There's no such thing as either 🤣 A friend made a 29er into a mullet drivetrain 'drop bar mtb' with a Wolftooth adapter to fix the issue with road STi and MTB rear derailleurs. This video makes me glad I bought a gravel bike.
@@svenlima I enjoy a modern mountain bike with 10 gears quite a lot. Zee is a lot cheaper than XTR and as long as you're not racing, just as capable. Also, they're much more niche components, they weren't impacted by the big bike parts shortage as much as others.
Two weeks back I was on a soaking wet, water everywhere, mud and downed tree beaches gravel road. I was on my full suspension mtn bike happily going slow and enjoying the ride. Guy passes me sliding around chaotic on a modern gravel bike. Pretty sure we were both happy as can be Ride what you want
I don't think you can do gravel wrong, you could be going for a gentle spin or racing, but no matter what gravel is meant to be fun and ride whatever you like as long as it makes you happy and leaves you smiling at the end. Have a great day everyone, from Australia.
Having Doddy and Si do a shared video brings the fun factor for sure. Add several fun points for Si's clown pants as well!! Love it. Great video guys. I enjoyed the comparisons of these two builds.
I built a flat bar gravel bike a couple years ago with a single chain ring up front and two sets of wheels. One with 2” 29ers for off rode and one with 33c gravel tires for everything else. It’s my favorite bike I’ve ever owned
1987 (I think), I was at the NORBA mountain bike races in Mammoth Lakes, California. There was a dude doing some incredible nose wheelies around the parking lot before the races. Later that day I learned it was John Tomac after he demolished the field in his race. The guy was an amazing bike rider.
What I like best about gravel is that it isn't just one thing. It rejects the extremes of optimized modern road and mountain bikes and instead gives you the vast in-between space where you're free to find what makes most sense to you.
Entertaining, but I would have preferred to see the same Canyon compared with the only difference being the drop and flat bar. Compared for comfort, speed and control.
It won't work, because the rest of the bike geometry is designed to work with either flat or drop bars. Mixing gets bad results. Don't forget drop bars are 380-460mm wide while flat are 600mm-800mm.
@@FalcoBikes what do you mean it won’t work, it’s literally what is in this video. The Canyon was a drop bar gravel bike they put a flat bar in. All they need is a stock one to compare too.
The flat bar gravel bike looks really appealing, captures the essence of the early days on mtb and makes what would be an easy trail on your full suspension more interesting. The only thing I would be concerned about would be the lack of hand position options compared to drops, especially when climbing...... maybe it needs some little extension thingies on the end of the bars that you can use for climbing and cruising?!
Hi to everyone. I have to say this much @4:28 I don't know what is more goofier..those goofier joypants and/or that hilariously joyful grin/smile that Si pulls off. That smile is such a wonderful smile it can make a bad day just joyous.
Yup, my gravel bike of choice is my mid 80s Fuji all ridged MTB. I upgraded the brakes and drive train a few years ago and love it for easy off roading.
I love my fat tire bike but I had to add horns to the ends of my bars so I can adjust my grip on long rides. The drop bars give my hands different grip options on my gravel bike.
Flat bar for me. I ride a mix of paved paths and crushed gravel (rail to roads type stuff) so I placed a pair of "bar ends" to the inside of my grips, angled forward, to simulate hoods. This gives my hands an additional position and allows me to pull my arms in to get slightly more aero on long straight aways. I just find this setup to be more versitile for my need than drops.
I now ride a Trek FX3 2022, which Trek call a 'hybrid', but I have declared it to be my flat bar gravel bike. It is light, fast, comfortable, confidence inspiring. I changed the following: a better saddle and a carbon roadie post, better flat composite pedals, and next are Pirelli Cinturato Gravel Hard 700x45c tyres, for more rubber, more air and tubeless. The Bontrager GR1 700x35C are in fact really good for road and light gravel, but time for an upgrade. So far this bike is the most fun bike I have ever owned, and I have been mountainbiking since 1990!
What exactly is hybrid bike? I'm new to cycling AND English is my second language. I own flat bar bike with front suspension and trekking XT line mentioned in video, is that a hybrid bike? Or does it qualify as "a gravel with flat bars and suspenion fork?" I've never seen such bike even mentioned in any video.
@@laughingbeast4481A hybrid is a flat bar bike without the shock absorbing fork. It is an upright ride and works great as a city bike, and can have wider tires than a regular road bike so gravel is not a problem.
Hybrid is really just an old market term for flat bar gravel bike (700C wheels) meant for more comfortable riding than road bikes and more efficient pedaling than mountain bikes. The bike industry has to change the name once in a while to attract more buyers. Don't blame them, I think hybrid is a terrible name.
What we really need are bars that transform from flat to drop when needed. People (myself) included are literally buying 5 or more bikes to optimize very specific conditions. Heck, I have a flat-tail just to get 2 seconds on my dual suspension when sketchy descents aren’t involved. Sometimes gravel is severe enough that I wish I had a flat bar, but I don’t want that bar for the 15-mile road ride to get to the gravel trail. Yes, transformer bikes, that is the answer.
The flat bar Canyon's poise and cockpit reminds me of my 1990 Stumpjumper which is very much at home blasting along the local single tracks and bike trails. I find inner bar ends (attached just outside the brake levers) have helped a lot, both in terms of comfort and aero.
I'm bought Specialized Diverge 2021 Carbon Gravel bike and first I threw away drop handlebar and installed flat carbon handlebar(175g). Very comfortable and light weight (total saved almost 300g) SRAM Eagle AXS Controller weight (75gr ) fits with Derailleur XPLR Force AXS without any problem. Brakes Sram carbon Level Ultimate fits with SRAM Force flat mount CALIPER without problem too. Tires Pirelli Cinturato M 700c×45 and Pirelli Cinturato tube (49g each) I think the best choice.
I was racing mountain bikes about the time John Tomac was using drop bars on his mountain bike, and if I recall the news stories the drop bars were his attempt at duplicating his road position on his mountain bike so he could switch between the disciplines seamlessly. And the only reason he had that interest was he recently--horrors of horrors--been signed to a road racing team. I also seem to recall him saying--later, after giving up road racing--how the drop bars made for some pretty scary races. Doddy said it himself: some pretty terrifying moments when things got tight. Love the comparison, very typical--i.e.: fun--GCN video.
I'm more comfortable and have a better steering with flat bar than drop. I am sticking with a flat bar gravel bike and will add bull horns and aero. Best custom.
