with a triple up front 48/36/26, hydraulic brakes, 45mm Pirelli Cinturato's and 790mm flat bars. All for under £1000 including the bike itself (£415 Jan. '22). I have toured on it, forest trails and various bridle paths and what have you.
My 2019 Salsa Fargo with it's 1 X 11, 32 tooth chainring and a 11 - 42 cassette, clearance for up to 29 x 3.0 tires and loads of mounts including rack mounts, works very well for gravel adventures. Would it win races? Based on pure speed, probably not. But if you want an adventure capable drop-bar bike that will carry you through your next adventure, it's hard to beat.
... with its* 32-teeth chainring (it's = it is) and up to 3-inch tires it's an MTB with dropbars, not a gravelbike that is supposed to perform on paved roads just as well as off-road.
Good summary. We all knew these & they will continue to be issues but oh well.....I agree about the gearing. Huge front chainrings on a lot of gravel bikes that will never see a race of any kind.
I dont know if you looked at bianchis gravel bikes because the one I bought around a moth ago, gr0013 comes with h.disk breaks grx 810 rear and front derailleur and the rest is grx 600 with a carbon fork and it costed 38.000 tl which is roughly 1300usd. I have rided it for around 200km and had no problems with it.
I have the setup you are asking for. Pivot Vault, sram mullet components, 10-52 cassette, 42 single crank, with room for up to 45 tires, enve 5.6 sea road rims that will fit all sizes.
I'm surprised that drivetrain isn't more popular on off-the-shelf bikes. I'm currently looking at the Marin Gestalt XR & Headlands 2, both of which have that drivetrain. (thankyou Marin! 🕺)
Agreed on the gearing. My gravel bike came standard with a 42T single chainring and 11-28 cassette. Considering it is also marketed as a commuter bike, I found it nonsensical. Even on a tarred road, 42-28 on a 10% gradient is bloody hard. I modified it to a 38T chainring and 11-34 cassette. A lot better, but still not easy.
You aren't kidding. My gravel bike is an old crosser, with a 38T chain ring and an 11-51 cassette. It gets me up anything, although it's not so fast on the flats. I might split the difference and get a 40T chain ring.
Yes 1x11/12 looks clean but the range limitations cannot be denied, also when u often do steep tracks in the lowest gear the chainline is not straigt and combined with the high forces it leads to fast wear out.. In the 90s i bought a mountainbike (3x9) with Continental 26x1.75 travel that can handle up to 75 psi, i did everything with that bike, still ride it..
@@johndrawing1176 I still prefer single chainrings, though. Not so much for the clean look, but more because it simplifies the cockpit, and shifting. Re wear: I think its more a case of how thin the cassette cogs and the chain are on 12spd bikes that leads to the high wear; more than the cross-chain issues. My 8 spd chain has to cross the same lateral width as my 12spd, but it lasts 4 times the distance ridden. I think megarange 10spd like the Microshift Advent X is probably the best option in terms of durability and versatility (and cost).
Regarding gearing, the answer is simple. Regardless of what kind of bike it is, and how it's marketed, the reality is they're all set up anymore for racing. Because "That's what the pros use/do". Same with the (lack of) mounts. Even on the less expensive models, they are still patterned after what the pros use, despite the fact that the pros (and serious amateurs), are generally all using very expensive and high-end bikes. Modern "endurance" geometry is considerably more aggressive than the endurance geometry of 20 years ago. One of my gravel bikes, that was specifically marketed and designed as "not a racer", is still quite aggressive, and I run the maximum allowed amount of spacers, with a high angle stem, and that gets me in a semi-comfortable position. And it's funny that they call it "not a racer", because it's geometry almost exactly matches another company's bike, that is specifically marketed as a racing bike. One that has won many many races. None of it makes any sense. but then again, it is all just marketing. And this is probably why the bike I ride the most is my Fairdale Weekender. It can take bigger tires than my gravel bikes, and has all of the traditional mounts. It's comfortable, and all-purpose. Not as fast as my gravel bikes, but then again I don't ride my gravel bikes as fast as they are capable of going. And not as capable off-road as a full suspension mountain bike, but I don't ride those kinds of trails anyway. If it weren't for the fact that I do like to do fast, long rides, I would just assume sell all the carbon fiber I have, and exclusively ride the Fairdale. I feel like bikes like the Weekender are all the bike most people need, and the kind of bike that most people don't even realize they're looking for. Forget about what the pros do and use. Find a bike that doesn't beat you up, does the job you need it to do, and most importantly, you just have a blast riding!
Spot on with the rack mounts! On tyres I find it's more of an issue with 650b tyres not having enough choice. I can get lots of lightweight options but no super tough options for commuting or bikepacking, like say Marathon Plus or Conti Contact Plus, which only come in 700c This is on the face of it a bit of a clickbait-y list video, but is actually very nicely considered. Thanks!
WTB Nano is all you need for a "mud-capable tire" on a Gravel bike. The road bike-based mech that are put on gravel bikes from Shimano and SRAM will be gummed up if you're riding in MTB-level mud where such a tire is necessary, especially if you have a front derailleur.
Because a gravel bike is not a mountain bike, it's supposed to be good on any terrain, including dry hardpack and paved roads. Super-wide tires and aggressive profile make a bike more off-road capable but less road capable, so you might as well stick with your MTB that felt so slow on-road.
Was into my MTB back in the 90s and loved it for many years. I eventually moved across to the road full time, but the 'fairly' recent gravel scene caught my eye. I now own a lovely titanium gravel bike which I bought a couple of seasons ago. I bought it thinking this will get me back into offroad riding but with the latest kit. Wrong.....This is not a go anywhere offroad bike. With the mtb I could plot any offroad route I wanted and 99% of the time I could pretty much manage the terrain. With the gravel I'm limited to say 60% of the offroad trails. The gravel bike, with the current gearing, just won't cut the steep or steep/techy stuff. Its an okay bike and enjoy the fast Towpathy/Kielder forest type gravel stuff, but its not what I expected. If I plot an offroad route I've never done before (I live next to the peaks) I can be sure that I'll be pushing some of it...Its a gravel bike and thats what its sold as I suppose. Like many more I feel as though I was marketed into something that wasn't what I was really after. I'll continue to use it but I have to be selective with routes. In hindsight (LOL)I should have gone for an MTB, circa 2000 frame/wheels and the latest hydraulic/tech stuff fitted (with barends)...fast and fun, up or down anywhere.
And that's why I built up a hardtail bike instead. Mainly my issues wasn't the gearing, it's the tires. I found gravel tires to be way too soft for any real off road use, or at least for me.
@@scruf153 yeah I never had the impression it was sold as doing anything more than unsealed dirt or gravel paths without having hugely compromised road performance, not so much trails and steep or technical terrain. It's a "go anywhere" bike that's less "anywhere" than a MTB, but a fair bit quicker on the flat.
That's a case of believing the hype put out there by manufacturers and journalists who don't own or ride these bikes long term, not doing enough research, and buying the wrong tool for the job. You bought a capable ratchet set, but tried to use it to hammer a nail and cut wood.
I have found Teravail Rutland to be very good at getting through mud and shedding mud (have to get through fields in winter on my local routes) they come in 4 sizes in 700s from 35 to 47 👍🏼
I didn't have most of these problems 30 years ago when I owned a Rock 'n Road bike hand-built by the late, great Bruce Gordon. Wide gearing range even though only 3x8 was available at the time, Avocet Cross-K 700x38 inverted tread tires that rolled smoothly on asphalt but gripped decently on hardpack, enough rack mounts, and the whole bike was only about $1200. I miss that bike.
@@InnuendoXP You're probably too young to remember. $1200 back then would be worth about $2400 today. With RX600, today's mid-range components, a gravel bike goes for about $3500. And the Rock 'n Road was built to order, not off the rack.
Finally someone mentioning the missing mounting points. I just don't get why so many brands get rid of them. I personally would not buy a bike without all the traditional mounting points.
I see a big issue at brake capability: a lot of gravel bikes come with 160/160 and can be upgraded in best case to 180/160. But going up and down a lot with a fully loaded bag (in my case including my office-laptop) can show the limits of this lightweight brake setup. Also by only having PM brakes on my other bikes I dislike the flatbed standard at gravel bikes.
What annoys me is the whole idea that gravel bike is a great choice for riding a single tracks, trails, rocks and roots. The reality is that there are practically no gravel bikes on trails and the majority of people use them like a comfy road bikes. Moreover, if someone does not want to race but simply ride with a more upright position, they have less and less choices when it comes to frame geometry.
