Home Forums Bike Forum Lets have a "show off your gravel bike" thread.

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  • Lets have a "show off your gravel bike" thread.
  • firestarter
    Free Member

    Cfh +many

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    I think we all think the same thing here don’t we. Bikes and fun. 😆

    I’ve been tempted on occasion to go to Swinley, not quite managed it but do fancy a pootle’age around the Surrey Hills off road..

    Any takers for this? Be nice to get a few of us out..

    Anyhoos, not wanting to spoil our party here but anyone been over to grit.cx lately ??

    franki
    Free Member

    I use Grit.cx from time to time, but the forum is a bit quiet.

    shedbrewed
    Free Member

    oxym0r0n – Member
    Shedbrewed – looks like a familiar Spam winter final descent there.
    Got my fastest finish last year, first time off-road on cowbell 2s
    POSTED 2 HOURS AGO # REPORT-POST

    Yup. Shortly after that I went straight into the brambles, cracking bit of target fixation on my part.
    Only the second time I’ve done it but enjoyed it.

    benp1
    Full Member

    I love this thread

    notmyrealname
    Free Member

    I use Grit.cx from time to time, but the forum is a bit quiet.

    Quiet is a bit of an understatement, it’s virtually dead over there with 2 posts in the past 5 days!

    I’ve just had a quick look on the site and despite being a subscriber I never realised that they were up to issue 5 with the magazine as I don’t think I bothered downloading it after issue one.
    It’s a shame as I had fairly high hopes for the site and the magazine but it’s never really happened.

    aP
    Free Member

    I ride my cx bike round the Surrey Hills pretty much every weekend, we could arrange a Saturday or Sunday meet (9am-ish, returning about 4pm)? Maybe do the full “mixed-surface” ride and start and finish in, say, Richmond-upon-Thames? Might be a long day, but its perfectly possible (no faffing, mind).

    theotherjonv
    Free Member

    I’ve only the one ‘all rounder’ so if has to do the commute, the road runs with the road group I go out with, some easier st stuff, big sky bridleway cruising days and as above sometimes I like to just go for a ride with a bit of everything. My stock Boardman CX won’t win any prizes against the fancy stuff in this thread but in smiles per mile per pound spent it’s already close to my best ever bike. Already starting to contemplate a frame transplant for something a bit fancier.

    soma_rich
    Free Member

    Fancy that aP! would prefer to meet outside of London from my point of view though!.

    Anyone fancy doing an Isle of Wight ride this Sunday?

    tang
    Free Member

    Saw this on sister site Grit and have put an order in:
    http://grit.cx/news/2015/08/lindarets-roadlink-affordable-wide-range-gearing

    Was aware of the goat link for mtb but this seems great for a light loaded hilly tour I have planned. Also good as I have lots of 10s mechs and my 9spd xt that was used for bigger cassette time has died.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    ^^ I’d buy one of those but they don’t make em’ to fit SRAM 😐

    As for the Surrey Hills ride, I’d be up for that 😀 I’d offer up we meet at 1030 though, near some cafe or other then ride out, stop for tea, hack back for 1600.. ( that’s my itinerary for most long’ish days out 😆 )

    cookeaa
    Full Member

    The thing about these bikes to me is that they almost go back to what mountain biking/riding was all about for me when I got in to it.

    I was thinking the same thing too the other day out on my “gravel” bike it suddenly reminded me of trundling about Dorset forests and bridleways on a diamondback ascent during my youth and all the long trips I was going to do with my bike (and never did)…

    I kind of view my MTB a bit differently now, it’s more for quick and easy thrills than the whole explore and adventure side of things… Gravel/CX/Gnarmac whatever the buzzword dejour might be drop-bared offroad capable bikes are definitely a winner for me, but I think maybe it’s something I had to sort of “grow into”…

    jameso
    Full Member

    they almost go back to what mountain biking/riding was all about for me when I got in to it.

    Yep. Rattling down tame bridleways on the edge of control and vision, arm pump and 10-20 mile rides on road to get to the trails : )

    ATBS, all good.