Think ultimately it’s going to come down to how much (if any) road sections you have on your gravel rides. For me, I have to ride at least 5 miles of road before I get to any decent off road trails which is a doddle on the drop bars. I guess I love the fact that I can link up all the sections with road if I need to, also love the fact I can put some slicks on and turn it into a sportive road bike
Just use bar ends or even better aero bars for touring or longer road sections. My road bike has flatbars with Aero bars as well. Dropbars are outdated in my opinion and are only held relevant by the UCI.
@@The2808erik I do agree that bar ends are really GREAT …still love them on my 1993 Litespeed XC Mountainbike. Curious when the industry does rediscover them eventually!
@@bikemike1118 People make the argument that they are unsafe and you can jab yourself with them. Just use some that don't protrude more than the brake levers.
@@The2808erik …Never heard that before. I also never had the feeling that they can injure myself in a crash - although I had several crashs - minor ones and one more severe one …the bar ends were never part of a problem …not in the least! In my experience this fear is BS 🤷🏻
Man I clearly remember the sound of Tomac’s bike racing in the Grundig WC locally back in the day. That rear disc wheel had such a distinctive sound. It was the same spec as that vintage stomach bike you showed. Good memories.
In the 90s NZ company Avanti was making a what would now be called a flat bar gravel bike. They were great for mixed gravel/seal commutes and general cruising around.
Hi CGN Thanks for the fun video. I have one weird handelbar: flat bar with aero bars :) Some times ago, you post a video about "all-in-on" bike: I made mine. I bought a Look gravel which has GRX equipment. I changed the cassette to a 11-42 and rear derailleur to a XT one. Unfortunately GRX shifter cannot handle an XT rear derailleur so I have to change to XT shifter meaning changing drop handlebar to flat handlebar. As you said , changing from drop to flat means a different position, thus I changed as well the stem for a longer one. And to improve 'aerodynamic', I put aero bars on the flat handlebar. This is quite weird indeed: seems like a modern bow like this )=. I hope that shimano will propose shifter for drop handlebar able to handle xt derailleur. Anyway, I have my "all-in-on" bike with 3 pairs of wheels: 700x28 with road tyres, (all-in-one and most versatile) 700x33 with gravel tyres and finally 650x50 with mountain tyres. Ok all in one is not good in all but simply works for all except downhill with jumps and stones which I do not like. Thus works and is enjoyable for me !
I really enjoy seeing an exploration of different geometries/configuartions and the rolling implications of each. Having the subjective-objective comparisons from such outstanding presenters, and knowledgeable riders, is invaluable. This video was both entertaining and informative. I do wish there were a slo-mo replay from the joy cam of peak fun moments.
“Mountain biking lite” was exactly how I described cycling on a 14 mile long gravel road, riding a 1985 Specialized Rockhopper with drop bars. That was more than 30 years ago! I did not wear neon tights.
I would not want drop bars on my mountain bike, but I am looking at adding some type of aero bar for the times where getting down in a comfortable way when bucking a wind or just trying to fly on the flats. Would not want to do gnarly trails with out good flat bars. Fun is ALWAYS my #1goal. Sure some training type ride can be a slog, but even those rides, the sun might be shining or your scenery is great, see an eagle in a tree etc. I have ridden more in the last 2 years than in the last 10. I have always ridden, but it has now become my 'thing'. - Cheers
I have a steel cyclocross bike that I converted to flat bars and single speed that I use as an errand bike or a bike to go and have a blast on. The handling is definitely more twitchy, but that is part of the fun.
I wonder if the suspension on the mountain bike contributed to it feeling dodgy? I know if I were leaning down on the drops the very last thing I would want is a soft front end.
Looking at the spec of some modern 'hybrid' bikes like the Specialized Sirrus X 5.0,they're basically flat bar gravel bikes like the Canyon in the video. The X 5.0 has Shimano SLX, 38mm tyres and a carbon frame/fork. I wouldn't send one down Whistler, but you could ride it almost anywhere, and have fun. They're not as cool as gravel bikes, and not designed for all out speed in any discipline, so they are often cheaper, but they could be the next big thing for a quiver-killer, do-it-all bike.
I actually have converted a Trek roscoe to a drop bar, for my winter commute. The trick is to modify the mountain bike brake levers to fit on the flat part of the bars. Then I mounted some cheap areo bars and mounted the shifters on them. It works awesome for commuting around town in snow ice and all. It takes a bit to get use to but works great mountain biking. But then I'm not a professional so if im a little slower I dont mind. I seem to be able to keep up with my friends so im happy
My favourite bike of the half dozen I have currently is a Giant Toughroad. It's basically a modern take on a 90s MTB. Rigid both ends with 2.0 inch tyres and flat bars but up to date with 1x11 and hydraulic disc brakes.
I've been riding a Boardman hybrid for about 6 years now, bought it to do the Dirty Reiver, which I've done twice now, although only managed the 130! But did finish quite high up in both. Have also done a 900 mile bike pack on it, loads of road riding & go off road about 20% of the time. £550 brand new too 😍
I'm a recent gravel convert, at the road end of gravel. 700x38 tyres and a 50/34 Tiagra group. I absolutely can't stop raving about it. On my Spectral I've got maybe three route options before I have to get in the car and travel. On the Tifosi I can leave my house and be buzzing my t*ts off almost immediately. I can punt it down byways, bridleways and towpaths and it makes the most tame forest track feel like BPW. I love it. The thrills are much more accessible than attempting to justify 160mm of travel 🤣
That’s my lockdown summed up. Although… I never truly feel in love with drops hence the change to flat/riser bars. Can’t wait to smash my local gravel loops and feel the difference.
Not to be a nerd here but bike geometry is designed to suit the rest of the componentry. Typical drop bars are 400mm-ish while flat bars are 700mm-ish. That's a 75% gap in leverage, with the flat bar giving you more control and balance. While the flat bar gravel may be nervous at first, you can get used to it after a while. But wielding a 600mm+ top tube and sub-70 degree HTA with a drop bar is just wrong. You MAY get a bit more used to it after a while but it won't be right.
I convert my Canyon RoadLite from a road configuration to a gravel configuration simply by swapping my wheels and tires. It's a matter of 2 min., the longest part being to re-calibrate the disc brake pads (unscrew, apply brake, screw: done). So, depending on what I want to ride that day, it's an easy decision to take.
@@prochiro The original wheels are Mavic CrossOne, I put 38mm Hutchinson Overide Gravel tyres on them. And I bought chinese wheels (Loca ?) that I use with 28mm tyres (Continental GP or Michelin Sport), same size as the original ones. I only need to adjust the brake on my front wheel because of a slight gap (probably less than 0.25mm !) causing some friction, only on the front wheel. On the back one, the current settings work with both sets. Oh, and I added discs on the chinese wheels, obviously.
