Endurance bike for speed you wonder what am talking about? It's Endurance bike 7.484 kilo without pedals 53 teeth gropset and extremely responsive to speed in comfort everything
I built one out of what was originally Sirrus 4 from Specialized. Changed out everything to make it more like a road endurance bike. It's been great for long tours over the last couple of years. This year I am looking to purchase one - the Vitus Venon looks amazing (if I can get one in the states).
All bikes should be designed with aerodynamics in mind. Its just the better shape. And if you can ride in the drops comfortably your fit (stack) is ok. Be it race or endurance.
The right bike is whichever bike will make you want to ride it more and makes you happy. Doesn't matter if it's an aero, lightweight, endurance, gravel etc.
With all the ‘race’ marketing in road cycling, some people who purchase TCRs, S6 Evos and Dogmas must be aware that the geometry isn’t designed for leisure or exercise, which of those two activities the ‘average cyclist’ is majorly riding. I suppose everyone has to do their proper research and chat with experienced cyclists, not just agree with the posters in their local LBS.
@@peggz223 This is where proper bike fit comes in. I was eyeing an endurance bike (Giant Defy) then, but I decided to consult first a fitter prior to purchasing one. I've found out that the TCR is much comfortable, hence I purchased one and it has become my "endurance" bike ever since.
@@rdr33 Good point, usually I’d assume more relaxed frame geometry is a better starting point than going with something more aggressive, but I’m glad you found a TCR more ‘rideable’ by consulting a fitting expert and asking good questions. Ride on man!
Experience has taught me when you are no longer a slave cycling marketing hype or aspire to perform like a pro despite age or suboptimal genetics, is the point you can truly enjoy road cycling.
Also, just stop riding with people who are slaves to cycling marketing theology. When you've been riding for 20+ years longer than them (even if you are similar in age), your intuition is better than theirs.
Im 61 and riding bikes for more than 40 years,i have 6 bikes but just one is more aero(scott foil),witch by the way is the one i ride less,since i prefer more hilly rides and mountain rides,ive been like the majority of amateur riders across the world a slave to cycling,but since i started riding more alone and chose my rides,i enjoy much more riding,and without so much stress.
100% agree. When I got my first Trek Domane in 2015, it was a total game changer for me. I no longer come back from rides feeling like I just got beat-up by my own bicycle.
I got a trek emonda alr6 and people laugh at me that i got alu over carbon in that price. Untill it turns out it got better wheels, groupset and weights less than their carbon shits :D
7:30 I’m so glad you highlighted that. When your hobby is your passion, any sense of practicality and logic go out the window. Look at cars, we’d all be fine with a VW Golf tsi but tell me you wouldn’t rather drive a Porsche. You’ll put up with the harsh ride, no back seats and terrible storage all so that your commute can be every bit more exciting. Same story with bikes.
Thank you so much. Two years ago I bought a red Giant Defy, Ultegra Di 2 with power meter. I am now 76 years old and since 2 yaers in love with my Giant doing up to 140 Km. Started cycling one year earlier with a Cube Nuroad Gravelbike. I use this bike only in winter. I am so happy that I followed your advice 2 years age thanks again.
Hallo Markus, ich wohne am Bodensee und liebe es überall hin zu fahren. Habe letzten Herbst zum ersten Mal am Bodensee Radrennen teilgenommen was mir viel Spass gemacht hat. Danke für Deine Antwort.@@fahrradmarkus
After 14 years riding Roubaix endurance road bikes, I switched to an Emonda and love it! It’s so much fun! Quick accelerations and responsive steering is a blast. Trek’s “1.5 geometry” is reasonably relaxed and fitted with a few spacers is comfy, even for me at age 68. The 51 mm deep wheels with 31 mm external width pair perfectly with Pirelli P Zero 30 mm tires set up tubeless. I’m geared down when needed with a 10-36 cassette. The old slammed stem paradigm isn’t the only road bike option.
I first bought an endurance bike based on thinking I wanted to be more relaxed but several fitters recommended a more aggressive bike for my next bike. I’m 5’7” 185 lbs and 42. Moved from a Roubaix to a Soloist. It has added prob 2 mph to my cruising speed, better handling, better climbing. I ride 30 tires tubeless and it’s more comfy than the endurance bike road vibration wise. Part of it is if you’re willing to put the work in to be able to handle the more aggressive position. It takes practice. And if you like going as fast as you can. I do, I’m always trying to go faster in the same routes I do. For me, I’m super happy I moved to a race bike. Others may just wanna get out and get in some miles without obsessing over speed. Others don’t have bodies that can contort to aggressive positions. But if you’re like me and love the speed, I wouldn’t rule out a race bike or aero bike.
Thanks.. I'm in a similar situation. I am very much looking at the Merida Reacto (current riding a 2016 Scultura 300 but wanting to upgrade). I absolutely love getting down in position and giving it my all (5'6.5" & 160lbs here).
Looking for a new road bike and I think I'm in the same boat. I already have a gravel bike for "chill rides". Having a more aggressive roadbike that actually feels significantly different and "forces" one to become more fit, doing stretching, etc. Might be a good idea.
I have a 2016 Giany Defy Pro. Endurance bike of the year 2016. Its very good. Still my most used bike us a All City Gorilla Monsoon complete with racks, suspension seat and stem, Selle Anatomica saddle, 47C Goodyear Connector tubeless tires. The bike is my Cadillac and the Giant feels like a race bike in comparison! But the joy of riding any road surface in comfort is my jam! I came from steel frames, friction shifters and 11/2 inch tires on steel rims. There is joy in a simple do everything bike! Race bikes are narrow focused but beautiful too! It depends on the ride. Your favorite bike is probably the one you are currently riding!