    RAGGATIP
    Free Member

    Gotama
    Free Member

    As for the Surrey Hills ride, I’d be up for that I’d offer up we meet at 1030 though, near some cafe or other then ride out, stop for tea, hack back for 1600.. ( that’s my itinerary for most long’ish days out

    I’d be keen for this too. Live in peaslake so would join somewhere along your route, poss cycling out to meet you as you come up from London. Summer lightening on leith is good fun on a cross bike, as are some of the peaslake trails so happy to navigate round those sections if required.

    seanthesheap
    Free Member

    The thing about these bikes to me is that they almost go back to what mountain biking/riding was all about for me when I got in to it.

    Yeah this, i started riding in 91, my 1st bike had 1.75 inch tyres so not a huge amount bigger than the 41mm tyres my Salsa came with, also if you want to ride dirt around here ( Leics ) you need to ride plenty of tarmac to link it all up and moutain bikes are very tedious on the road, so the Salsa makes a lot of sense to me, you do have to be careful on wooded single track though.

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    shedbrewed – Member

    @epicyclo
    , those are some massive trees. Where was it?

    Between Conon Bridge and Muir of Ord. It’s an old forest, but the winter gales flattened a lot of trees, so they’ve come in and done the lot. There’s 50 rings visible on those logs.

    back2basics
    Free Member

    just posting here to keep in touch with this thread as i contemplate n+1
    🙂

    aP
    Free Member

    We could meet @ Giro in Esher for essential coffee, cakes £12,500 bike purchases….

    christof
    Free Member

    Here’s my newly completed Salsa Fargo. Sorry its not photographed in it natural habitat!
    Really looking forward to getting it muddy!

    antigee
    Free Member

    Here’s my newly completed Salsa Fargo

    looks like will be lots of fun – I’m no geek – whats the chainset? doesn’t look like a road standard

    ads678
    Full Member

    This morning’s ride, my first col. Not the biggest, but it was hard enough.

    Aargh, can’t get the image to work from my phone!!!!

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    Slightly surprised I’ve not punted mine up in this thread. Here it is last year, midway through a roads, byways and pubs trundle round Hertforshire last year with The Lovely Wife. Currently on CX Speeds, also worn GP4S and Thunder Burts. The bike, not the wife.

    christof
    Free Member

    antigee

    Its a MTB SRAM S1000 chainset. It is essentially a 29er MTB frame and will as such, only that a MTB crankset

    antigee
    Free Member

    christof – Member
    antigee

    Its a MTB SRAM S1000 chainset.

    cheers will look at the options on that run 9 speed triple mtb/touring on my pro6 but want to go 10 speed

    fibre
    Free Member

    Where are all the 35mm tubeless cross\gravel tyres?. The WTB’s looked like a good option until I found out they don’t like Stans rims.

    Failing that what’s the current all round all surface favourite for tubes?, I’ve had enough of my thorn collecting SB8s.

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    Bontrager somethings? Cx0 cx3

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    And the compass Barlow pass are apparently good tubeless

    Malvern Rider
    Free Member

    Mountainbiking in the main, has moved so far from what attracted me to it in the 80s. Even Singletrack Mag. has gone more and more Enduro and less relevant to me.
    Adventure / Gravel Biking has reminded me how much I love cycling and exploring in the countryside.

    Same here, although was ’89 I got into mtbs – so mostly 90’s bikes where I cut my singletrack teeth. Before that I used to go everywhere on a 10 speed racer, mostly towpath but would do woodland as well in the dry! For me it’s been mostly about getting outdoors and having a belt around, small adventures, light touring, sometimes longer. I still like to hammer singletrack on an FS hardtail, but prefer explorating for a full day with a bit of gear strapped on.

    My ‘gravel bike’ is a humble home-brewed affair – ie a well-loved mid-90s Raleigh Special Products cromo mtb with full retro XT, Sun rims, Schwalbe Marathons, full guards, Ti flat bars and bar-ends. I since ditched the Gripshift for thumbies and it works a treat, is fairly light, very forgiving ride, quite indestructible and surpringly quick for a 26er.

    benp1
    Full Member

    Found some road that had yet to be dressed properly, was a proper bit of gravel road, wasn’t very long but loved it

    back2basics
    Free Member

    @malvernrider – that looks like a sweet ride – they are not 26er road rims are they???

    i had another thread up about building up classic road or mtb, and i was swinging to road, but seeing that pic above………….. 🙂 🙂

    back2basics
    Free Member

    soooooo
    there must be some compromise between stiffness for climbing and comfort on the ruffty tuffty gravel stuff?

    genubah
    Free Member

    Hi.
    Long time lurker here, I registered just to post in this thread.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    Time for a Tyres update Shirley?