@@prochiro I could have gone way bigger, there is a lot of space between the forks (though I would need to move the brake cable out of the way; it's attached inside the fork).
Too used to flat bars from mtbing.... so bought a lightweight hybrid and stuck gravel tires on it to gravel race...cheaper conversion and still pretty speedy with 52 up front! Admittedly put tribars on too for roads... only 10kg bike but can ride most blue mtb trails on it without suspension... foam grips help dampen vibrations! 😉
I consider my trek 1120 a flat bar gravel bike. I swap around tire sizes, running anything between 29x3.0 to 29x2.4, depending on the ride. Jones h loop bar. I dig it.
Just bought the kit to put flat bars on my Marin Gestalt - it has been my turbo trainer bike for years but finally took it to the trails this summer - older guy with a bad hip and I find I cant ride it down on the drops and pedal so riding on the hoods and trying to hold on and brake is terrifying! But I love the speed and acceleration on the gravel trails!
Nice cross over. I did drop AND aero bars on my Salsa Beargrease (yes a fat bike). It’s a fantastic adventure bike that is great on gravel and even light trails.
I love gravel bikes, but Ive never been comfortable on drops. I bought a Crockett 7 and within 3 months converted it to flat bar. Its so much more comfortable for me, and feels way faster on the trails and roads that I ride on. If your not comfortable, then whats the point?
Cycling innovations usually stem from racing, so if you’re not interested in going fast, dropped handlebars aren’t really necessary and may be detrimental.
I love drop bars for the same reason I love my vertical PC mouse - the gripping positions are way more natural. When you grip a flat bar (or a regular PC mouse), the hands (and consequently also elbows) are turned 90 degrees compared to their natural resting position, causing tension and long term discomfort.
Your natural resting position of your hands are neither vertical nor horizontal, they are in between position. When you punch bag either with straight punch or hook your elbow goes from vertical to horizontal position at its strongest point at the impact area. When you perform barbell chest press your arms are naturally stronger when elbows are at horizontal position.
Already switched my gravel to flat bar before I saw this video. Its more relaxed and agile. It just fits my riding style since I came from MTB and I hated the drop bar since day 1.
@@UenoLocker54 which in that race, didn't matter at all. It was the Croatan Buck Fifty. It is flat as can be on the coast of North Carolina. Wind is the biggest issue in that race.
Great video chaps! Having Doddy with his retro steed added a lot of quirk to the comparison. It would be interesting to see a flatbar gravel bike compared to a modern drop bar mtb. I don't think it would be a huge difference other than the hand position. Which is pretty much personal preference.
As someone who put drop bars on a large sized 29er hardtail, I would suggest a few things for those interested in do the same thing. It's a lot of bike. If you have a choice a smaller frame and 27.5 wheels would improve the agility. Or just going down to 27.5 improves handling by magnitudes Wider drop handle bars are better. Get an adjustable stem. Being able to the adjust the angle of the handle bars to your liking, gives you amazing flexibility. Lockout suspension is a must, that way you can turn it into a competent road bike when you want it to be. I still think the idea has merit, I just wish someone would pursue the idea from the ground up. That a frame could be built with the concept at it's root. Essential a more rugged full suspension gravel bike. Decent commuter on tarmac and bit more capable on the rough stuff than a gravel bike.
Flat bar bikes are great fun. If you are not into road racing, try one. They are great for touring. I regularly ride 150km a day on mine without any problems... hand position is never an issue. You don't need drop bars to have a great bike and have a great ride.
built 2 gravel bikes and love them but had to pick up a flat bar due to shoulder injuries. went with the Cinelli Gazetta Della Strada and it has be great relief and almost no pain at all. but how it rides, and being a Columbus steel frame, i am pretty smitten. it is somewhat twitchy on the road but rips on gravel and single track with a short bar and carbon wheels. was looking to upgrade the drive train to GRX but was told by LBS that the GRX is not compatible with MTB shifters. guess i need to do a bit more research.
The biggest advantage to a drop bar gravel bike (at least, right now) is that you can run Shimano 1x12 drivetrain as-is! It really opens up the 1x capabilities and is much less expensive than a 'mullet' AXS build! Also, the braking performance is MUCH better with flat-bar levers on rough terrain. It's just much easier to stop when you're bouncing around a lot. Additionally, I think the flat bar opens up more real estate for a set of Aero bars (which normally would obscure most of the top of a standard drop bar). I built my current gravel bike with drop bars, and after riding it quite a lot, I can honestly say that I would go back and build it as a flat bar bike if I could do it again.
Drop bar MTB all the way! I own a 2017 Koga Beachracer, which is basically a 29er Mountainbike with drop handlebars and rigid fork. So they do make it and I love it! It can do anything from Tarmac to MTB XC trail as-well-as race on the Dutch beaches off course. Best bike I own.
I'll want to grab a flared drop bar, for whichever frame I'll choose. For frames, I'll choose a rigid, light XC frame of any material, and a hydroformed, triple-butted aluminium frame. But the local bike shops near me have run their supplies of metal flared drop bars out of stock... so that'll lead me to grab a comfortable set of bar tape by next week, first.
My bike 15 years ago, a GT avalanche, was shod in Michelin country rock tires, basically 45mm wide mostly slick rubber. Apart from the 3x7 and the suspension fork, it was a modern gravel bike. I bought it because it had disc brakes.
I’ve recently rebuilt an old gravel frame with flat (riser) bars, coming from an MTB background it’s made me realise how much I didn’t enjoy drops as soon as the surface wasn’t a road and lacked confidence around town. I’m looking forward to putting more miles on flat bars, but so far it’s made more smiles so I don’t think the drops will be coming back but a longer stem might be.
I've yet to find a set of drop bars, or a position on them, that gets alone with me. I have a fully rigid I use for commuting/bikepacking that I have an 800mm motocross inspired riser bar on. I'm thinking gravel bike + some sort of alt bar is probably peak gravel performance.
I love my flat bar gravel bike and is certainly faster than my mountain bikes on smoother sections of the mountain trials I ride , the mountain bike comes into its own when it’s muddy and rocky ,thanks for vid from the Philippines 🇵🇭
Bicycles aren’t about which is faster, because all bicycles are fast enough when pedalled by physically conditioned rider. Bicycles all about fun and exercise, besides transportation.
At the moment my perfect gravel bike is more of an all road bike. Road agility, gravel / endurance confort (or lack of it), dropper post for extra fun, and 1x because I like it.