Great info! I love my cannondale topstone 4. About 1000 usd. Mounts everywhere, great price. All I did was throw a dropper and get wider bars and it’s perfect. Can’t really fit huge tires but it’s fine I’m mainly on my enduro MTB anyway but I think the topstone covers most or at least some of the points you bring up. Good work man thanks!
I have 50-34 & 11-34, 2x. It's a forgiving road setup on a gravel frame. I wont be able to climb trees, but whenever it's vaguely flat (mileage of "vaguely" will vary), it means i have lots of gears to play with. A 1x setup with a huge cassette is great to climb trees, but miserable whenever it's vaguely flat, as you can somehow never find the cadence that feels right.
I like the handlebar on my gravelbike. I like light cross country mountainbike too, and they both are good on dirtroad/gravelroads in the forest. I got 42 cog behind on the gravelbike, and that is light enough.
Whilst I kind of agree with most of your points. I must point out, that I have just purchased a pair of Pirelli Cinturato gravel M tyres (40mm), which are fantastic in muddy conditions. I'm unsure whether your choices are clouded by your sponsors, but the tyres are out there. Also, why on earth would anyone need more than 45mm tyres on a gravel bike.
You need wider tires if your gravel roads have a lot of sand. My roads are a mix of sand and gravel. They ride much easier and faster with a 48 tire. I’ve ridden them plenty on 35-42, if they are well traveled, those work fine, if tractors/maintenance has been through, it is not a fun time on the narrower tires.
You are spot on. Add another front sprocket or two, flat bars, chunky tyres, just like my 1990 mountain bike. Surely a gravel bike is like an SUV, it gives the looks of something that can go off road without actually being any good at it. But there is a need for less aggressive mountain bikes.
Special tip for aggressive tyres -> Schwalbe Smart Sam is avalieble in 42mm and performes very well. The only downside is that I only found models so far that you have to use inner tubes for. But it´s cheap and I recomend it absolutley! Just give it a try :)
My gravel bike is a hybrid Giant Seek 0 upgraded to Alfine 11 speed IGH, Giant SLR cockpit/saddle/post, Shimano XTR trail pedals, Magura MT4s, DT Swiss rims, Shimano dynamo and supernova lights f/r. For some bling and to stop corrosion all bolts are titanium. 20t rear 39t chainring.
Over a full mixed terrain "gravel" ride you are unlikly to encounter much mud, it's not worth having a nobbly tyre for the sake of loosing a little bit of traction on a few yards of mud.
There are plenty of gravel bikes with mounts and if you go 2x plenty of low gear options. No problem to mount mud guards provided tire size if compatible. Tires for off road mud riding are terrible for roads in the rain so I don't see this as an issue.
Well, for one I can tell a big issue is the HTII system - you are more or less forced to use cranks with very little, but expensive possibility to change the cranks gearing - e.g. a 42-26 double. I went back to square bottom bracket, so I could freely choose whatever I wanted. That's the best decision I made with my bikepacking rig. The second best decision was to have a frame allowing to be used with both drop and flat bars (8bar tflsberg). I switched to flat bars and do not regret it at all. 55mm Rene Herse 29ers, 42-26 double with 11-40t cassette. There's nothing I can't conquer anymore.
There's a wide range in variety of gravel bikes out there. Although the gearing options are indeed pretty comparable on most of them, whether or not that is an issue is highly dependent on the sort of terrain one will be riding on. Personally speaking, when it comes to uphill, off-road, and in particular with luggage along, if I am planning a route which is predominantly this sort of terrain, my first choice of bike wouldn't be a gravel bike. Likewise, if I know I'll only be riding on tarmac, I also wouldn't have a gravel bike as a first choice. The gravel bike shines when it comes to a healthy mix of tarmac and less strenuous off-road segments during the trip. Giving a good balance between nature and more populated areas. But it's not perfect under all circumstances. No bike fits that bill. Having said that, pannier bikes are far from dead. There are still numerous of brands creating touring bikes with panniers. Most of these bikes are more oriented at cycling predominantly on tarmac or less complex off-road stretches. But ultimately, this makes sense. I can tell out of experience that panniers on more complex off-road tracks, simply tend to be getting in the way pretty fast. For starters, in terms of pushing a bike uphill with panniers is more cumbersome than with frame bags. I often find myself having a pannier hitting the back of my leg pushing my bike up steeper segments. And whenever there are bushes around, the panniers on the other side of the bike do create additional width. But panniers are great for trips on tarmac only. In particular if you are just hopping from hotel to hotel with limited luggage. Everything may fit in a back pannier or two due to their large volumes.
"No, I can't go on that ride with you this weekend because when I bought my bike two years ago I didn't plan for a series of steep off-road sections that you now propose. Can't we just take a less interesting 50 mile diversion on flat main roads?"
Urban areas in general have very little knarly gravel or woodsy single track. Gravel bikes are still very popular there because it's a social thing. The shortcomings you mention like over gearing, a scarcity of rack mounts and a lack of knobby tires are because these are not needed in the urban market. Manufacturers tailor there bikes to urban buyers who comprise a much larger share of the market than adventure riders
No, manufacturers like to follow fashions and trends set by either sports or by someone's marketing department. Very rarely do manufacturers design bikes to be practical and usable by for the vast majority of people. Otherwise the vast majority of bikes would have built in lights, usable mirrors, comfortable saddles, a wider variety of riding positions, mudguards, stands and pannier racks. Not flashy paint jobs and exotic, lightweight parts that are expensive to replace.
The versatility of the gravel bike was its strength but became its biggest weakness. Now we are starting to get this splitting of models. We get "race" gravel bikes (backward development to a road bike with more clearance) and we get "adventure" gravel bikes (just more clearance and more fork angle, standard gravel bike). When will we get a full suspension aero TT gravel bike?
Some excellent points. For a mud tyre though, the Continental Mud King in 29 x 1.8” fits the bill but granted, it’s just about the only choice in this sector.
Great points particularly about gearing. I’m now on 38 26 upfront and 36 11 at the back. Tyre wires I put wtb senderos on for the winter and they are fab, although 650b only. Good point about rack mounts I can’t imagine a steep descent with no dropper and a bag stopping me gettingbehind the saddle. I do own a proper mountain bike. But from the house the gravel bike is king. Todays ride can be done on a mountain bike. But the easy trails and roads are more fun on a gravel bike
My '16 Niner RLT RDO was hopelessly over geared. So I changed the whole damn kit. XT 11-42 cassette. GRX 810 rear mech. Praxis 32-48 front crank. The Ultegra 8020 shifters handle everything with aplomb and can even cross chain big/big with ease. Wasn't an inexpensive endeavor but she climbs like a beast now. The only thing I could ask for is more tire clearance: 40mm max. Guess I'll need the new frame now........
I have 3 sets of wheels. 650b with 50mm tyres for offroad, 700c v 40 for gravel racing, 700c x32 slicks for road. Perfect. My SRAM also has a 44 tooth cassette.
I am happy with my focus atlas 6.7eqp. it is ready for commuting and bike packing, touring on mixed terrain and has rags, lights and I like the shimano grx it comes with- for its range and the clutch etc. And it has a nice stable geometry and is not too sluggish. It is extremely versatile. The rags and fenders make it look less cool but tbh it makes sense for me and the way I use it. For more fun riding offroad and singletrails I prefer my mtb or my fatbike, anyway.
Single most annoying trend to me is that gravel has become too competetive and thus too focused on high end gear. Electronic groupsets, carbon wheels and titanium screws take all the fun out of gravel grinding IMO
“tyres” Rene Herse Fleecer Ridge. Pretty dang good balance that performs well in most conditions, and they have 650b options too. Expensive but I’m a fan so far.
I built my gravel bike with a Shimano GRX 12-speed wide-range cassette and a 34-t chainring; a dropper post; loads of mounting spots; and Continental RaceKing tires, 2.2x29 front and 2.0x29 rear. Of course, as it's a custom frame and a high-end build, it was too expensive and since it fits my 94cm inseam it definitely doesn't fit everyone...
Did you consider the effect of the rolling diameter with respect to gearing. As the Mountain bike has a bigger rolling diameter then the gravel bike. Personally, I run 42T and 11-46T cassette on GRX 800 with a Garbaruk OSPW cage. Could go to a bigger cassette range
It's almost like bike manufacturers don't want to make all the improvements at once so they will have some improvements to make to sell you another bike further down the track.
Why are people comparing a gravel bikes to adventure bikes? There will always be compromise. Why not buy the adventure bike if you plan to bike-pack and ride gravel? That way you have the best gear range. I have a gravel bike with 42-11x42 gearing with stock wheels and tires and do just fine on double digit climbs. I have no intention of doing bike-packing so I have no issues.