I can relate. Many over-thought, over-priced bikes, over many years, many disappointments, and it boils down to one question: is/was/were there favorable kinetic feedbacks that made a bike part of the experience
I have two race bikes - an aero bike and a hill climber and had them fitted so they are comfortable. I’m 60 but my back is still fine and I LOVE to go fast. I tried the Defy and honestly it felt slow to me. At the end of the day ride what you love!
I tend to be in the speed = comfort school as well. I often ride alone at a brisk base in windy conditions. Being in a tucked position and having that snappy feel from a racier bike is nice.
Yes, agree that wider tires are better for sure😃... But like my stack on the low side. It's been extra 🌬️ windy this year and being tucked definitely gets you through the wind easier/faster. If you're riding 400-500 miles per month that definitely adds up to time/watts saved so glad I still have my old Trek 1400 zx "Race" Bike... Plus it's light and easy to chuck around... Guess if I really wanted to make life easier, I'd just drop $$2.5k on a higher level electric and be done with human💪 powered cycling for good!!👍😮 ...Aaaahhhh, so much easier!!😅
I'm 60 as well. I'm fit and flexible and it's not my back on those bikes, it's my neck! My body feels great on those race bikes, but by the end of the ride the back of my neck is destroyed.
At 75 with arthritis I have a Cerevelo Caledonia with a slightly small frame, an extended head tube to limit neck estension and a prostate protecting saddle. Its very comfortable and I can easily get into the drops, although I try to avoid that these days!
Great point, well made. I ride a Canyon Endurace CFR and absolutely adore the bike. Super lightweight and easy on the eye. It makes me smile whenever I look at it, and I can never wait to get back on it for another ride.
reminds me of setting up Tri bikes in early 90s everyone had to have flat backs. for average person this meant slower times and more pain. by late 90s we were setting them up to be as comfortable as possible, a couple 60 plus guys were almost upright in aero bars, but they finished faster and happier. comfort is key
Got about 50K miles on my 23-yr old Trek 1000 road bike. I’m 63, riding about 3K leisure mi/yr and, while I can easily afford to upgrade, just don’t have a good enough reason to do it. 😎
I have a Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen. Goes anywhere and perfect for everything! I'm glad that people are figuring out that you don't need a race bike unless you are actually in a race. If you are out for exercise, those few ounces are not going to hurt anything. Reliability, versatility, and comfort are much more important than getting to your destination 2 minutes sooner.
I have an Emonda that I absolutely adore for group rides and long, hilly routes and thanks to the carbon its not too bad for comfort but as an every day bike I always turn to my old Salsa Journeyman hybrid. I ride a lot like over 100 miles most week and chewed through that bike twice over only the frame and handlebar are original but it now has GRX gears. I love the 46/30 and 11-42. Its great as a commuter and errand runner to heavily load up and get around traffic, snow, ice, whatever. I even chewed through the wheels and upgraded to a cost reducing, semi custom carbon wheelset. It rides like a dream. Not fast but taking it easy its surprising how far I can get with it. I have done my longest rides on it including 158 miles with 12k climb in ONE DAY in Italy. But you just have to take it a little easier.
Completely agree! I switched from a road bike to a Parlee endurance bike in 2017 and will never look back. The carbon lay-ups, the shorter wheelbase and cockpit make for comfort be in a 25 mile short ride or a century.
I'm 57, just got my 1st road bike since I was 15 years old. A Bianchi 928 carbon L, 2 weeks later pick up a Cervelo RS. 6 weeks today there is a Daccordi Vinci on its way to me. I bike to work 6 days a week. About 20 minutes away. I gave up the truck. When I comes home, I can't wait to go back out and ride more. At 1st I was worried about the leaning over. Now I love it and prefer it. Each bike weighs less than 17lbs. This low weight, thin tires makes the bike go up hills by itself. The roads where I live are horrible. I have Campanology Ventos, Shimano r500, both are bulletproof. I'm gonna stay with what I have until I can no longer ride
Had a Cannondale SuperSix for several years and ended up with a cracked frame. Got it warrantied and found myself with a carbon Synapse frame as replacement. Found out that was probably the better choice and I didn’t know it until I could compare. Endurance frame with race bike parts is awesome.
I’ve never looked back after switching to mechanical brakes, friction shifters, 650bx 47mm tires, square taper bottom bracket with sub compact gearing all on a super comfy steel frame and fork. Coming in at a respectable sub 21 lbs.
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Got Dia-Compe ENE Power Ratchet Friction Shifters on my commute bike. Buttery smooth, allows me to use flat steel chainrings on my triple chainset. Durable, reliable, needs very little maintenance. The clunk of indexed shifting is great on a race bike but feeling/hearing your way through the gears with friction also is worth doing, it's the cycling equivalent of sailboating.
@@einundsiebenziger5488The channel Path Less Pedaled has some videos about friction shifters. On my bikes I have one Rohloff and the others are indexed but I get that people want something that's simple and compatible to different cable pull ratios. Btw for me if I had to pick something, it would be hub dynamos and LED bike lights.
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Friction shifting is great for people who like to tinker with their bikes and try different setups and different styles of riding and not have to worry about compatibility issues. They're also the easiest to repair which is why a lot of long distance adventure tourers like them (and rim brakes). You get pretty fast with friction shifters after riding with them for a short amount of time, it would never be good for racing these days but they're fine for the average person.