When I was a kid in the 80's we used to buy old "racers" from 2nd hand shops and put knobbly tyres on them and cow-horns, and we called them "trackers". My brother even had one with a Sturmey Archer back wheel at one point
After spending thousands of dollars on my first Gravel bike with expensive Carbon wheels and an alternative wheelset for road riding, and many hours tinkering with internal cabling and hydraulic disc maintenance, I finally realized Gravel bike is a huge bicycle industry marketing scheme to sell something that is totally unnecessary. Selling my Gravel bike and keeping my endurance bike for the road and MTB for the trails. Flat bar or Drop bar, No grabel bikes beats a dedicated road bike or MTB, unless you ride "Gravel" trails 100%
Anything can ride gravel, depending how fast and efficient you want to be. My.bike was used £80 carrera Crossfire disc hybrid, it does everything just not to the extremes
Since I am basically a poor, I converted my old hybrid bike to a drop bar gravel grinder. Only downside is tire clearance. Mine was a “sporty”. Sesión of the Fuji absolute so I can fit max 38c on them. Oh and no disc brakes. Which have been a bummer at times. Either way it’s worked great!
Converted my 2018 Specialized Diverge Carbon into a flatbar gravel. The original parts were 2x10 tiagra with mechanical brakes. It needed an upgrade. Converted it with deore xt /grx drivetrain, slx/grx brakes...so much fun to ride.
I’ve been ahead of the curve for a few years now. Bought a decent spec hybrid for a song and changed out grips, brakes, and tires. Boom! Rad gravel bike
In 2011 I converted a hardtail MTB to a flat bar gravel bike by transferring components to a Salsa Fargo rigid fork frame. Still my favourite bike. Goes anywhere, lighter than a MTB. I feel insecure on drop bars. My grip on the bars is less secure. Brakes and shifters not at hand. On easy going with flat bars, when wanting a change of hand positions, I use bar ends or just put palms of hands against bar ends. I do more touring riding now, for which I've moved to narrower tyres, 40 mm. I think in the end that MTBs adapt to gravel (rigid forks) better than do road bikes (lower gears) because the MTB spacings and components are more suited to the more rugged environement of off-piste. And flat bars are less complex, less expensive and easier to maintain.
I love the comparo, but the gap can be narrowed. I've done both things. I had a Salsa Warbird I fitted with drop bars and a Lauf fork, and then later on set up a Specialized Epic 29er with wide gravel style drops, and a Fox 32 fork with 100mm travel. Used both on similar trails like these dudes, but also on the road to the trails, which is why I converted to a drop MTB. The results would reflect what would happen if you are riding the bikes at their limits, not an average 8/10ths ride in the park. Nothing can beat the turning and stopping/accelerating of a gravel bike with flat bars. It feels like you're on some sort of stunt bike. However, handling on the drop bar MTB bike doesn't need to be "dodgy". It's going to be slower in comparison to a gravel bike due to the longer wheel base. The "oversteer" problem they talk about is from too much of a forward shift in center of gravity when turning. Turning a bike pitches the center of gravity forward, and causes the oversteer sensation. They were right about a shorter stem, it puts weight rearward. But a 51mm offset fork with 100mm or less of travel, and a mullet configuration (29er front and 27.5 rear) will fix the center of gravity very nicely while maintaining decent geometry. If you're still pitched too far forward in the turns, a raised stem and maxed out headset spacers will help maintain center of gravity further. The advantage of the drop bar mountain bike is comfort and stability over the long run due to it's longer wheel base and extra room to move around, and that fork is wonderful for the ruts, roots, and rocks I encounter while railing along at an 8/10ths pace. You won't win any races, but if you can set it up correctly it has it's place in your world, do not despair.
Which would you rather have, a drop bar mountain bike, or a flat bar gravel bike?
There's no such thing as either 🤣 A friend made a 29er into a mullet drivetrain 'drop bar mtb' with a Wolftooth adapter to fix the issue with road STi and MTB rear derailleurs. This video makes me glad I bought a gravel bike.
I actually run a drop bar rigid MtB & we call them "MonsterCross" bikes here in the USA Mountian West. Slow & Fun w/ 650b+ 3" tires
Drop bars all the way on whatever for more hand positions and general versatility.
My drop bar gravel bike has front suspension, so does that make it a drop bar mountain bike? 🤔
Flat bars all day, thank you GCN, never have I felt more of a mountain biker watching GCN.
So finally we are back where I started cycling. On a frame without suspension and flatbars. Well done bicycle industry. 👏
Well said!
@@svenlima I enjoy a modern mountain bike with 10 gears quite a lot. Zee is a lot cheaper than XTR and as long as you're not racing, just as capable. Also, they're much more niche components, they weren't impacted by the big bike parts shortage as much as others.
Yes, perplexing they refuse to call that rigid framed mountain bike a mountain bike.
Doddy has suspension...
@@svenlima I'm close to 5000km without any complaints so far. Do you know any resources where these components are tested for longevity?
Two weeks back I was on a soaking wet, water everywhere, mud and downed tree beaches gravel road. I was on my full suspension mtn bike happily going slow and enjoying the ride. Guy passes me sliding around chaotic on a modern gravel bike. Pretty sure we were both happy as can be
Ride what you want
Yeeeees. This is the spirit! Love it.
so true, depends on style of riding
WORD! The best bike is the one you’re riding at a given time. 🤙🏼
I don't think you can do gravel wrong, you could be going for a gentle spin or racing, but no matter what gravel is meant to be fun and ride whatever you like as long as it makes you happy and leaves you smiling at the end. Have a great day everyone, from Australia.
I really like your comment :D
Join the dark side. Thats what 99.999% of mountainbiking is. Not many ppl care about racing, we just go out and have fun.
I disagree to the extent that riding with poorly suited tires can be the wrong way, since that can compromise safety
You certainly can do gravel wrong - look at Si's pants!
That is so true!
Having Doddy and Si do a shared video brings the fun factor for sure. Add several fun points for Si's clown pants as well!! Love it. Great video guys. I enjoyed the comparisons of these two builds.
Do you know the brand?
I built a flat bar gravel bike a couple years ago with a single chain ring up front and two sets of wheels. One with 2” 29ers for off rode and one with 33c gravel tires for everything else. It’s my favorite bike I’ve ever owned
Totally. Me too. Every bit this. And then some. Plus some more. U got it.
1987 (I think), I was at the NORBA mountain bike races in Mammoth Lakes, California. There was a dude doing some incredible nose wheelies around the parking lot before the races. Later that day I learned it was John Tomac after he demolished the field in his race. The guy was an amazing bike rider.
What I like best about gravel is that it isn't just one thing. It rejects the extremes of optimized modern road and mountain bikes and instead gives you the vast in-between space where you're free to find what makes most sense to you.
Entertaining, but I would have preferred to see the same Canyon compared with the only difference being the drop and flat bar. Compared for comfort, speed and control.