2024 and I chose a gravel frame that can take racks and fenders using 650x48, with a 1x Sword GS giving 1.8 meters of development. I wont go bike packing with it so this is fine.
2x on a gravel bike all the way if you plan on using it on the road too. Especially if you come from a road bike background and like to keep a given cadence. 1x fine for gravel and/or your background is mainly mountain biking.
WRT gearing, I'm currently building a bit of a mullet bike. Microshift advent, 11-47 dinner plates at the back with a 42 1x at the front. The intention is to do south downs way in the summer, lets see if thats enough gears 😁
Is 1x really so important on a gravel bike? I put together my gravel bike with an old 9 spd 2x SLX chainset I had, Sora levers, XT 11-34 cassette and an XT shadow mech. Most of the time I run with 44-36, but have run it with 44-32 and even 36-24 that originally came the chainset. With a dogfang it has been a great setup (apart from not being able to run hydraulic brakes which I can live with). I always considered myself a mountain biker but this bitsa bike has really hit the spot.
I run either 36x 11-46 or 36x 9-46 because I rarely ride more than 100GI and I need the lower XC gearing for muddy rocky hills. And when it comes to tyres, I removed the 700c and have 2 650B wheelsets fitted with either XC Dry race tyres or XC Mud Race tyres. Basically, I think a good gravel bike should be fitted with Dry XC race gearing for to be good on Tarmac and off road with fast comfortable XC tyres with low rolling resistance.
... I agree ... the bike I use for gravel "Rails to Trails is a 2012 Trek 8.6 DS w/ a 3X10 Drivetrain and 700 X 38mm tires. It has a front suspension w/ lockout and a "soft-tail" seat stays and disc brakes ... and w/ my current bi-lateral torn rotator cuffs it is my favorite bike to ride ... as it is easy on my shoulders ... Please note I will NEVER (!!!) ride a "compact double" or a "single" unless it is a "beach cruiser" ... down by the ocean side ...
Are that many people going bikepacking? I suspect the industry isn’t building gravel bikes for bikepacking because it’s not what they’re being asked the loudest for.
I remember the times I went bikepacking on a bike with a compact (50-34) and a 11-36 cassette. More than enough for anything I did. I had a simple steel frame with Schwalbe Marathons and did both on- and off road. I'm talking about 20 years back. I never spent more than a few 100 euros on my bike and it got me everywhere I wanted. People that do slow bike packing adventures really shouldn't bother buying anything more expensive than 1000 euro in the current market, and the best is still to build one yourself based on an old steel MTB or randonneur frame.
i want a gravel bike because it looks so good, but i feel if i had 35c-40c tyre like in the past, i would have spun out on the lahar trail i recently rode on on my mtb hybrid that has a corner bar and rigid fork and that has 2.3 tyres. i had a couple of near misses on that mtb tyre so what more with a smaller tyre? cant ride it as fast as well even with lower pressure vs an xc tyre
The claim that " you don't have any gravel roads " (ie, in UK) is utter bollocks . . I live in N. W. England and know of plenty of gravel roads here and N. Wales just for starters !
This has got to be the biggest "pander to the angry UA-cam mob" vid I've ever seen. Point 1 is true where as 2-5 is just exaggeration. 2. Wrong, it's only the top end bikes that are foregoing rack mounts. Majority of bikes still have them. 3. Wrong. Vast array of tyre choice is on par with road and MTB. Always a balance between grip/puncture protection/fast rolling in all disciplines 4. Partially true. A Hybrid doesn't = a gravel bike. Totally different geo. If the point was that flat bar equivalent (e.g. Norco Search vs. Search flat bar version) then fair call. Hybrids are just terrible bikes in general, the worst of all worlds (twitchy upright bike with heavy barely functioning touring suspension). 5. Wrong again, gravel bikes (like all bikes) are on a spectrum. If anything, this point makes more sense if you replaced "gravel bike" with "road bike" as 95% of people on road race bikes are inflexible weekend warriors running 40-50mm of spacers defeating the whole purpose of the geo in the pursuit of riding "what the pros ride". Gravel bikes have meant that people are actually buying bikes that fit them.
I'm one of those people with lots of spacers under the stem. I would love to have bought a decent racing bike with a more upright position, but there isn't the same choice! Even cheap bikes out of Halfords have over-racey positions.
From riding in different parts of the country i would add the gravel and terrain is very different. I have a Trek Boone CX bike, a Hook Gravel bike, and a specialized Epic XC bike. On chunky or mucky gravel the Epic is faster up to 20 MPH or so max speed and I'll drop all of the gravel bikes in these chunky conditions. The Hook is better for those faster group rides on hard pack and I have wider bars for more stability. The Boone I've got set up as an any road bike, it's good for bad pavement and does okay on hard pack and wash boards, but feels slower than the other two. I have no issues with gearing on the Hook, but I run a 2 by 11 and don't haul cargo. You can give up both sides of your gearing to run a one by on a gravel bike- do the calculations with a GRX 2 by 11 and see what you end up with.
Gearing is a problem for most bikes sold. The gears are never low enough. I had to build my own cassettes from multiple donor cassettes to get desired gearing. Same with the chain rings. We aren't all young racers, in fact most of us aren't.
he's talking about kickstands.. if you want to buy higher end bikes, DON'T GET A KICKSTAND. your bike can lean on the back wheel just fine, it's how i store mine and it never falls over.
It looks like people in germany ride their gravel bikes on the road for 90%, pack their bike with all kinds of bags full of accessories although riding only 30% of the daily distance of any road cyclist and calling it an adventure on social media. How long do these tires last? I guess I would ride one down in a month.
For heavens sake, the clue is in the name. If you want a bike for deep mud, buy a deep mud bike (hint: cyclo-cross). If you want a bike to climb really steep hills, buy a really steep hill bike. A gravel bike is for gravel. And on gravel, it does really, really well.
Can barely remember ever wanting higher gears… but many many times wanting to shift to a lower gear and finding no more ! 😢
3x anyone?
@@Nahtano7 2x is still enough
@@Nahtano7 1x is just straight up stupid, bad chainline and stupid gearing
Mullet drivetrain is the answer. And the SRAM AXS architecture? "This is the way"
I have a Ti bespoke monstercross rig (dam thing doesn't know WHAT it is. 100mm sid fork, wide flared drop bars, AXS dropper post...) has a Ethirteen (purple ano of course) 9-50t rear-end shifted by an axs x01 rear mech, and shifted with force brifters.
Getting turned with a Force 1x chainset running (purple ano) a 42t garburuk narrow wide chainring.
It doesn't spin out at an absurdity low speed on flat pavement or gravel, and it gives you a better than 1:1 climbing gear for technical single-track climbs.
I once did a 30 mile pavement ride with 4k of climbing to a trailhead, did a 10 mile no shit MTB trail loop (which had a 4 mile single-track flow trail decent with lots of air and a few wall rides) and rode 30 miles home on that thing.
Mullet is love, Mullet is life. (Unless you are a cadence guy... I guess... I'm a seated power masher so being "between ratios" isn't a problem)
I switched my gravel cranks to Ultegra road cranks. I rarely use low gears. Hilly ,steep climbs no man's here near Ann Arbor. Mich. Nice video
The versatility of the gravel bike is the appeal. I can hop on and off different surfaces, leaving my house on tarmac, getting on a crushed limestone rail trail, heading out to the country where I find varying degrees of light to chunky gravel on hills that can reach 15% gradient. As for tires, the Rene Herse Hurricane Ridge 48mm's are perfect for gravel while rolling smoothly over tarmac.
In addition, cassettes are easy to change if you really need lower gears.
I've bought a hybrid bike for that reason. Does the same like a gravel for half the price. Only difference is that my hybrid bike has a slightly longer wheelbase
Agreed. I'm looking at a Marin DSX1 flat bar gravel bike mainly as a timesaver. So much quicker for a ride after work to ride a bike from house instead of loading up my mountain bike and driving to the local trails. Looking for a simple bike with a 1X drivetrain and a couple of mounts for water bottles.
@@frankking439 Hydration bags are much convenient than water bottles, especially if the water bottles are stuck in the holder and hard to pull them out. N9t t9 mention they are prone to be dirty especially off-road. Nowadays I use a Hydration bag for water and the bottle holder only for drinks which I would only drink when i am stopped and for drinks i would not put in the Hydration bag due to cleaning issues (like Cola) Meanwhile the Hydration Bags straw is right at me. Only issue is that sometimes its dripping but now i have one with an open/close lever and also it has a cap which easy to handle by one hand.