I have a Cube 2021 Nuroad C:62 SL. It's marketed as a gravel bike - but the frame looks a lot like other "tags". I absolutely love it. Some scoff at the single chainring being used on the road - I've never had a problem with it on my club rides. The 10-50T cassette has dropped a lot in price since I bought it and that "dinner plate" let's me tackle pretty much any climb I am faced with. On the high end it's usually me that chickens out before the capability of the gearset. The eTap AXS kit is just brilliant. I have the Schwalbe G-One R tyres - 40mm wide on this. I love them. We have some pretty terrible lanes around here in the Cotswolds and that tyre is defo needed a lot of times - plus it has surprisingly good rolling resistance. Only downside is price. Two recent club rides showed that big-time when we came across some very un-roadie friendly terrain. I love this bike - feel I can do anything I need to on the road - but can use it on tracks and gravel without any qualms.
Good advice. When I was racing years ago and rode a Pinarello with the same goemetry as the Deutsche Telekom team bikes at the time. It was so uncomfortable that I finally stopped riding it and then moved over to MTB. Too many people buy into the marketing hype generated by the TDF riders and the bikes they ride, but as you say, they don't think through enough about what they really need. Endurance bikes are great, I rode a Cannondale Synapse across the Italian and Swiss Alps in 2020 and agree that the more comfortable you are, the faster you will ultimately be in the end.
I have a Boardman Cx Team 2011 that I bought on eBay 11 years ago. I've used it for L'Etape du Tour several times, cycle touring with panniers, Paris Roubaix, Tour of Flanders, cyclocross, Mt Ventoux via the woods and round the Bugatti circuit for the Le Mans 24hr velo. Oh.... I also use it to go shopping. Does me just fine. 👍
I bought a Rondo Hvrt a few years ago based on your great review and Bike of the Year award. I absolutely love it - the adjustable Endurance or Race setup choice makes it so versatile and I love putting in the 650B wheels with super wide tyres for wicked gravel rides. I love it! I've ridden 100plus miles in great comfort.
Thing I found I bought the race bike which was an amazing tool of torture same as sports motorbike too, I’m 50 years old and have accepted I’m fat slow always last in the pack regardless of bike so I ride what’s comfortable now and I’m not obsessed by watts or power or speed and cycle with people of similar mindset. Forget the latest trends go out and enjoy your ride
Finally the right way! I'm proud to be une of the first one that had buy the first Trek Madone model back in 2012 ...also made in USA with life long warranty! It was very more comfortable than the madone and since than I had very good ride over many mithic roads across Alps and some gravel not programmed stuff all with great confidence. I'm very happy not to be alone!
I think we need to get away from titles like "endurance", "gravel" etc. My last 2 bikes were based on the geometry and tyre clearance I wanted, along with things like frame mounts and the ability to fit mudguards. I couldn't care less what category the manufacturer put them in. As it happens, both were sold as 'gravel' bikes but that was irrelevant to the purchasing decision.
I agree for most non pro riders. I just bought a second hand bmc team machine while im in Toulon for a month. Its my first road/race bike in a while, at home I have a trek 520 disk and love it. Its a completely different animal but if i was out for a big day solo would 100% take comfort and sacrifice speed.
I like what you were saying there, my new Salsa Journeyer gravel bike could almost race a crit. Put a set of slick tires on it and 48 tooth chain ring on the front boom you're ready to go. Yes I did get this gravel bike with two in the front; I'm still a roadie 😎.
I own a Tarmac SL7 and bought a Roubaix last year under the promise of more comfortable rides. The comfort was barely improved but the bike just felt so lazy. I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much. I think a race bike can be just as comfortable in an era of wider tyres and lower pressures, unless you’re offended by stem spacers or are a nervous descender.
thanks, I was thinking my RC520 lack in performance, your video made me realized, comfortable equals efficiency equals higher average speed for the most of us.
I agree with you, in parts. I think you should start the video by saying: if you, like me, only use bicycles for leisure, never participate in competitions, don't go after KOMs...You should consider an endurance bike.
I build my endurance bike and is very good when I build that it was 8.600 kilos now its 7.483 with the upgrades that I did I can.easily hold 42 khm in the straight keep on mind the wheels is aluminum everything is how you choose your components and how aero frames is not that much faster at the best the gave you 0.4 kmh per hour in the straight with the same watts
I agree with whatever opinions result in road race bikes staying long/low. More riders choosing endurance bikes is good. Fewer riders being shamed for having 50mm in spacers on race bikes is good too.
You can race and take KOMs on an endurance bike - a lot of good endurance bikes are neither slow or heavy, and also have aerodynamic features. Riding a bike that fits you properly is almost always faster. It’s not a case of choosing between a fast bike and a slow bike, both types of bike can be fast with the right rider.
I just got a Trek SLR Domane last June. Came from Cervelo S2 the last 8 years. I could never really get comfortable with the Cervelo, but it was fast. Usually got neck pain even with the stem flipped. NO neck pain with the Trek, nearly as fast even with 32mm tires and A LOT more enjoyable to ride. Also I ride 50/34 11-34. I crack up seeing guys with bigger chain rings nearly cross chaining riding cadence way too low.
The only bike I’ve got with a slammed negative stem is a Giant Defy that never leaves my trainer now. That does look better than my TCR with spacers. Next time I need a road bike, it will probably be endurance geo, as long as it’s still a fast bike.
100% Correct. I have been riding racing configurations for decades and almost annually ripped the rear derailleur off the frame sprinting up hills. I also break spokes every season due to the rough roads I ride on. In addition, I tend to jump the curb on the city streets around here. So, after a mechanical failure in a group ride, a Trec salesman sold me a Domaine, and I was delighted. I agree the ride is comfortable and I have fewer mechanical issues. I ride in the A/drop groups and have no issue staying in the pacelines and little peletons that develop. I see many guys/gals with race configurations with carbon fiber rims who clearly are not racers. They are (ahem) a bit tubby. These wheels' "Aero" benefits only kick in at about 20mph. Instead of spending several thousand dollars on fancy aero tires, they should get a personal trainer and try to drop that belly.