They actually did that video already, I believe it was with Orbeas?
That was I thought this video was :(
It won't work, because the rest of the bike geometry is designed to work with either flat or drop bars. Mixing gets bad results. Don't forget drop bars are 380-460mm wide while flat are 600mm-800mm.
@@FalcoBikes what do you mean it won’t work, it’s literally what is in this video. The Canyon was a drop bar gravel bike they put a flat bar in. All they need is a stock one to compare too.
The flat bar gravel bike looks really appealing, captures the essence of the early days on mtb and makes what would be an easy trail on your full suspension more interesting. The only thing I would be concerned about would be the lack of hand position options compared to drops, especially when climbing...... maybe it needs some little extension thingies on the end of the bars that you can use for climbing and cruising?!
I’ve got a flat bar’d gravel bike - wouldn’t change it - predominately my background is road, so I love just mixing it up !!
Hi to everyone. I have to say this much @4:28 I don't know what is more goofier..those goofier joypants and/or that hilariously joyful grin/smile that Si pulls off. That smile is such a wonderful smile it can make a bad day just joyous.
The Canyon is basically similar to my all rigid mtb from 1992 - which I use for gravel riding. Nice to be fashionable again.
Yup, my gravel bike of choice is my mid 80s Fuji all ridged MTB. I upgraded the brakes and drive train a few years ago and love it for easy off roading.
@@Mike-sh2dg rigid.
I love my fat tire bike but I had to add horns to the ends of my bars so I can adjust my grip on long rides. The drop bars give my hands different grip options on my gravel bike.
Love having Doddy do this! Combining GMBN/GCN makes for fun viewing
Flat bar for me. I ride a mix of paved paths and crushed gravel (rail to roads type stuff) so I placed a pair of "bar ends" to the inside of my grips, angled forward, to simulate hoods. This gives my hands an additional position and allows me to pull my arms in to get slightly more aero on long straight aways. I just find this setup to be more versitile for my need than drops.
I now ride a Trek FX3 2022, which Trek call a 'hybrid', but I have declared it to be my flat bar gravel bike. It is light, fast, comfortable, confidence inspiring. I changed the following: a better saddle and a carbon roadie post, better flat composite pedals, and next are Pirelli Cinturato Gravel Hard 700x45c tyres, for more rubber, more air and tubeless. The Bontrager GR1 700x35C are in fact really good for road and light gravel, but time for an upgrade. So far this bike is the most fun bike I have ever owned, and I have been mountainbiking since 1990!
I love my flat bar hybrid. The ride is more intuitive and upright. I don't worry more about speed, but opt instead for comfort.
What exactly is hybrid bike? I'm new to cycling AND English is my second language. I own flat bar bike with front suspension and trekking XT line mentioned in video, is that a hybrid bike? Or does it qualify as "a gravel with flat bars and suspenion fork?" I've never seen such bike even mentioned in any video.
@@laughingbeast4481A hybrid is a flat bar bike without the shock absorbing fork. It is an upright ride and works great as a city bike, and can have wider tires than a regular road bike so gravel is not a problem.
Most hybrid bikes today are with shock absorbing forks.
Hybrid is really just an old market term for flat bar gravel bike (700C wheels) meant for more comfortable riding than road bikes and more efficient pedaling than mountain bikes. The bike industry has to change the name once in a while to attract more buyers. Don't blame them, I think hybrid is a terrible name.
What we really need are bars that transform from flat to drop when needed. People (myself) included are literally buying 5 or more bikes to optimize very specific conditions. Heck, I have a flat-tail just to get 2 seconds on my dual suspension when sketchy descents aren’t involved. Sometimes gravel is severe enough that I wish I had a flat bar, but I don’t want that bar for the 15-mile road ride to get to the gravel trail. Yes, transformer bikes, that is the answer.
I was gravel biking before it was a thing I just took my 10 speed road bike lowered the tire pressure to about half and went on the trails lol
A flat bar with barends and aerobars is perfect for both road and offroad.
Brakes?
The flat bar Canyon's poise and cockpit reminds me of my 1990 Stumpjumper which is very much at home blasting along the local single tracks and bike trails. I find inner bar ends (attached just outside the brake levers) have helped a lot, both in terms of comfort and aero.
Nice to see hybrid bikes getting a bit of attention on the channel 😄. Workhorses deserve love too
Doddy is the man! Glad to see him here on GCN!
I'm bought Specialized Diverge 2021 Carbon Gravel bike and first I threw away drop handlebar and installed flat carbon handlebar(175g).
Very comfortable and light weight (total saved almost 300g)
SRAM Eagle AXS Controller weight (75gr ) fits with Derailleur XPLR Force AXS without any problem. Brakes Sram carbon Level Ultimate fits with SRAM Force flat mount CALIPER without problem too.
Tires Pirelli Cinturato M 700c×45 and Pirelli Cinturato tube (49g each) I think the best choice.
I was racing mountain bikes about the time John Tomac was using drop bars on his mountain bike, and if I recall the news stories the drop bars were his attempt at duplicating his road position on his mountain bike so he could switch between the disciplines seamlessly. And the only reason he had that interest was he recently--horrors of horrors--been signed to a road racing team. I also seem to recall him saying--later, after giving up road racing--how the drop bars made for some pretty scary races. Doddy said it himself: some pretty terrifying moments when things got tight. Love the comparison, very typical--i.e.: fun--GCN video.
Ive ride flat bar gravel bike from last 2 years and its f… brillant mate
My buddy has a Roubaix with a flat bar and it is a blast to shred around town on.
I love it when you guys do challenges together
This should be interesting
I'm more comfortable and have a better steering with flat bar than drop. I am sticking with a flat bar gravel bike and will add bull horns and aero. Best custom.
Always a pleasure to see the riders having so much fun.
Think ultimately it’s going to come down to how much (if any) road sections you have on your gravel rides. For me, I have to ride at least 5 miles of road before I get to any decent off road trails which is a doddle on the drop bars. I guess I love the fact that I can link up all the sections with road if I need to, also love the fact I can put some slicks on and turn it into a sportive road bike
Just use bar ends or even better aero bars for touring or longer road sections. My road bike has flatbars with Aero bars as well. Dropbars are outdated in my opinion and are only held relevant by the UCI.
@@The2808erik I do agree that bar ends are really GREAT …still love them on my 1993 Litespeed XC Mountainbike. Curious when the industry does rediscover them eventually!
@@bikemike1118 People make the argument that they are unsafe and you can jab yourself with them. Just use some that don't protrude more than the brake levers.