You can apply the same logic to any number of other bikes, from touring, hybrid or MTB to city bikes and traditional roadsters. They will all cope with roads, dirt roads and trails, woodland paths and the like. There are so many variations of the above, that there's pretty much a bike to suit everyone without buying a so called "gravel bike". And as not two manufacturers gravel bikes are alike, clearly they can't even agree what a gravel bike should be. 😂
As others have said - the gearing issue is pretty ridiculous. With a 1x setup on a 11-42, I really had to switch down to a 36T chainring - which is great, except it obviously leads me to spinning out when I’m just using it on steeper descents or for road-riding. For a bike that solidly works as both a bikepacking/gravel bike and road-capable all-arounder, I really think a wide-range 2x is the best option.
My bike came with a 2x. I don’t do any backpacking. Mostly Road and gravel, Gravel 48/31 with 40-11 cassette. For Road is 48/31 with 34-11 cassette. I have 2 wheel set with tires rotors and cassette on each. So it goes from Road to Gravel bike in 10min or less
You could eaaily switch cassette up a 11-46, maybe 10-46 even. Also keep chainring as is or move it up to 38t.
I'm running 40t chainring, 9-52 kcnc cassette.
I never understood why people (or manufacturers) feel the need for a single chain ring setup if they're going to be riding a wide variety of terrain. There's a reason why bicycles developed two and three chain ring setups, and most people benefitted from them. Trying to cram a huge range of gearing solely on the back wheel leads to lots of compromises.
i do not understand this hype about 1by drivetrains. especially on gravel bikes that are adventure orientated a 2by is the way to go.
@@another3997 also, the 1x dinner plate cassettes are ridiculously expensive for a wear item!
My gravel bike is a Giant Escape 3 hybrid converted to a 9 speed 11-36 cassette with a triple up front 48/36/26, hydraulic brakes, 45mm Pirelli Cinturato's and 790mm flat bars. All for under £1000 including the bike itself (£415 Jan. '22). I have toured on it, forest trails and various bridle paths and what have you.
My road bike, because I like a bit of comfort, is a Boardman 8.9ADV gravel bike with the original tyres removed, a Redshift stem and a set of 32's fitted. It doesn't have many attachment points, but I don't care. I live in a very hilly area so the standard gearing is ok but it wouldn't be any good at all if I loaded it up with bike packing stuff.
In other words, there's a lot of marketing shite going on and I for one haven't fallen for it. What I've done is a bit of research, decided what suits me and ignored the bike industry.
How often you use your top gear on your gravel bike?(48/11) It's 65 kmh at 110rpm. NO use outride pro racing situation
@@Saliamonas14 Try riding in North Devon (UK), nothing but hills and it ain't just up, so yes it gets used ;-) Maybe not often but it does.
@@gregbrown8503 Exactly my set up except I stick with 3x7 , works great, cheap to maintain, A £4000 gravel bike with a 1x setup wouldnt be so good for me as my £400 Giant, its great
Why wouldn't the Boardman be any good loaded up I have one and it takes all my luggage just fine curious what is stopping you.
@@zedddddful nothing stopping me other than when loaded up I want Granny gears. The bike is fine for any hill unloaded, but stick around 9 kilos more on it, which is the weight of my camping kit .................
I think gravel bikes splitting into two categories of adventure bikes AND race bikes is good. It leaves both to excel at their indented use. Id rather not compromise my bike for bikepacking so that a guy on the other side of the spectrum can do gravel racing with the same machine.
what a comment. Dude you are my hero. Id love to meet you in real life.
How many bike categories do we need? There are already a plethora of racing bikes and there are already a plethora of adventure, touring, hybrid, utility and off-road bikes. Why would people want to change the basic "gravel bike" identity? What you're basically saying is that the gravel bike isn't really a super idea. Which I agree with, as there are plenty of bikes that can already fulfill that niche, and they've been available for many, many years. This is what happens when marketing teams are told the company isn't selling enough bikes... a "new" and "better" category appears. And then disappears. 🙄
mounting points for a rack in the rear are hardly "compromising" the raceability of your frame
@@another3997anyone who rides though and even the bike industry themselves have conceded that gravel bikes are basically just revamped versions of old school mountain bikes. There’s nothing wrong with this concept really, obviously they get to market and profit off a “new” thing but I think the bike industry started to get way too high end and people wanted to get back to simpler times while maybe sticking with higher end parts.
Gravel bikes splitting to MTBs and touring bikes wow!!!
Gravel bikes are cool. But they can be very expensive as you mentioned. I rented one, did 40 miles and felt the vibration of each one of those miles in my arms for a week. The cost to buy of that one was $1700. The owner showed me a better option with a suspension for $5000. It was too much for me. I did love it, so the idea that came to mind was that I was basically riding a MTB with drop bars. And I did just that, fixed my old MTB into a “gravel” bike with drop bars. It does great! And I only spent $360 fixing it and replacing old parts.
"vibration of each one of those miles in my arms" - can also have something to do with poor core muscles or bike fitting. Beginners often support/lean their body on the handlebars with their arms straight instead of holding the handlebars relatively loosely with their arms slightly bent. With your arms stretched straight, every bump in the road hits your joints and you'll notice that for a few days. There is more “spring” in the bent arm position.
Probably overpressure tires. When I first started riding gravel that killed me. Also supporting your weight off your arms (core baby)
pfft
Pumping up the tires of the cheaper bike just a bit too hard.
Clever salesman 😂
Excellent points, but the gearing misconception is also valid for road bikes, as not everyone is a young, slim and fit pro rider and might use it for long bike packing days in the Alps. So lower gearing would help road bikes as well, but I agree that for gravel bikes it becomes even more obvious of how wrong the gearing is. For the last 4 decades I always looked for the bikes with the lowest gearing and modified my current road bike from an 11-34 cassette to a MTB cassette with 11-40.
Same here, 11-40 and even 11-42 work with a RoadLink DM derailleur hanger on my RX810-specced gravel bike. And yes, with a literal mountain range on my door step, it does make a difference 😅
I keep telling this to my cycling friend but they’re too insecure to admit it is true haha
@@phil4455 triples are irrelevant now. A 3x9 has 14 independent ratios, 2x11 has 14 independent ratios. That’s why it’s dead. A 30x28 is a bigger gear than a 34x32, so big range cassettes defeat its former use as well.
Same issue here. I would love it to use a GRX groupset. As I’m an roadie I love a wide range but I couldn’t find a good option. I was transforming an old Cannondale M500 mtb frame into a gravel bike. I like mechanical groupsets cos it’s easy to maintain travelling and no need for ‘special’ tools on the road. I ended up using Shimano Sora 2x9. Shimano levers, sora FD, Alivio long cage RD with a 11-42 microshift cassette. On the front I installed an old square tapered crank and I change the rings with Zephyr 42/34 rings. This was the best for me I could get with a low budget. Its not the lightest option ofc but in need you can always walk ;). I use shorty V-brakes aswell. It works really well. In my opinion there are too many people with overgeared bikes and stuff they don’t need for the things they do with bikes. But yea, if you have the money why not.
Crying at my 9 speed 53/39 12/25
I'm a firm believer in a 2X drivetrain for gravel bikes. The 1X just doesn't have enough gears for the variety of terrain one may encounter. IMHO
I’m so glad I still ride the original gravel bike, my atb (all-terrain-bike), a 1986 Zebra I bought new at Bicycle Habitat.
I run 1.6 Continental Contacts.
I've got a gravel bike, it has brilliant gearing, all the mounting points i could ever need, mud guard mounts, pannier rack mounts, and running g one all rounds and its great on the road and the trail.. 👍
What model?
Thanks for telling us the model!
Thank you for making your first point that especially for bikepacking most gravel bikes don't have low-enough gears! I couldn't agree more!
Thats why most touring bikes use triple chainrings up front. I get 17 gear inches when using the 22 on the front and 34 on the back. 17 gear inches will get you up almost anything.
@@martinhughesireland True, I also use one with an old MTB cassette on my road bike. It's worth staying away from the trend of 1x systems.
Change your chainring. Mountains out of molehills.
@@JohnDough-yr2zt If your chainring is too small, top speed downhill can be reduced. Thus, depending on the personal requirements, a smaller chainring might just do the job, but it can also be insufficient.
@@lesand5484 Depending on 1 chainring to be as good for top speed, and low gears for the steep stuff, doesnt work, it never will.
But 1000's argue every day that 1X is the only way there is.