Completely agree.. And it’s frustrating that some endurance bike are still getting a bit racy. For me, the Defy is now a touch to long and low. I went from F8 to Domane.. Okay, the Trek does n’t have zip the Pina has, but I tend to be quicker over all, as the Domane floats over the rough and is so easy to descend fast on. I look forward to multi days on the Trek, unlike the Dogma.. Unfortunately the pro peloton sells more bikes than a bike fit 🤷🏻♂️
Endurance bikes are made to suit different types of riders, some like the latest Defy are tailored more towards the sporty rider who basically wants a race bike but with a bit more comfort for going fast over long distances. There are plenty of young fit riders now competing in ultra distance races for example, where a classic race bike isn’t quite ideal, but a sporty endurance bike is. Others like the Domane or Roubaix are more relaxed geometry that’s more suited to less flexible riders and those who ride at a more leisurely pace. There is plenty of space in the market for different types of endurance bike, not every one has to be really short reach and high stack.
Even gravel bikes are becoming stupidly racier nowadays, what a shame. They just don't work with my super long legs and quite average/short torso and arms. I ended up designing a Titanium bike that I would call an Endurance Gravel bike (super high stack of 600mm, short reach of 379mm with top tube of only 540mm, upright seatpost at 75 deg, relaxed steerer at 71.5 deg, clearance for 50mm tires). The bike I have dreamed for years. Hope I can build it over the next few weeks, and this time with an almost slammed headset ... Because the frame allows :)
Incredible! Great post/video, w proven facts and thorough explanation. And I’ll share (briefly) my own experience. I “accidentally” bought an endurance bike- (not knowing) “exactly” what I was specifically buying. But having read the specs, and test ride the bike- and….Aaaaand logically “buying into” the style it self-I went: well, I want longer comfortable rides, Endurance bike is what I want. Right of the bat- the bike/frame-felt incredible. It was like-as if I was flying, on a flat road, not a descend. I wanted to test a true race bike-for comparison, honestly-not even close. The best choice I’ve made. And this post proves it!
I have a Ribble Titanium Endurance bike, after having a Cannondale Super Six Evo the Ribble is such a blessing, so comfortable and nice to live with. There is no question however over a timed, uniformed course at the same power output the Cannondale was faster about the equivalent of 2 minutes over 40km. FYI
At 63, endurance geometry is my first choice. I can still go plenty fast on a bike that's more stable and a bit cushier. I have a 2000 Allez Pro M4 with 39/53 and 11-21 9-speed. It's fast, stiff, twitchy, and really gets power down; it's a lot of fun to ride for 90 minutes or so. Its chainstays measure 400mm and its wheel base is not quite 1000cm. My favorite road bike is my Battaglin San Luca with 36/50 and 11-27 11-speed, in Columbus steel with 410mm chainstays and a 1030mm wheelbase. The longer chainstays and especially that additional 30mm of wheelbase make a big difference in ride quality but give away nothing in terms of speed or perceived power transfer. Or maybe it's the Columbus steel. It's all the above, no doubt.
I'm only in my 40's, and got a steel bike with "sensible"/"middle of the road" geometry. After getting steel, I'm never going back. The bike itself soaks up the poor surface roads I ride on, and my position gives me a good balance between efficiency and comfort. Even if I give up a little speed, the comfort that combination gives makes everything so much more enjoyable; I can comfortably go farther and for longer. It's great.
Most people just don't have anywhere to ride a gravel bike. Most places the roads are paved and trails are single track. So it's a bike that worse on pavement than a road bike and worse on trails than a mountain bike. Sure if you live somewhere with miles and miles of dirt roads then I'm sure they would be the best thing ever.
@@sevenrats you have a point but the times when I want to do gravel I don't need to take a train or go by car I can just ride to the trail. That is the good thing about gravel bikes. It's not about fast rides but flexibility. Going to reach the trails 60/70 kms away I don't even think about using my mtb but with the gravel bike I can. Having two road bikes (winter and summer),gravel, and mtb i never get bored. Of course city bike for commuting... Life is never boring
@@sevenrats the closest gravel road to my house is about 1.5km and I can do hundreds of kilometres locally on gravel. I have a road bike, but my gravel bike is actually better suited to most road riding (due to road condition and bike comfort) and the performance quite comparable.
As you point out, the difference in geometry between the tcr and defy is small. It’s actually this small that the only significant changes are the stack, wheel base and tire clearance. You can easily make up stack and if you don’t need more than 32mm tire clearance, you would be hard pressed to notice the differences. BUT the defy has internal cable routing and is on average 1000 more expensive. So I chose the tcr, am riding 28mm and couldn’t be happier.
The all new Defy has slightly more aggressive geometry to the 2018 era one I have. Unfortunately, my 2018 doesn’t have the tyre clearance they have now….
I agree. But the question will always remain ' am i going as quickly as i could be? Is this the fastest tool for the job?' While these questions are present , Endurance bikes will never truly be the one and only option.
If speed matters to you then it matters to you. It’s absolutely legitimate! I have two race bikes - an aero bike and a hill climber and had them fitted so they are comfortable. I’m 60 but my back is still fine and I LOVE to go fast. I tried the Defy and honestly it felt slow to me. Ride what you love!