@@The2808erik …Never heard that before. I also never had the feeling that they can injure myself in a crash - although I had several crashs - minor ones and one more severe one …the bar ends were never part of a problem …not in the least! In my experience this fear is BS 🤷🏻
@@bikemike1118 Yeah probably true.
Man I clearly remember the sound of Tomac’s bike racing in the Grundig WC locally back in the day. That rear disc wheel had such a distinctive sound. It was the same spec as that vintage stomach bike you showed. Good memories.
Thank you, they clarified the doubts I had about the handlebar and the type of bicycle frame to use.
What was your choice?
Doddy and Si apply the theory into practice is going to be fun any day. Thanks great video.
In the 90s NZ company Avanti was making a what would now be called a flat bar gravel bike. They were great for mixed gravel/seal commutes and general cruising around.
I had a 2000s Ibex flat bar hybrid that rode well in all conditions. Miss that bike.
Hi CGN
Thanks for the fun video. I have one weird handelbar: flat bar with aero bars :) Some times ago, you post a video about "all-in-on" bike: I made mine. I bought a Look gravel which has GRX equipment. I changed the cassette to a 11-42 and rear derailleur to a XT one. Unfortunately GRX shifter cannot handle an XT rear derailleur so I have to change to XT shifter meaning changing drop handlebar to flat handlebar. As you said , changing from drop to flat means a different position, thus I changed as well the stem for a longer one. And to improve 'aerodynamic', I put aero bars on the flat handlebar. This is quite weird indeed: seems like a modern bow like this )=. I hope that shimano will propose shifter for drop handlebar able to handle xt derailleur. Anyway, I have my "all-in-on" bike with 3 pairs of wheels: 700x28 with road tyres, (all-in-one and most versatile) 700x33 with gravel tyres and finally 650x50 with mountain tyres. Ok all in one is not good in all but simply works for all except downhill with jumps and stones which I do not like. Thus works and is enjoyable for me !
I really enjoy seeing an exploration of different geometries/configuartions and the rolling implications of each. Having the subjective-objective comparisons from such outstanding presenters, and knowledgeable riders, is invaluable. This video was both entertaining and informative. I do wish there were a slo-mo replay from the joy cam of peak fun moments.
“Mountain biking lite” was exactly how I described cycling on a 14 mile long gravel road, riding a 1985 Specialized Rockhopper with drop bars. That was more than 30 years ago! I did not wear neon tights.
Non-neon tights?
I would not want drop bars on my mountain bike, but I am looking at adding some type of aero bar for the times where getting down in a comfortable way when bucking a wind or just trying to fly on the flats.
Would not want to do gnarly trails with out good flat bars. Fun is ALWAYS my #1goal. Sure some training type ride can be a slog, but even those rides, the sun might be shining or your scenery is great, see an eagle in a tree etc.
I have ridden more in the last 2 years than in the last 10. I have always ridden, but it has now become my 'thing'. - Cheers
All we need is some grip shifters and a Flexstem and we’ve come full circle.
and bar ends, too, gotta have a little pair parallel to the ground for serious uphill torque.
If you don't think there are flexstems then you haven't been paying attention to gravel.
I have a steel cyclocross bike that I converted to flat bars and single speed that I use as an errand bike or a bike to go and have a blast on. The handling is definitely more twitchy, but that is part of the fun.
I wonder if the suspension on the mountain bike contributed to it feeling dodgy? I know if I were leaning down on the drops the very last thing I would want is a soft front end.
Looking at the spec of some modern 'hybrid' bikes like the Specialized Sirrus X 5.0,they're basically flat bar gravel bikes like the Canyon in the video. The X 5.0 has Shimano SLX, 38mm tyres and a carbon frame/fork. I wouldn't send one down Whistler, but you could ride it almost anywhere, and have fun. They're not as cool as gravel bikes, and not designed for all out speed in any discipline, so they are often cheaper, but they could be the next big thing for a quiver-killer, do-it-all bike.
You mean the Specialized Diverge EVO? We see what you're doing there, Specialized...
I actually have converted a Trek roscoe to a drop bar, for my winter commute.
The trick is to modify the mountain bike brake levers to fit on the flat part of the bars. Then I mounted some cheap areo bars and mounted the shifters on them.
It works awesome for commuting around town in snow ice and all.
It takes a bit to get use to but works great mountain biking. But then I'm not a professional so if im a little slower I dont mind. I seem to be able to keep up with my friends so im happy
That was awesome 👌 i really enjoy the gcn gmbn collaborations! And doing either diciplines in a contrast way. MORE LIKE THIS please 🙏 🙏
My favourite bike of the half dozen I have currently is a Giant Toughroad. It's basically a modern take on a 90s MTB. Rigid both ends with 2.0 inch tyres and flat bars but up to date with 1x11 and hydraulic disc brakes.
I've been riding a Boardman hybrid for about 6 years now, bought it to do the Dirty Reiver, which I've done twice now, although only managed the 130! But did finish quite high up in both. Have also done a 900 mile bike pack on it, loads of road riding & go off road about 20% of the time. £550 brand new too 😍
Love the collabs. Fun vid guys, thanks.
We love doing them too - glad you enjoyed it!
I'm a recent gravel convert, at the road end of gravel. 700x38 tyres and a 50/34 Tiagra group. I absolutely can't stop raving about it. On my Spectral I've got maybe three route options before I have to get in the car and travel. On the Tifosi I can leave my house and be buzzing my t*ts off almost immediately. I can punt it down byways, bridleways and towpaths and it makes the most tame forest track feel like BPW. I love it. The thrills are much more accessible than attempting to justify 160mm of travel 🤣
That’s my lockdown summed up. Although… I never truly feel in love with drops hence the change to flat/riser bars. Can’t wait to smash my local gravel loops and feel the difference.
Great Video Si and Doddy. It was great to see Doddy in a crossover GCN video!!!
I believe your experiment is biased. Seeing SI in these colourful bibs would make you laugh in any occasion 😂
Si can always say, sun's out, tights out. And who knows, maybe he wears 'em like pajamas to the grocery store. :)
Not to be a nerd here but bike geometry is designed to suit the rest of the componentry. Typical drop bars are 400mm-ish while flat bars are 700mm-ish. That's a 75% gap in leverage, with the flat bar giving you more control and balance.
While the flat bar gravel may be nervous at first, you can get used to it after a while. But wielding a 600mm+ top tube and sub-70 degree HTA with a drop bar is just wrong. You MAY get a bit more used to it after a while but it won't be right.
Needs some bar ends, preferably in purple anodised aluminium.
And max 600mm bars ;-)
I convert my Canyon RoadLite from a road configuration to a gravel configuration simply by swapping my wheels and tires. It's a matter of 2 min., the longest part being to re-calibrate the disc brake pads (unscrew, apply brake, screw: done). So, depending on what I want to ride that day, it's an easy decision to take.