Bicycle and parts makers HAVE to have a new system to sell pretty often, for now 1X is the big push...................After all these years with sketchy 2X shifting up front, now that 2X works perfect, shifts as fast as rear shifting? Now is the time to say it doesnt work right, too complicated, and go 1X.
This video can be summed up by the following: Gravel bikes are the adjustable wrench of bikes, and while it works almost everywhere, the experience is typically better with a set of wrenches i.e. bikes designed for the specific use case. Also, there aren't enough tire options.
I built a bike to maximize riding fun on my home terrain. It looks like a gravel bike. If you did the same for where you live, your bike might NOT look like a gravel bike. I also have a vintage hardtail, a vintage road bike and a touring bike. The “gravel bike” is a daily rider for getting away on short notice.
My build was “expensive,” but the bike you want might cost more than you think. Nobody is making big money in bikes these days, especially dealers and mechanics.
lol the low gearing on a modern gravel bike running a 10-52 12speed in the rear is lower than most any 2x road setup. Also tops out with enough speed to ride on the road for all but A cat riders. About the tires, the difference in rolling resistance between a gp 5000 and a challenge pro or a pathfinder is like 15 watts. That’s a 32c road tire vs a 40c gravel tire with any terrain capabilities. There is a website that provides these numbers. New gravel tires don’t have the loss you think.
Not many gravel bikes actually come with 10-52 as standard though, unfortunately. (two that do, which I'm grateful for, are the Marin Gestalt XR, & Headlands 2 - I'm considering either of these right now). I know there's the Shimano 10-51 as well.
One of the point Gravel bike better than touring/ hybrid bike is the weight usually sit between 8.5kg to 10.5kg, plus drop bar provide different handling positions and more aero, in a long distance it saves a lot of energy, and reduce chance of fatigue
In terms of mounting bolts, there are two types gravel bike, for example gravel “road” bike like Specialized Crux and Specialized Diverge which is on the touring adventure side which has as much as mounting points as touring bike
Then gear raito, 1x setup is very enough for a average 9kg ish gravel bike, although touring/ mountain bike got a lower ratio, they are also from 12kg up, so that that 3kg different makes up a lot more room for luggage if you are doing bikepacking (touring)
Tyre clearance, new disc brake road bike can usually fit up to 35mm tyres, but on rougher gravel road, 35mm is not enough unless you are pro…..plus bottom bracket of gravel bike sits a bit higher than road bike, which does a better job when you are riding on forest terrain, also the vibration absorption of the frame is much better than a road bike
Taking notes... But agree to disagree on many levels... My main concern is why to say or supply a electronic shifting on a gravel bike... That is destined for the most harder longer and distant places to ride... When you need is not micro smooth shifting you need is a long last durable group set that has not limited battery... Except your legs... Ergo a lot of potential in gears... For many different cadences and comfort.
Di2 battery lasts for approximately 600km, your legs make it that far?
@@jonathanzappala 600km? I have been averaging around 3000km per charge on 110 model battery.
@@_MPP_ I can believe that’s just the number I have heard shimano say. I know I only charge mine about twice a year but I loose track with indoor time and when they sit.
Poseidon Redwood:
Cheap
Room for big, aggressive tyres
Wide range 11-48 cassette
Lots of mounts including rack mounts
Heavy stock wheels... well, I guess you can't win 'em all!
Ya!!! Finally, intelligence !! Extreme low gearing, isn't offered. Which is most important system on bicycle. I added triple crank , shamano 9020 ,22 x30x40 ,to my rei adv 3.2 10spd cassette 11 to 36. And dropped weight.650b x50mm .20lbfront 23rear. Comfortable,
Very efficient. Hauls large, heavy loads. Total confidence. Gearing,I would like to play with 11x40. I've never pushed, guess some enjoy pushing. Many new bickers, get discouraged (can't get up hill ,or even crash. Enter electric market. No thanks,for me!!! 👍😁
A gravel bike will not do *everything* great, but will do better than most other options over the full range of possible use of "a bike"; yes an XC bike would be a better choice on rough and super steep terrains, but have you tried riding a century on one? Yes, a pure aero road bike will get you faster on tarmac, but have you tried riding one in the woods over roots and cobbles? A gravel bike can do all this, so you can plan for longer rides on mixed terrains with a good confidence the bike will get you through. That's big when you think about it.
Bought a Treck checkpoint ALR 5 2 years ago. Had not done more than the odd mountain bike ride in the last 20 years. I’m hooked again. The bike is nothing short of awesome. It’s on the smart trainer in winter and on the road and gravel the rest of the year. Our roads are not the best. I bought an aero bike last year and had a puncture the very first ride. I’m super careful where I ride it now. The other thing is I like the rigidity of the Aluminum frame in some situations. Yes the aero is far faster, but the gravel bike does pretty much everything. The company that I looked at hiring a bike for the North coast 500 used that exact model. If it’s robust enough to be a rental and versatile enough for that ride, it can’t be bad. Got me back into cycling and I’m so grateful for that.
The Checkpoints are great bikes! I own a 2023 Trek Checkpoint ALR5. I upgraded to a Shockstop suspension stem, mounted a pannier rack (this bike still has mounts for pannier racks) and it’s one of the most versatile and comfortable bikes I’ve owned.
Good to know you are riding a bike that old. So many of us want the latest and greatest.
Trek* Checkpoint*
I haven't yet felt to buy a dedicated gravel bike. When I'm afraid to leave the tarmac with my road bike, or winter approaches, I just put some cyclocross tires on like you said. When I want to go on trails, I take my mountainbike. And for longer tours I have my trekking bike fit with Schwalbe Marathon tour plus for rougher terrain and mounts for four saddle bags.
Or, you could have one gravel bike for road, gravel, mountain and touring uses, like I do :) 2 sets of wheels is all it takes.
What's the difference between a trekking bike and a gravel bike?
@@p504504 which is a nice setup if you don't race or do fast group rides where you want the gearing and handling of a road bike
@@Pionirish If you are logical : flat bars (or drops), 50mm+ tyres clearance, stronger tubing, longer chainstay and more relaxed position.
Here in France we used to call such elongated and sturdier road bike "randonneuse" (female hiker) before they disaperead... Only for them to come back 30-40 years later with a vengeance 😅
Gravel bikes are still riding the wave of "newness" they came in on.
They started as roadbikes that took fatter tires, a little fatter.
Now they are the "only bike needed" for some, they are mt bikes, they are road bikes.
Not me.
------------------
The 1X thing, will always be what it is. Either has no low gear, or no top gear, or lacking in both.
This is said to be a triumph and its all we need. Marketing can be assnine, but it works.
"a strong rider doesnt need low gears for hills" is the standard justification for 1X.
I love my gravel bike, but strongly agree with your comments about gear range and mounting points for rack, fenders, etc.
Some of these issues, like the gearing can be solved by not going for an out-of-the-box solution, but mix and matching different components. I know most people are not bike mechanics to be able to do this at home, but shouldn't be a huge deal to have it done in a bike service shop.
Spot On. Going for the adventure side I went for a Bombtrack Beyond, 36t 11/42, and fitted Smart Sam's 2.1. Plenty of attach points. Very happy about this setup. But found the EUR 2600 price tag a bit pricey...
BRILLIANT I TOTALLY agree with everything you said, I live on the edge of Dartmoor and ride mostly off road on an amazing variety of terrains from dismantled mineral railways to moorland, all just outside my door, my bikes get a hammering but I never spend a fortune, my favourite bike at the moment is a used Giant Escape that I picked up for £150, I fitted drop bars and shifters, I ALWAYS fit a carrier as I always need to carry clothing/tools/ food etc and the Giant has frame mounts front and rear (as you say WHY leave them off??) it has a triple chainset (26/36/46) with a 7 speed screw on freewheel (14-28 recently replaced for £15) and I can climb anything with that and also have a decent top gear for the road, and I ALWAYS fit mudguards otherwise I would get plastered in crud much of the time and have never found a problem with using them, the Giant has loads of clearance and I use 700x38c tyres, I could go much bigger and still have room for mudguards, so yea, for me gravel bikes are an expensive fad, they wont last, Even a cheap Carrera Crossfire Hybrid from Halfords would be a better choice for me most of the time, I have tried mountain bikes but I much prefer 700c wheels for the extra pace and there are just loads of great used Hybrids about and the frame construction on even cheap Hybrids is up to the job now, I have never broken a frame
Done something similar with my Escape. They're as tough as old boots these bikes, and comfy with it. My gravel bike is a Giant Escape 3 hybrid converted to a 9 speed 11-36 cassette with a triple up front 48/36/26, hydraulic brakes, 45mm Pirelli Cinturato's and 790mm flat bars. All for under £1000 including the bike itself (£415 Jan. '22). I have toured on it, forest trails and various bridle paths and what have you.