I got properly into cycling in lockdown. My hybrid commuter took me so far and then I had the long wait as road bikes were in short supply. The power of marketing is phenomenal. I ignored pure aero and tourers. After that I did my best to pick my way through the reviews and had a Boardman SLR 9.4 and a Vitus Vitesse lined up. The Vitus won as it was in stock (and I was seduced by the romance it was Sean Kelly’s brand). I’ve no idea how my reach and stack match up to an endurance geometry. I thought those two were pretty similar. I do know my bike is great fun and I’m happy.
This is incredibly sensible and logical advice for (dare I say +90%) of riders out there. However I am equally certain that +90% will ignore it. “Looking pro” on a Sunday morning ride is the most important thing to many. We all know the rider with the lateset gear getting dropped and then claiming a heavy night out or that their CTL, ATL, TSS are slightly off that day…😂
You're right. I've owned all type of bikes in the recent years, all carbon with ultegra level builds. After riding for years and trying different bikes, I'm convinced that I need a modern endurance bike, nothing Else. Comfort and distance riding is key. The whole nimble handling and aggressive position is only for racing conditions, which few people do.
I agree on the fact that comfort makes most of us faster. However, after riding a year of races on a Canyon Endurace I switched to a gravel bike with similar geometry and I love it. I do retain the comfort, but I also have two wheelsets that allow me to fit 28mm tires for a gran fondo, or swap in my 38mm’s to take a good amount of offroad. Best balance in my book.
I have a bike custom-made based on the Soma Wolverine 4.0 frame design: RD Broski sliding dropouts, split in chainstay for belt drive upgrade, monster cross, off road touring, road and gravel riding. It fits all these categories. I guess it's also endurance, the frame is Ti.
Great video! I totally agree with it. I'm the proud owner of a Bianchi Infinito XE. Very comfortable, not sluggish at all and can take 32mm tires if you are so inclined.
HOOOO BOYYY...after 69-years of cycling, nothing has "ruined" my love of cycling than looking at YT-vids on the subject. Ughhh......blah blah blah. Happiness does NOT require all the hype. sheeshhh....
90% of my riding is on my 'endurance' bike. But only because I don't want to wear out my nice race bike components for commutes. So it isn't that it's not as comfortable as I'm just as comfortable on both for all day rides, but that I consider it better so I don't want to use it for usual rides. Almost like a nice suit. Doesn't mean it's less comfortable...but wearing your going out suit to the office makes no sense. I've got $30 wiggle tyres on my endurance bike. I've got $80 ones on my race bike. To say, I don't think it's as black and white as endurances get used more because they are more comfortable. if money was no object I'd ride the race bike everywhere.
I totally agree with you. I'm running a subcompact crank with an 11-36 cassette & 32mm tires. While on my adventure- turning bike because of the weight of cargo, I'm happy to have disk brakes on my everyday bike I like rim brakes.
I agree on the gearing. I'm 60 years old and my FTP is around 200-215, somewhere in there. I never use my hardest gears. Usually when I'm descending I'm freewheeling, recovering from the climb I just did, not cranking down the hill! I would be better off two teeth less in the front and two teeth more in the back! Hahaha!
I can only agree...just bought a Giant Defy and even though I'm less "aero" than on my last bike, I'm sure I'm faster cause I get less tired...no pain anywhere, pure joy to ride
I just got a new Scott Addict 10 and it’s a total game changer, loving the endurance gearing and geometry. My other bike is a Giant Revolt 2 gravel bike and it’s great for those windy days when I want to hide from the wind in the trails. No aero bike here!
Although I’m not cycling much now due to health reasons I have loved my only drop bar leisure road bike, an All City Mr Pink, 48/34 Sugino, SRAM Force gearing, 30mm Strada tyres… it does exactly what you are advocating and I had that set up a decade ago for the rough old roads here in rural New Zealand. Plenty of oldies like me out there on carbon bikes and skinny tyres, they need watch this video.
Completely happy with my SL7; its the perfect Sportif bike. I have a gravel, Fat, mtb, zwift and trainer SL7 for everything else. The switch to 28mm tubeless and low psi is the key.
I currently own about 40 bikes... and have owned roughly 400 to 500 bikes in my life... most of them in the past 15 years... most of the carbon road bikes. I agree with most of this video but of course it depends on the rider (age, speed, power output) where they live (flat or hilly our mountainous) and what type of riding they mainly do (solo, group, road, gravel, touring, racing, gran fondo, centuries, etc). One reason I have so many bikes is that I have homes in 3 different states--all with completely different climates and topography--ranging from beach house in Hawaii to a city house in the Rockies... so I need a pretty wide range of bikes. I do fast group rides in the city--with sprint zones up to the mid to high 30 mph range--and solo canyon rides from 5000 up to 10000+ ft--with descents up to 45+ mph on twisty mountain roads. And of course mountain and gravel riding as well.. and some slower century rides through the countryside or along the ocean. So, yeah, I agree that the "average" non-professional rider--if having to choose just ONE bike--should probably choose something in the endurance / gravel capable orientation... but if you have the means and the garage space and you do a variety of different riding, a nice, fast racing bike never hurts--for the shorter, sprintier group training rides--and a nice, ultra-light (15 lbs or less) climbing bike with the right gear ratios (50t up front with 11-32 in the back) is a must have. One thing I would add to the video is that you don't need to go out and buy an expensive new bike. For $500-ish you can buy an AMAZING bike--Tour-de-France / pro-level bike--from 10 or 15 yrs ago--that is STILL WAY MORE BIKE than most of us need. I pick them up all the time... Trek Madone 6.9 w/ full Dura Ace... for $500... $600... $700-ish if you want nice carbon wheels. Or a smokin' hot S-Works Epic for under $1000... full carbon / full XTR / full suspension / under 24 pound rocket... etc. In America at least there are TONS of amazing used bikes for sale at GREAT prices. So... why not have a really sweet bike for all occasions?