That's cool. I've been thinking about doing the same. Which wheel and tyre combination have you used?
I went even further and built both wheelsets using the same hubs and rotors - no more brake calibration needed!
@@prochiro The original wheels are Mavic CrossOne, I put 38mm Hutchinson Overide Gravel tyres on them. And I bought chinese wheels (Loca ?) that I use with 28mm tyres (Continental GP or Michelin Sport), same size as the original ones. I only need to adjust the brake on my front wheel because of a slight gap (probably less than 0.25mm !) causing some friction, only on the front wheel. On the back one, the current settings work with both sets. Oh, and I added discs on the chinese wheels, obviously.
Cheers mate. That sounds good. I'm surprised you managed to squeeze 38mm tyres in. 👍
@@prochiro I could have gone way bigger, there is a lot of space between the forks (though I would need to move the brake cable out of the way; it's attached inside the fork).
Too used to flat bars from mtbing.... so bought a lightweight hybrid and stuck gravel tires on it to gravel race...cheaper conversion and still pretty speedy with 52 up front! Admittedly put tribars on too for roads... only 10kg bike but can ride most blue mtb trails on it without suspension... foam grips help dampen vibrations! 😉
I consider my trek 1120 a flat bar gravel bike. I swap around tire sizes, running anything between 29x3.0 to 29x2.4, depending on the ride. Jones h loop bar. I dig it.
Just bought the kit to put flat bars on my Marin Gestalt - it has been my turbo trainer bike for years but finally took it to the trails this summer - older guy with a bad hip and I find I cant ride it down on the drops and pedal so riding on the hoods and trying to hold on and brake is terrifying! But I love the speed and acceleration on the gravel trails!
Nice cross over. I did drop AND aero bars on my Salsa Beargrease (yes a fat bike). It’s a fantastic adventure bike that is great on gravel and even light trails.
I love gravel bikes, but Ive never been comfortable on drops. I bought a Crockett 7 and within 3 months converted it to flat bar. Its so much more comfortable for me, and feels way faster on the trails and roads that I ride on. If your not comfortable, then whats the point?
Cycling innovations usually stem from racing, so if you’re not interested in going fast, dropped handlebars aren’t really necessary and may be detrimental.
@@TheSteinbitt Well my average top is 35 mph on a flat bar not fast but I prefer the flat
I love drop bars for the same reason I love my vertical PC mouse - the gripping positions are way more natural. When you grip a flat bar (or a regular PC mouse), the hands (and consequently also elbows) are turned 90 degrees compared to their natural resting position, causing tension and long term discomfort.
Your natural resting position of your hands are neither vertical nor horizontal, they are in between position. When you punch bag either with straight punch or hook your elbow goes from vertical to horizontal position at its strongest point at the impact area. When you perform barbell chest press your arms are naturally stronger when elbows are at horizontal position.
See you next week for tribar mountain bikes
By far the funniest video I have seen on GCN. The face footage looks like a cartoon meme.
Already switched my gravel to flat bar before I saw this video. Its more relaxed and agile. It just fits my riding style since I came from MTB and I hated the drop bar since day 1.
Great vid, gentlemen! My wife has a Salsa Journeyman flatbar and she loves it; I've got a dropbar Diverge Comp E5 and I love it.
Good stuff!
Damn, doddy's bike looks effing amazing with those flared drop bars
I was in a gravel race today. I was surprised to see several gravel bikes with flat bars and aero extensions.
That's my style....
Flats offer less overall comfort but are better for control.
@@UenoLocker54 which in that race, didn't matter at all. It was the Croatan Buck Fifty. It is flat as can be on the coast of North Carolina. Wind is the biggest issue in that race.
Flat bar!
Great video chaps! Having Doddy with his retro steed added a lot of quirk to the comparison.
It would be interesting to see a flatbar gravel bike compared to a modern drop bar mtb.
I don't think it would be a huge difference other than the hand position. Which is pretty much personal preference.
I got fooled at first too, Doddys bike is actually modern 29er mtb with dropbars, just retro inspired visuals. Bike check at 13:59
As someone who put drop bars on a large sized 29er hardtail, I would suggest a few things for those interested in do the same thing.
It's a lot of bike. If you have a choice a smaller frame and 27.5 wheels would improve the agility. Or just going down to 27.5 improves handling by magnitudes Wider drop handle bars are better. Get an adjustable stem. Being able to the adjust the angle of the handle bars to your liking, gives you amazing flexibility. Lockout suspension is a must, that way you can turn it into a competent road bike when you want it to be.
I still think the idea has merit, I just wish someone would pursue the idea from the ground up. That a frame could be built with the concept at it's root. Essential a more rugged full suspension gravel bike. Decent commuter on tarmac and bit more capable on the rough stuff than a gravel bike.
The 2 best presenters in the GCN GMBN team, great post 🙂
Thank you!
Wow, Tomac, Missy the Missile and Tinker. That brings back memories. Riding my ridged Fuji Mt. Limited in Moab back in the 90s
Flat bar bikes are great fun. If you are not into road racing, try one. They are great for touring. I regularly ride 150km a day on mine without any problems... hand position is never an issue. You don't need drop bars to have a great bike and have a great ride.
Yeah, just get a bar ends then, such a game changers
Popularising hybrids as 'Gravel Bikes' is the single best piece of marketing I have ever seen.
built 2 gravel bikes and love them but had to pick up a flat bar due to shoulder injuries. went with the Cinelli Gazetta Della Strada and it has be great relief and almost no pain at all. but how it rides, and being a Columbus steel frame, i am pretty smitten. it is somewhat twitchy on the road but rips on gravel and single track with a short bar and carbon wheels. was looking to upgrade the drive train to GRX but was told by LBS that the GRX is not compatible with MTB shifters. guess i need to do a bit more research.
Awesome that's what I always thought about and wanted to try out!
The biggest advantage to a drop bar gravel bike (at least, right now) is that you can run Shimano 1x12 drivetrain as-is! It really opens up the 1x capabilities and is much less expensive than a 'mullet' AXS build! Also, the braking performance is MUCH better with flat-bar levers on rough terrain. It's just much easier to stop when you're bouncing around a lot. Additionally, I think the flat bar opens up more real estate for a set of Aero bars (which normally would obscure most of the top of a standard drop bar). I built my current gravel bike with drop bars, and after riding it quite a lot, I can honestly say that I would go back and build it as a flat bar bike if I could do it again.
I still prefer my 2x flat bar. The 1x just seemed to limited for my riding style.
Good luck finding some mechanical 105 flat bar shifters. It took me some time to find a set of 2x11 shifters but I love it.