My 2019 Salsa Fargo with it's 1 X 11, 32 tooth chainring and a 11 - 42 cassette, clearance for up to 29 x 3.0 tires and loads of mounts including rack mounts, works very well for gravel adventures. Would it win races? Based on pure speed, probably not. But if you want an adventure capable drop-bar bike that will carry you through your next adventure, it's hard to beat.
... with its* 32-teeth chainring (it's = it is) and up to 3-inch tires it's an MTB with dropbars, not a gravelbike that is supposed to perform on paved roads just as well as off-road.
Go 27.5 for tyre choice and go Garbaruk for gears..
Good summary. We all knew these & they will continue to be issues but oh well.....I agree about the gearing. Huge front chainrings on a lot of gravel bikes that will never see a race of any kind.
I dont know if you looked at bianchis gravel bikes because the one I bought around a moth ago, gr0013 comes with h.disk breaks grx 810 rear and front derailleur and the rest is grx 600 with a carbon fork and it costed 38.000 tl which is roughly 1300usd. I have rided it for around 200km and had no problems with it.
I have the setup you are asking for. Pivot Vault, sram mullet components, 10-52 cassette, 42 single crank, with room for up to 45 tires, enve 5.6 sea road rims that will fit all sizes.
I'm surprised that drivetrain isn't more popular on off-the-shelf bikes. I'm currently looking at the Marin Gestalt XR & Headlands 2, both of which have that drivetrain. (thankyou Marin! 🕺)
Agreed on the gearing. My gravel bike came standard with a 42T single chainring and 11-28 cassette. Considering it is also marketed as a commuter bike, I found it nonsensical. Even on a tarred road, 42-28 on a 10% gradient is bloody hard. I modified it to a 38T chainring and 11-34 cassette. A lot better, but still not easy.
You aren't kidding.
My gravel bike is an old crosser, with a 38T chain ring and an 11-51 cassette. It gets me up anything, although it's not so fast on the flats. I might split the difference and get a 40T chain ring.
Yes 1x11/12 looks clean but the range limitations cannot be denied, also when u often do steep tracks in the lowest gear the chainline is not straigt and combined with the high forces it leads to fast wear out.. In the 90s i bought a mountainbike (3x9) with Continental 26x1.75 travel that can handle up to 75 psi, i did everything with that bike, still ride it..
@@johndrawing1176 I still prefer single chainrings, though. Not so much for the clean look, but more because it simplifies the cockpit, and shifting. Re wear: I think its more a case of how thin the cassette cogs and the chain are on 12spd bikes that leads to the high wear; more than the cross-chain issues. My 8 spd chain has to cross the same lateral width as my 12spd, but it lasts 4 times the distance ridden. I think megarange 10spd like the Microshift Advent X is probably the best option in terms of durability and versatility (and cost).
Regarding gearing, the answer is simple. Regardless of what kind of bike it is, and how it's marketed, the reality is they're all set up anymore for racing. Because "That's what the pros use/do". Same with the (lack of) mounts. Even on the less expensive models, they are still patterned after what the pros use, despite the fact that the pros (and serious amateurs), are generally all using very expensive and high-end bikes.
Modern "endurance" geometry is considerably more aggressive than the endurance geometry of 20 years ago.
One of my gravel bikes, that was specifically marketed and designed as "not a racer", is still quite aggressive, and I run the maximum allowed amount of spacers, with a high angle stem, and that gets me in a semi-comfortable position. And it's funny that they call it "not a racer", because it's geometry almost exactly matches another company's bike, that is specifically marketed as a racing bike. One that has won many many races. None of it makes any sense. but then again, it is all just marketing.
And this is probably why the bike I ride the most is my Fairdale Weekender. It can take bigger tires than my gravel bikes, and has all of the traditional mounts. It's comfortable, and all-purpose. Not as fast as my gravel bikes, but then again I don't ride my gravel bikes as fast as they are capable of going. And not as capable off-road as a full suspension mountain bike, but I don't ride those kinds of trails anyway. If it weren't for the fact that I do like to do fast, long rides, I would just assume sell all the carbon fiber I have, and exclusively ride the Fairdale. I feel like bikes like the Weekender are all the bike most people need, and the kind of bike that most people don't even realize they're looking for. Forget about what the pros do and use. Find a bike that doesn't beat you up, does the job you need it to do, and most importantly, you just have a blast riding!
Spot on with the rack mounts!
On tyres I find it's more of an issue with 650b tyres not having enough choice. I can get lots of lightweight options but no super tough options for commuting or bikepacking, like say Marathon Plus or Conti Contact Plus, which only come in 700c
This is on the face of it a bit of a clickbait-y list video, but is actually very nicely considered. Thanks!
650b is dead. 28 and 29 inch tires is where most frames are headed
I just got the state 4130 all road with 650b and 700c tires love the gearing because most of the time I ride slow
Try Conti Contact Urban..have a look at bicyclerollingresistance
@@Hansmeiser2008 cheers. I went with Conti Ride Tour in the end.
@@Paganizondaf650 thanks I'll let my 27.5-fitting frame know & just toss the whole thing in the bin.
WTB Nano is all you need for a "mud-capable tire" on a Gravel bike. The road bike-based mech that are put on gravel bikes from Shimano and SRAM will be gummed up if you're riding in MTB-level mud where such a tire is necessary, especially if you have a front derailleur.
Good points, especially gearing and rack mounts
Great point with the aggresive tires!
I just don't understand why there are no alternatives in the 40-50mm range
Because a gravel bike is not a mountain bike, it's supposed to be good on any terrain, including dry hardpack and paved roads. Super-wide tires and aggressive profile make a bike more off-road capable but less road capable, so you might as well stick with your MTB that felt so slow on-road.
Was into my MTB back in the 90s and loved it for many years. I eventually moved across to the road full time, but the 'fairly' recent gravel scene caught my eye. I now own a lovely titanium gravel bike which I bought a couple of seasons ago. I bought it thinking this will get me back into offroad riding but with the latest kit. Wrong.....This is not a go anywhere offroad bike. With the mtb I could plot any offroad route I wanted and 99% of the time I could pretty much manage the terrain. With the gravel I'm limited to say 60% of the offroad trails. The gravel bike, with the current gearing, just won't cut the steep or steep/techy stuff. Its an okay bike and enjoy the fast Towpathy/Kielder forest type gravel stuff, but its not what I expected. If I plot an offroad route I've never done before (I live next to the peaks) I can be sure that I'll be pushing some of it...Its a gravel bike and thats what its sold as I suppose. Like many more I feel as though I was marketed into something that wasn't what I was really after. I'll continue to use it but I have to be selective with routes. In hindsight (LOL)I should have gone for an MTB, circa 2000 frame/wheels and the latest hydraulic/tech stuff fitted (with barends)...fast and fun, up or down anywhere.
And that's why I built up a hardtail bike instead. Mainly my issues wasn't the gearing, it's the tires. I found gravel tires to be way too soft for any real off road use, or at least for me.
a gravel bike is more for commuting and backpacking
@@scruf153 yeah I never had the impression it was sold as doing anything more than unsealed dirt or gravel paths without having hugely compromised road performance, not so much trails and steep or technical terrain.
It's a "go anywhere" bike that's less "anywhere" than a MTB, but a fair bit quicker on the flat.
That's a case of believing the hype put out there by manufacturers and journalists who don't own or ride these bikes long term, not doing enough research, and buying the wrong tool for the job. You bought a capable ratchet set, but tried to use it to hammer a nail and cut wood.
Grx 46-30 chainring and 11-40 cassette on my gravelbike. Installed goatlink and longer chain. Works great.
I have found Teravail Rutland to be very good at getting through mud and shedding mud (have to get through fields in winter on my local routes) they come in 4 sizes in 700s from 35 to 47 👍🏼
I love Teravail and was going to mention the Rutland.
I didn't have most of these problems 30 years ago when I owned a Rock 'n Road bike hand-built by the late, great Bruce Gordon. Wide gearing range even though only 3x8 was available at the time, Avocet Cross-K 700x38 inverted tread tires that rolled smoothly on asphalt but gripped decently on hardpack, enough rack mounts, and the whole bike was only about $1200. I miss that bike.
$1200 in the early 90s seems a bit steep to be calling 'only' 😅
@@InnuendoXP You're probably too young to remember. $1200 back then would be worth about $2400 today. With RX600, today's mid-range components, a gravel bike goes for about $3500. And the Rock 'n Road was built to order, not off the rack.