I bought a Domane last year and had the bike shop exchange the factory standard 11-34 cassette with an 11-36 as I live in a quite hilly area. I love the comfort of the endurance geometry and I love the fact that I can spin up most hills without completely knackering myself. I don't know if that is considered cheating, and I don't really care either as it means I get out there much more frequently and enjoy it so much more.
When looking to buy my first road bike two years ago, i did my research. Based on my preference for long distance over speed, I went with a endurance bike. It might not be as bling as an aero bike, but its a great km cruncher.
I have ridden a Specialized Secteur for more than 10 years and updated to a Rose Pro SL. Both endurance „entry level“ bikes with 105 gearing and relaxed geometry. I can still ride plenty fast if I want to and achieved decent fitness, which is more than enough for me as a dad of 3 with limited riding time available.
I think that the recent bikes change the feeling on the road. The large tyre of 28 or 30 mm with low inflation (4 at 5.5 bars) make a general impression of feeling a smooth bike if you compare with the 23 mm type at 7 bars. The confort is now also on the race bike except some aero models. Because the last question is the drop who depend of flexibility, age, osteoarthritis, and off course duration of ride. I have 57 i run the Giant Defy 2020 (endurace bike) with the most low position of handelbar, 28 mm tyres and 1,5 kg wheels Mavic Ksyrium SL. When i'm good i run at 28km/h during 2 hours. I think that the limit is not my bike, but my 82 kg (1,73 m) and my âge. I think that the TCR (race bike) would'nt do me any good. I agree with bike radar. Thanks.
Remember when you buy a bicycle, you are not Greg LeMond and you will never be Greg LeMond. For most of us it’s not about speed, it about comfort. The more comfortable you are the more you will ride and that’s what it’s all about. Don’t bother if you dig your bike out, dust it off and go 5 miles, a couple times a year. Try to ride 3 to 4 times a week. Give yourself time to notice the difference and your improvements. You will get better. When you do you will ride more because you will love what it does for your body and mind.
For years I felt a pull from the marketing because I love the look of many areo bikes, especially with a slammed stem and carbon wheels. But I resisted. While I still love the look, I'm content with my endurance bike (Cannondale Synapse). Love it, actually. Fit is completely dialed in. It's fast and good on hills, which is a must in my area. Also have a steel road bike (Ritchey Road Logic). Guess it's considered endurance. Don't know. Don't care. Love that bike too. Just wish I could run 35mm tires on her.
Well said. I personally ride a 2020 Giant Revolt Advanced 2. Over the years, it has been kitted out, and the only remaining stock part is the stem, lol. 650b Hunt Mason X Adventure Sport wheels for the dirty stuff, Zipp 303s for the tarmac. The only handicap road or gravel is me, lol.
In your example of the Giant, the smaller large chaining (43) with even smaller sprocket(10) is a misguided way to weight-savings, not needed in this category. A 53x12 weighs only grams more, but a 11t or 12t starting sprocket is more efficient (the other sprockets will also be the next size up, so same gear range). It also makes for more durability where the deivetrain has longer wear. Durability here, and better efficiency as a free benefit, seem more important in this category. In case you're unaware, when you get to 11 and under, the sprocket is less round and starts to cost in efficiency, 11t having been chosen as the smallest for this reason, and has remained so for a very long time. This "compact" setup is a fad, thanks to ignorance and marketing.
I am the commuter type of cyclist. For me it's just a mode of transport whenever the distance isn't too far. But expanding the "not too far" range is where an appropriate bike comes into play. I just got my eyes on a travel bike. Looks as comfortable as a drop bar bike can possibly be, with 29" by 2.25" tyres. It triggers a "must have" reflex. I just have to clear out my garage first.
I have owned two Domanes and recently bought a Giant Revolt gravel bike. Truth is, the more comfortable the bike is, the more you will ride it. I am 61 for reference.
Canyon Endurace 2018 model with disc and a 12mm stem. 52/36 and 11/32. Its geometry is basically identical to the Ultimate and it’s a race bike with 30 mm tire clearance. I’ve also ridden light gravel with it on 25 mm tires with no problems.
When I returned to road bikes, after a 20 year gap, I didn't know a great deal about them, but, with a preference for long (100 mile plus) rides, I knew I wanted two things. - good puncture resistance, and comfort. The first was taken care of by trial and error tyre selection, and now I get a puncture maybe once every 25,000 miles. Looking into the second priority, besides opting for wider tyres, I discovered that endurance bikes are designed for the long rides I favour, eventually settling on a Specialized Secteur, and, later, a Roubaix. Over the years since I've sometimes wondered if a race bike might not after all have been a better choice, and been tempted to buy one, a thought I've always managed to resist. So it's good to see my original instinct confirmed here I'm less enamoured by the move towards larger cassettes. Living in flat East Anglia, I still find a 25-11 is fine on all my bikes, paired with either 50/34, or, in the case of the Secteur, a 50/39/30 triple (triple cranksets have gone out of fashion since). There are hills here - up to 20% here and there, but they're all short sharp climbs, and I find I can get up any of them easily with those combinations. In fact rarely even need the 30 ring on the Secteur.
Seven years ago, I bout a Cube Attain GTC Pro based on Warren's review. 50/34, 11-32 and clearance for 32c. Its as good now as it was then. I've upgraded the wheels to Hunt Mason X Four Seasons and plopped some ultegra level brifters on there. The temptation to upgrade to something with eTap or Di2 is there, bit the return on investment just doesn't justify it.