Drop bar MTB all the way! I own a 2017 Koga Beachracer, which is basically a 29er Mountainbike with drop handlebars and rigid fork. So they do make it and I love it! It can do anything from Tarmac to MTB XC trail as-well-as race on the Dutch beaches off course. Best bike I own.
I'll want to grab a flared drop bar, for whichever frame I'll choose. For frames, I'll choose a rigid, light XC frame of any material, and a hydroformed, triple-butted aluminium frame.
But the local bike shops near me have run their supplies of metal flared drop bars out of stock... so that'll lead me to grab a comfortable set of bar tape by next week, first.
My bike 15 years ago, a GT avalanche, was shod in Michelin country rock tires, basically 45mm wide mostly slick rubber. Apart from the 3x7 and the suspension fork, it was a modern gravel bike. I bought it because it had disc brakes.
I’ve recently rebuilt an old gravel frame with flat (riser) bars, coming from an MTB background it’s made me realise how much I didn’t enjoy drops as soon as the surface wasn’t a road and lacked confidence around town. I’m looking forward to putting more miles on flat bars, but so far it’s made more smiles so I don’t think the drops will be coming back but a longer stem might be.
I've yet to find a set of drop bars, or a position on them, that gets alone with me. I have a fully rigid I use for commuting/bikepacking that I have an 800mm motocross inspired riser bar on. I'm thinking gravel bike + some sort of alt bar is probably peak gravel performance.
I put some dropped bars on an old mtb frame and that thing is super fun, completely converted bike to a whole lot of fun. Big smiles when I ride it.
That's what it's all about!!
i think si should open his own fashion category on the gcn online shop
I love my flat bar gravel bike and is certainly faster than my mountain bikes on smoother sections of the mountain trials I ride , the mountain bike comes into its own when it’s muddy and rocky ,thanks for vid from the Philippines 🇵🇭
Bicycles aren’t about which is faster, because all bicycles are fast enough when pedalled by physically conditioned rider. Bicycles all about fun and exercise, besides transportation.
At the moment my perfect gravel bike is more of an all road bike. Road agility, gravel / endurance confort (or lack of it), dropper post for extra fun, and 1x because I like it.
When I was a kid in the 80's we used to buy old "racers" from 2nd hand shops and put knobbly tyres on them and cow-horns, and we called them "trackers". My brother even had one with a Sturmey Archer back wheel at one point
Saw a lovely mountain bike with drops last summer: it was a Klein Attitude and I had to stop and talk to the owner I liked the look of it so much.
Watching the joy cam filled me with joy.
After spending thousands of dollars on my first Gravel bike with expensive Carbon wheels and an alternative wheelset for road riding, and many hours tinkering with internal cabling and hydraulic disc maintenance, I finally realized Gravel bike is a huge bicycle industry marketing scheme to sell something that is totally unnecessary. Selling my Gravel bike and keeping my endurance bike for the road and MTB for the trails. Flat bar or Drop bar, No grabel bikes beats a dedicated road bike or MTB, unless you ride "Gravel" trails 100%
Anything can ride gravel, depending how fast and efficient you want to be. My.bike was used £80 carrera Crossfire disc hybrid, it does everything just not to the extremes
"Are you having fun?"
"No, it's terrifying!"
Now this is the spirit of mountainbiking :D
Those Tioga Disc Drives were awesome.
I have a Sara English levarg which is a gravel bike, drop bars and 40mm fro the suspension, and I love it...
Since I am basically a poor, I converted my old hybrid bike to a drop bar gravel grinder. Only downside is tire clearance. Mine was a “sporty”. Sesión of the Fuji absolute so I can fit max 38c on them. Oh and no disc brakes. Which have been a bummer at times. Either way it’s worked great!
Converted my 2018 Specialized Diverge Carbon into a flatbar gravel. The original parts were 2x10 tiagra with mechanical brakes. It needed an upgrade. Converted it with deore xt /grx drivetrain, slx/grx brakes...so much fun to ride.
Do you find braking better on flat bar, and less pressure on your hands?
A gravel bike with drop handle bars makes absolutely no sense.
I’ve been ahead of the curve for a few years now. Bought a decent spec hybrid for a song and changed out grips, brakes, and tires. Boom! Rad gravel bike
I have both a flat bar and a drop. I like them both I think for longer distances I like drop, but for short or rougher terrain I like the flat.
I rented a drop bar, I didn’t like the braking, and all main position, puts lot of weight on the ulnar nerve
In 2011 I converted a hardtail MTB to a flat bar gravel bike by transferring components to a Salsa Fargo rigid fork frame. Still my favourite bike. Goes anywhere, lighter than a MTB. I feel insecure on drop bars. My grip on the bars is less secure. Brakes and shifters not at hand. On easy going with flat bars, when wanting a change of hand positions, I use bar ends or just put palms of hands against bar ends. I do more touring riding now, for which I've moved to narrower tyres, 40 mm. I think in the end that MTBs adapt to gravel (rigid forks) better than do road bikes (lower gears) because the MTB spacings and components are more suited to the more rugged environement of off-piste. And flat bars are less complex, less expensive and easier to maintain.
I love the comparo, but the gap can be narrowed. I've done both things. I had a Salsa Warbird I fitted with drop bars and a Lauf fork, and then later on set up a Specialized Epic 29er with wide gravel style drops, and a Fox 32 fork with 100mm travel. Used both on similar trails like these dudes, but also on the road to the trails, which is why I converted to a drop MTB. The results would reflect what would happen if you are riding the bikes at their limits, not an average 8/10ths ride in the park. Nothing can beat the turning and stopping/accelerating of a gravel bike with flat bars. It feels like you're on some sort of stunt bike. However, handling on the drop bar MTB bike doesn't need to be "dodgy". It's going to be slower in comparison to a gravel bike due to the longer wheel base. The "oversteer" problem they talk about is from too much of a forward shift in center of gravity when turning. Turning a bike pitches the center of gravity forward, and causes the oversteer sensation. They were right about a shorter stem, it puts weight rearward. But a 51mm offset fork with 100mm or less of travel, and a mullet configuration (29er front and 27.5 rear) will fix the center of gravity very nicely while maintaining decent geometry. If you're still pitched too far forward in the turns, a raised stem and maxed out headset spacers will help maintain center of gravity further. The advantage of the drop bar mountain bike is comfort and stability over the long run due to it's longer wheel base and extra room to move around, and that fork is wonderful for the ruts, roots, and rocks I encounter while railing along at an 8/10ths pace. You won't win any races, but if you can set it up correctly it has it's place in your world, do not despair.
Godbless you guys I am having fun while watching you!!