The mud tire you're looking for is the Specialized Rhombus Pro at 700x42
6 years ago gravel tyre selection was very poor. I'm happy to see so many options now
Finally someone mentioning the missing mounting points. I just don't get why so many brands get rid of them. I personally would not buy a bike without all the traditional mounting points.
I see a big issue at brake capability: a lot of gravel bikes come with 160/160 and can be upgraded in best case to 180/160. But going up and down a lot with a fully loaded bag (in my case including my office-laptop) can show the limits of this lightweight brake setup. Also by only having PM brakes on my other bikes I dislike the flatbed standard at gravel bikes.
What does this guy say? With the Shimano GRX 812 rear derailleur are 11 /42 cassettes possible!
812 is the 1x version. It actually has a lower total capacity than the 2x 810 (31 vs 40). Bigger casette, but lower gear range than a 2x bike.
What annoys me is the whole idea that gravel bike is a great choice for riding a single tracks, trails, rocks and roots.
The reality is that there are practically no gravel bikes on trails and the majority of people use them like a comfy road bikes.
Moreover, if someone does not want to race but simply ride with a more upright position, they have less and less choices when it comes to frame geometry.
Great info! I love my cannondale topstone 4. About 1000 usd. Mounts everywhere, great price. All I did was throw a dropper and get wider bars and it’s perfect. Can’t really fit huge tires but it’s fine I’m mainly on my enduro MTB anyway but I think the topstone covers most or at least some of the points you bring up. Good work man thanks!
I have 50-34 & 11-34, 2x. It's a forgiving road setup on a gravel frame. I wont be able to climb trees, but whenever it's vaguely flat (mileage of "vaguely" will vary), it means i have lots of gears to play with. A 1x setup with a huge cassette is great to climb trees, but miserable whenever it's vaguely flat, as you can somehow never find the cadence that feels right.
I like the handlebar on my gravelbike. I like light cross country mountainbike too, and they both are good on dirtroad/gravelroads in the forest. I got 42 cog behind on the gravelbike, and that is light enough.
Whilst I kind of agree with most of your points. I must point out, that I have just purchased a pair of Pirelli Cinturato gravel M tyres (40mm), which are fantastic in muddy conditions. I'm unsure whether your choices are clouded by your sponsors, but the tyres are out there.
Also, why on earth would anyone need more than 45mm tyres on a gravel bike.
Are they fast tarmac? I’m looking for a tire for my cross bike.
@@milan4ever Not noticeably so, my average speed dropped by 1.1mph according to Komoot. I'm running 36/43psi front and rear on road.
You need wider tires if your gravel roads have a lot of sand. My roads are a mix of sand and gravel. They ride much easier and faster with a 48 tire. I’ve ridden them plenty on 35-42, if they are well traveled, those work fine, if tractors/maintenance has been through, it is not a fun time on the narrower tires.
You are spot on. Add another front sprocket or two, flat bars, chunky tyres, just like my 1990 mountain bike. Surely a gravel bike is like an SUV, it gives the looks of something that can go off road without actually being any good at it. But there is a need for less aggressive mountain bikes.
Special tip for aggressive tyres -> Schwalbe Smart Sam is avalieble in 42mm and performes very well. The only downside is that I only found models so far that you have to use inner tubes for.
But it´s cheap and I recomend it absolutley! Just give it a try :)
My gravel bike is a hybrid Giant Seek 0 upgraded to Alfine 11 speed IGH, Giant SLR cockpit/saddle/post, Shimano XTR trail pedals, Magura MT4s, DT Swiss rims, Shimano dynamo and supernova lights f/r. For some bling and to stop corrosion all bolts are titanium. 20t rear 39t chainring.
Over a full mixed terrain "gravel" ride you are unlikly to encounter much mud, it's not worth having a nobbly tyre for the sake of loosing a little bit of traction on a few yards of mud.
There are plenty of gravel bikes with mounts and if you go 2x plenty of low gear options. No problem to mount mud guards provided tire size if compatible. Tires for off road mud riding are terrible for roads in the rain so I don't see this as an issue.
Well, for one I can tell a big issue is the HTII system - you are more or less forced to use cranks with very little, but expensive possibility to change the cranks gearing - e.g. a 42-26 double. I went back to square bottom bracket, so I could freely choose whatever I wanted. That's the best decision I made with my bikepacking rig.
The second best decision was to have a frame allowing to be used with both drop and flat bars (8bar tflsberg). I switched to flat bars and do not regret it at all. 55mm Rene Herse 29ers, 42-26 double with 11-40t cassette. There's nothing I can't conquer anymore.
There's a wide range in variety of gravel bikes out there. Although the gearing options are indeed pretty comparable on most of them, whether or not that is an issue is highly dependent on the sort of terrain one will be riding on.
Personally speaking, when it comes to uphill, off-road, and in particular with luggage along, if I am planning a route which is predominantly this sort of terrain, my first choice of bike wouldn't be a gravel bike. Likewise, if I know I'll only be riding on tarmac, I also wouldn't have a gravel bike as a first choice. The gravel bike shines when it comes to a healthy mix of tarmac and less strenuous off-road segments during the trip. Giving a good balance between nature and more populated areas. But it's not perfect under all circumstances. No bike fits that bill.
Having said that, pannier bikes are far from dead. There are still numerous of brands creating touring bikes with panniers. Most of these bikes are more oriented at cycling predominantly on tarmac or less complex off-road stretches. But ultimately, this makes sense. I can tell out of experience that panniers on more complex off-road tracks, simply tend to be getting in the way pretty fast. For starters, in terms of pushing a bike uphill with panniers is more cumbersome than with frame bags. I often find myself having a pannier hitting the back of my leg pushing my bike up steeper segments. And whenever there are bushes around, the panniers on the other side of the bike do create additional width.
But panniers are great for trips on tarmac only. In particular if you are just hopping from hotel to hotel with limited luggage. Everything may fit in a back pannier or two due to their large volumes.
"No, I can't go on that ride with you this weekend because when I bought my bike two years ago I didn't plan for a series of steep off-road sections that you now propose. Can't we just take a less interesting 50 mile diversion on flat main roads?"
"range in variety" is redundant.
Urban areas in general have very little knarly gravel or woodsy single track. Gravel bikes are still very popular there because it's a social thing. The shortcomings you mention like over gearing, a scarcity of rack mounts and a lack of knobby tires are because these are not needed in the urban market. Manufacturers tailor there bikes to urban buyers who comprise a much larger share of the market than adventure riders
No, manufacturers like to follow fashions and trends set by either sports or by someone's marketing department. Very rarely do manufacturers design bikes to be practical and usable by for the vast majority of people. Otherwise the vast majority of bikes would have built in lights, usable mirrors, comfortable saddles, a wider variety of riding positions, mudguards, stands and pannier racks. Not flashy paint jobs and exotic, lightweight parts that are expensive to replace.
The versatility of the gravel bike was its strength but became its biggest weakness. Now we are starting to get this splitting of models. We get "race" gravel bikes (backward development to a road bike with more clearance) and we get "adventure" gravel bikes (just more clearance and more fork angle, standard gravel bike). When will we get a full suspension aero TT gravel bike?
Some excellent points. For a mud tyre though, the Continental Mud King in 29 x 1.8” fits the bill but granted, it’s just about the only choice in this sector.
Pirrelli cinturato gravel M.
Herse Hurricane Ridge 48
Great points particularly about gearing. I’m now on 38 26 upfront and 36 11 at the back. Tyre wires I put wtb senderos on for the winter and they are fab, although 650b only. Good point about rack mounts I can’t imagine a steep descent with no dropper and a bag stopping me gettingbehind the saddle. I do own a proper mountain bike. But from the house the gravel bike is king. Todays ride can be done on a mountain bike. But the easy trails and roads are more fun on a gravel bike
Tyre-wise* I put on WTB Senderos ...
Literally all I use my gravel bike for is commuting, road, canal, then back to road, use my mountain bike for absolutely all the fun stuff
My '16 Niner RLT RDO was hopelessly over geared. So I changed the whole damn kit. XT 11-42 cassette. GRX 810 rear mech. Praxis 32-48 front crank. The Ultegra 8020 shifters handle everything with aplomb and can even cross chain big/big with ease. Wasn't an inexpensive endeavor but she climbs like a beast now. The only thing I could ask for is more tire clearance: 40mm max. Guess I'll need the new frame now........
Hutchinson Toro CX+ Tyre 700C x 47 perfect for mud even works well on wet slippery chalk on the winter southdowns
I have 3 sets of wheels. 650b with 50mm tyres for offroad, 700c v 40 for gravel racing, 700c x32 slicks for road. Perfect. My SRAM also has a 44 tooth cassette.