I have a 2019 Cannondale Synapse and it's by far the most comfortable bike I've ever ridden. I do 95% of my riding on it these days and, if I ever upgrade, will look for something very similar. My other bike is a 1988 Colnago, however, and it's notably faster and more lively when I take it out. Were I racing again, I'd want the modern equivalent, but suspect I'll never see a peloton from the inside ever again.
I have just bought the new Giant Defy Pro 0. As it s winter here in Canada I have yet to try it. My other bike is a Giant TCR Pro. As I am turning 70 next fall I wanted a more comfortable bike for long rides, especially on the poor condition roads in Quebec.
100% agree. The only thing is on my defy I changed the 11-34 cassette to a 11-30 because on the 11 speed the 11 13 15 jump in ratios on the top end drove me crazy. On the new 12 speeds it's not an issue. Run a compact 50/34 crank
Sloaping top tube is the best thing ever. You can get the cockpit higher, but don't have to look at a spacer stack :D I only have something like 10mm of spacers under the stem and I can ride on the drops for ages. In fact, I have all positions in full use and alternate between them all the time.
I'm in this camp, just from the gravel bike as an all road bike perspective. Where I live in Ontario, the nearest gravel road is about 1.5 km away and takes me on glorious rides along Lake Eries shoreline. I've done long road rides with almost slick tyres, but mostly have a set of Rene Herse Steilacoom 700Cx38 tyres on that I'm too lazy to switch out. My bike is steel and a decade old now, but there's no reason it couldn't last the rest of my life. (Don't misunderstand that comment, it may not be my only or my last bike.............). I do get to ride in the UK occasionally (challenging as SW Ontario doesn't have hills) and your roads are certainly no better than ours, the condition of which means that you have to concentrate so hard on the road bike, to avoid the potholes and construction defects that it detracts from the ride. And the benefit of losing a few grams from a bike would be far outweighed by losing a couple of kilos from me.
Gravel frame with 2 wheelsets. 1x for simplicity. All in one drop bar bike. Good enough for any weekend road ride with carbon wheels and 32mm tires and fantastic on discovery rides with XC grade wheels and 50mm tires.
I bought a DeRosa Merak which is described by DeRosa as a race bikes. This is the finest handling bike I've owned. And I have owned a LOT of bikes. I had a 14 lb Look which rode terrible, jumping around under me on climbs. The heavier DeRosa handles so much better that there's no comparison. I even have a heavy gel saddle on it. This bike is so great that I intend to sell off most of my bikes and get some space in the garage.
Couldn't zgree more. What did I end up buying? A fulltime on aero bike with deep section carbon wheels.....and....a gravel bike on the side. Doublet the money While the best option is in your comments. I would now choose a gravel bike with two wheelsets. Probably a Scott Addict or a Merida scultura endurance
Bike fit specialists recommend that riders with proporsionally shorter legs and longer torso take a race geometry bike. For example Tarmac instead of Roubaix.
I think endurance bikes are the way to go for most of us. Still, I think many if not most of gravel bikes fall pretty close. After all, they are not that different. They usually have a little wider handlebars for better control when riding off-road and gear range shifted towards this application either. And of course, wider tire clearance. All this will make us slightly slower on the tarmac, but I would argue the increased versatility is well worth consideration.
The biggest impact on performance is ergonomic comfort. I don't know any bike with this discription. I had a Giant defy advanced, sold it and go a steel frame with long wheel base touring geometry, improved my time over 50 km by minutes with so much more comfort.
When i got my ORRO Venturi STC i realized i had the perfect bike that was both comfortable on any ride and aero. After not using it for full 6 months I ended up selling my canyon endurance. I totally agree that for us mortals comfort is what we should prioritize if we can also have aero and a great looking bike as in my case then i think it's optimal.
I switched from an endurance bike to a Cervelo R5. I've never been more comfortable or happy on a bike. I don't feel cramped in the handlebars and can stretch out on the downhill.
Endurance bike like Defy still come with 105 crank with 50/34 and cannot smailer, also come with 32c tyre. But gravel bike's Grx 48/31 crank and 35+ tyre make it more comfortable. Also functionality and resale are better than endurance I think. Geo should be similar cause they all have longer wheel base comparing to road bike.
I recently upgraded from a vintage Cannodale Criterion setup. The shop tried selling me on an endurance bike. I took one for a test ride. I am glad I did. I can see the benefits of an endurance setup. However, it was not for me. The handling was too sluggish, the position was too upright, and the pedals were too low (I jammed them into the ground several times in just a few minutes). At nearly 50 years old, the endurance bike should have been the choice. But, given my previous bikes and other hobbies, like speed skating, I had to go with something more aggressive. I ended up on a Cervelo Soloist. The riding position is more relaxed than the crit bike and the handling is more sedate than I am used to. I have gotten used to it. I am enjoying the smoother ride of the wide tires and an overall geometry that isn't trying to actively kill me.
Do you own an endurance bike or is aero more your thing?
Endurance bike for speed you wonder what am talking about? It's Endurance bike 7.484 kilo without pedals 53 teeth gropset and extremely responsive to speed in comfort everything
I built one out of what was originally Sirrus 4 from Specialized. Changed out everything to make it more like a road endurance bike. It's been great for long tours over the last couple of years. This year I am looking to purchase one - the Vitus Venon looks amazing (if I can get one in the states).
All bikes should be designed with aerodynamics in mind.
Its just the better shape.
And if you can ride in the drops comfortably your fit (stack) is ok.
Be it race or endurance.
Steel gravel bike with a set of road wheels seems to fit the bill!
I know I should own an enduro but ended up buying a third hand Emonda because it looked cool and liftable with two fingers.
The right bike is whichever bike will make you want to ride it more and makes you happy. Doesn't matter if it's an aero, lightweight, endurance, gravel etc.