    Almanzos’s I’ve been running since it’s been baking hot and bone dry dusty tracks have been very excellent. Running them for faster riding and grip on bone dry trails. Grip wise they’ve been suprisingly good in a mix of conditions, on bone dry hardpack they’ve just gripped like they’re stuck to the ground with no spinout even when climbing hard. Provided the trails are not covered in shale or deeper dust/dry mud these are the best tyres I’ve used in these conditions. On the road/lanes that are less roads than they are unsurfaced blobs of random tarmac and they’ve gripped like stink. All that gravel and field run off has just been blasted away. Pressures I’m running have settled into 35psi rear and 30psi on front. On occasion I’ve gone up to 45 rear and 40 front for mainly bad road/lanes but thats about it. I tried running them down to 25 rear and 20/25 front but got a couple of pinch flats and since I get cheesed off with these I’ve upped the pressures. They do grip well down at these pressures mind, but I can’t see any reason to run them this low.
    Wear, well they’re the fine tread (small diamonds) with small knobs on the edges of the casing and I’ve done about 2.5ks on them and they’ve yet to show signs of wear. The sidewalls have started to discolour slightly but then they are skinwalls afterall.

    T’is all for now.

    Oh, I’m off up to Epping later for a blast and looking forward to a Hack in some Pine needles.
    😯

    lunge
    Full Member

    Tyres? I started with 28mm Vredestein Senso Xtreme’s, very road orientated but surprisingly capable on light off like towpaths and the like.

    I’ve now put on a pair of On-One Gravel Roads in 33mm, these are much better off road and not as slow as I feared on the road either. I’m running them at 50 PSI but I think I’ll drop that to 40 something for the next ride.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    Do you/anyone know of a “road” based tyre (no tread or just a very paired down tread ) with a width of 35mm’ish?
    Use? well road rides only, may use on shitty lanes but more long distance cross lane country rides..
    Weight? well I’d like the lightest possible but also with some puncture protection (a little, like the Stradas mentioned that CFH uses)
    I know I can get hold of Challenge’s Strada Bianc’s (the tan walls that CFH uses) but they’re 30mm max.. I’m looking for something similar but a bit wider..

    Thoughts??

    PJ266
    Free Member

    BB I’d be looking at the Compass and Grand Bois tyre ranges.

    I have fitted some Strada Biancas and ridden 300km so far, quite happy with them as I’m mostly on the road at the moment, but would prefer more volume like you say.

    The-Beard
    Full Member

    I have a steel road bike – that Ribble one – which I use as my commuter, takes guards and a rack etc, etc. It’s very nice to ride and I like it a lot but it has awful tyre clearance, 25mm is pushing it. So the thought has been going round my head that really I should get a different (still steel most likely) frame with better tyre clearance. Would open up a few more possibilities for using the bike too. But then why not get one that takes discs as commuting in Scotland in winter means discs are a good idea. And if I do that then I’d need new wheels as mine don’t take discs. So that’s me up to frame, wheels and brakes. Hmmm. Now that’s almost a whole bike…

    Wow, that escalated quickly!

    josemctavish
    Free Member

    Nice to see the Amazons making an appearance here:

    Tyres wise, I go for:

    Smart Sam 35c for mixed rides with a fair amount of road.
    Smart Sam 47c for proper offroad.
    Marathon Winter 35c for the snowy wastelands.

    seanthesheap
    Free Member

    I headed out for a short ride this afternoon, the idea was to do some interval training as my average is pretty poor at the mo, anyway, about 10 minutes in and I was fed up of training so popped down a dirt track, found a bench and chilled out for 10 or 12 minutes in the sun watching the water foul on the pond, lovely. 🙂

Viewing 40 posts - 201 through 240 (of 347 total)

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