I am happy with my focus atlas 6.7eqp. it is ready for commuting and bike packing, touring on mixed terrain and has rags, lights and I like the shimano grx it comes with- for its range and the clutch etc. And it has a nice stable geometry and is not too sluggish. It is extremely versatile. The rags and fenders make it look less cool but tbh it makes sense for me and the way I use it. For more fun riding offroad and singletrails I prefer my mtb or my fatbike, anyway.
Single most annoying trend to me is that gravel has become too competetive and thus too focused on high end gear. Electronic groupsets, carbon wheels and titanium screws take all the fun out of gravel grinding IMO
“tyres” Rene Herse Fleecer Ridge. Pretty dang good balance that performs well in most conditions, and they have 650b options too. Expensive but I’m a fan so far.
CX bike is my race/general use/ gravel-light MTBing bike.
I built my gravel bike with a Shimano GRX 12-speed wide-range cassette and a 34-t chainring; a dropper post; loads of mounting spots; and Continental RaceKing tires, 2.2x29 front and 2.0x29 rear. Of course, as it's a custom frame and a high-end build, it was too expensive and since it fits my 94cm inseam it definitely doesn't fit everyone...
Did you consider the effect of the rolling diameter with respect to gearing. As the Mountain bike has a bigger rolling diameter then the gravel bike. Personally, I run 42T and 11-46T cassette on GRX 800 with a Garbaruk OSPW cage. Could go to a bigger cassette range
It's almost like bike manufacturers don't want to make all the improvements at once so they will have some improvements to make to sell you another bike further down the track.
My BMC URS has SRAM gearing and is 38t by 10-52t
Why are people comparing a gravel bikes to adventure bikes? There will always be compromise. Why not buy the adventure bike if you plan to bike-pack and ride gravel? That way you have the best gear range. I have a gravel bike with 42-11x42 gearing with stock wheels and tires and do just fine on double digit climbs. I have no intention of doing bike-packing so I have no issues.
Most of these gripes would vanish if you'd stop conflating gravel with bikepacking, cyclocross, and commuters.
2024 and I chose a gravel frame that can take racks and fenders using 650x48, with a 1x Sword GS giving 1.8 meters of development.
I wont go bike packing with it so this is fine.
2x on a gravel bike all the way if you plan on using it on the road too. Especially if you come from a road bike background and like to keep a given cadence. 1x fine for gravel and/or your background is mainly mountain biking.
Also, my sram Rival setup is 11-44 works absolutely perfectly
WRT gearing, I'm currently building a bit of a mullet bike. Microshift advent, 11-47 dinner plates at the back with a 42 1x at the front. The intention is to do south downs way in the summer, lets see if thats enough gears 😁
Is 1x really so important on a gravel bike? I put together my gravel bike with an old 9 spd 2x SLX chainset I had, Sora levers, XT 11-34 cassette and an XT shadow mech. Most of the time I run with 44-36, but have run it with 44-32 and even 36-24 that originally came the chainset. With a dogfang it has been a great setup (apart from not being able to run hydraulic brakes which I can live with). I always considered myself a mountain biker but this bitsa bike has really hit the spot.
I run either 36x 11-46 or 36x 9-46 because I rarely ride more than 100GI and I need the lower XC gearing for muddy rocky hills. And when it comes to tyres, I removed the 700c and have 2 650B wheelsets fitted with either XC Dry race tyres or XC Mud Race tyres.
Basically, I think a good gravel bike should be fitted with Dry XC race gearing for to be good on Tarmac and off road with fast comfortable XC tyres with low rolling resistance.
... I agree ... the bike I use for gravel "Rails to Trails is a 2012 Trek 8.6 DS w/ a 3X10 Drivetrain and 700 X 38mm tires. It has a front suspension w/ lockout and a "soft-tail" seat stays and disc brakes ... and w/ my current bi-lateral torn rotator cuffs it is my favorite bike to ride ... as it is easy on my shoulders ... Please note I will NEVER (!!!) ride a "compact double" or a "single" unless it is a "beach cruiser" ... down by the ocean side ...
Shimano GRX is 46/30 11-42
Are that many people going bikepacking? I suspect the industry isn’t building gravel bikes for bikepacking because it’s not what they’re being asked the loudest for.
@@cjohnson3836 Why do you seem angry?
I remember the times I went bikepacking on a bike with a compact (50-34) and a 11-36 cassette. More than enough for anything I did. I had a simple steel frame with Schwalbe Marathons and did both on- and off road. I'm talking about 20 years back. I never spent more than a few 100 euros on my bike and it got me everywhere I wanted. People that do slow bike packing adventures really shouldn't bother buying anything more expensive than 1000 euro in the current market, and the best is still to build one yourself based on an old steel MTB or randonneur frame.
Maxxis Beaver 1.9" is perfect for the winter. My XC HT has 28-52 and often I click down for another gear. Even when not carrying bags and panniers
I have microshift advent x on my gravel bike, it's really great 1x system, 11-48T cassette with 40T crank
i want a gravel bike because it looks so good, but i feel if i had 35c-40c tyre like in the past, i would have spun out on the lahar trail i recently rode on on my mtb hybrid that has a corner bar and rigid fork and that has 2.3 tyres. i had a couple of near misses on that mtb tyre so what more with a smaller tyre? cant ride it as fast as well even with lower pressure vs an xc tyre
The claim that " you don't have any gravel roads " (ie, in UK) is utter bollocks . . I live in N. W. England and know of plenty of gravel roads here and N. Wales just for starters !
Used to ride cyclocross on 23mm tubs, guess men where men in those days.
The gears don’t go low enough? a mountain bike with a 3x setup actually solves the problem.
Let me hell yes to the 3x set ups!!!!
My front 3 gears are road race and my back 9 are large diameter mountain bike gears!!!
I love my drive train!!!!
This has got to be the biggest "pander to the angry UA-cam mob" vid I've ever seen. Point 1 is true where as 2-5 is just exaggeration. 2. Wrong, it's only the top end bikes that are foregoing rack mounts. Majority of bikes still have them. 3. Wrong. Vast array of tyre choice is on par with road and MTB. Always a balance between grip/puncture protection/fast rolling in all disciplines 4. Partially true. A Hybrid doesn't = a gravel bike. Totally different geo. If the point was that flat bar equivalent (e.g. Norco Search vs. Search flat bar version) then fair call. Hybrids are just terrible bikes in general, the worst of all worlds (twitchy upright bike with heavy barely functioning touring suspension). 5. Wrong again, gravel bikes (like all bikes) are on a spectrum. If anything, this point makes more sense if you replaced "gravel bike" with "road bike" as 95% of people on road race bikes are inflexible weekend warriors running 40-50mm of spacers defeating the whole purpose of the geo in the pursuit of riding "what the pros ride". Gravel bikes have meant that people are actually buying bikes that fit them.
I'm one of those people with lots of spacers under the stem. I would love to have bought a decent racing bike with a more upright position, but there isn't the same choice! Even cheap bikes out of Halfords have over-racey positions.
From riding in different parts of the country i would add the gravel and terrain is very different. I have a Trek Boone CX bike, a Hook Gravel bike, and a specialized Epic XC bike. On chunky or mucky gravel the Epic is faster up to 20 MPH or so max speed and I'll drop all of the gravel bikes in these chunky conditions. The Hook is better for those faster group rides on hard pack and I have wider bars for more stability. The Boone I've got set up as an any road bike, it's good for bad pavement and does okay on hard pack and wash boards, but feels slower than the other two. I have no issues with gearing on the Hook, but I run a 2 by 11 and don't haul cargo. You can give up both sides of your gearing to run a one by on a gravel bike- do the calculations with a GRX 2 by 11 and see what you end up with.
Gearing is a problem for most bikes sold. The gears are never low enough. I had to build my own cassettes from multiple donor cassettes to get desired gearing. Same with the chain rings. We aren't all young racers, in fact most of us aren't.
Tufo makes a great range of gravel tyres. The thunderos come in various sizes and are great in mud.
Im happy with my Exage 400LX 48-38-28, 11-40 9 speed. Chainline baby
he's talking about kickstands.. if you want to buy higher end bikes, DON'T GET A KICKSTAND. your bike can lean on the back wheel just fine, it's how i store mine and it never falls over.
It looks like people in germany ride their gravel bikes on the road for 90%, pack their bike with all kinds of bags full of accessories although riding only 30% of the daily distance of any road cyclist and calling it an adventure on social media. How long do these tires last? I guess I would ride one down in a month.