With all the ‘race’ marketing in road cycling, some people who purchase TCRs, S6 Evos and Dogmas must be aware that the geometry isn’t designed for leisure or exercise, which of those two activities the ‘average cyclist’ is majorly riding.
I suppose everyone has to do their proper research and chat with experienced cyclists, not just agree with the posters in their local LBS.
I ride surly long haul trucker, go shops on it work and on holiday, needless to say I love it..its even got mudguards
@@peggz223 This is where proper bike fit comes in. I was eyeing an endurance bike (Giant Defy) then, but I decided to consult first a fitter prior to purchasing one. I've found out that the TCR is much comfortable, hence I purchased one and it has become my "endurance" bike ever since.
@@rdr33 Good point, usually I’d assume more relaxed frame geometry is a better starting point than going with something more aggressive, but I’m glad you found a TCR more ‘rideable’ by consulting a fitting expert and asking good questions. Ride on man!
@@rdr33The Giant defy has intermediately aggressive riding position . The TCR is more relaxed making it better suited for longer riding sessions .
Experience has taught me when you are no longer a slave cycling marketing hype or aspire to perform like a pro despite age or suboptimal genetics, is the point you can truly enjoy road cycling.
Also, just stop riding with people who are slaves to cycling marketing theology. When you've been riding for 20+ years longer than them (even if you are similar in age), your intuition is better than theirs.
When I hit 60 I adopted a ride less and enjoy more attitude.
This includes riding a 34 year old custom steel bike with 10spd Campy and modern wheels.
Im 61 and riding bikes for more than 40 years,i have 6 bikes but just one is more aero(scott foil),witch by the way is the one i ride less,since i prefer more hilly rides and mountain rides,ive been like the majority of amateur riders across the world a slave to cycling,but since i started riding more alone and chose my rides,i enjoy much more riding,and without so much stress.
😂 just ride 🎉 it's not that serious 😅@@SurpriseMeJT
100% agree. When I got my first Trek Domane in 2015, it was a total game changer for me. I no longer come back from rides feeling like I just got beat-up by my own bicycle.
Everyone thinks my 2017 105 Roubaix looks shit, me included. But god it's comfortable
Really looking into that one. Messages like this I see way more than the Synapse. Might have to start saving up!
Because it beats you and that is good :D
I have a Fuji Roubaix from 2016 and I love the heck out of it.
I got a trek emonda alr6 and people laugh at me that i got alu over carbon in that price. Untill it turns out it got better wheels, groupset and weights less than their carbon shits :D
@@skeletonmodel Synapse alloy is a very spongey bike. I rode one for years and grew to hate it. No stiffness in the frame at all.
7:30 I’m so glad you highlighted that. When your hobby is your passion, any sense of practicality and logic go out the window. Look at cars, we’d all be fine with a VW Golf tsi but tell me you wouldn’t rather drive a Porsche. You’ll put up with the harsh ride, no back seats and terrible storage all so that your commute can be every bit more exciting. Same story with bikes.
Thank you so much. Two years ago I bought a red Giant Defy, Ultegra Di 2 with power meter. I am now 76 years old and since 2 yaers in love with my Giant doing up to 140 Km.
Started cycling one year earlier with a Cube Nuroad Gravelbike. I use this bike only in winter. I am so happy that I followed your advice 2 years age thanks again.
I'm sure we all hope to be as fit as you are, when we're that age! :)
Hallo Markus, ich wohne am Bodensee und liebe es überall hin zu fahren. Habe letzten Herbst zum ersten Mal am Bodensee Radrennen teilgenommen
was mir viel Spass gemacht hat. Danke für Deine Antwort.@@fahrradmarkus
76 years! wow! ❤❤
After 14 years riding Roubaix endurance road bikes, I switched to an Emonda and love it! It’s so much fun! Quick accelerations and responsive steering is a blast. Trek’s “1.5 geometry” is reasonably relaxed and fitted with a few spacers is comfy, even for me at age 68. The 51 mm deep wheels with 31 mm external width pair perfectly with Pirelli P Zero 30 mm tires set up tubeless. I’m geared down when needed with a 10-36 cassette. The old slammed stem paradigm isn’t the only road bike option.
I switched from a Giant TCR to an Emonda and I can agree
I own a gravel bike - and put different wheelsets on it. Endurance geo - a bit of aero here and there - but it's perfect!
What bike do you ride?
Pinarello Grevil@@ArteUltra1195
What bike?
Totally agree!
I just purchased and endurance bike for all the reasons you mentioned. This is one of the best pieces of information I've seen in a while. Thanks!
I first bought an endurance bike based on thinking I wanted to be more relaxed but several fitters recommended a more aggressive bike for my next bike. I’m 5’7” 185 lbs and 42.
Moved from a Roubaix to a Soloist. It has added prob 2 mph to my cruising speed, better handling, better climbing. I ride 30 tires tubeless and it’s more comfy than the endurance bike road vibration wise.
Part of it is if you’re willing to put the work in to be able to handle the more aggressive position. It takes practice. And if you like going as fast as you can. I do, I’m always trying to go faster in the same routes I do.
For me, I’m super happy I moved to a race bike. Others may just wanna get out and get in some miles without obsessing over speed. Others don’t have bodies that can contort to aggressive positions.
But if you’re like me and love the speed, I wouldn’t rule out a race bike or aero bike.
Thanks.. I'm in a similar situation. I am very much looking at the Merida Reacto (current riding a 2016 Scultura 300 but wanting to upgrade). I absolutely love getting down in position and giving it my all (5'6.5" & 160lbs here).
Same here eyeing the Reacto! 😊@@NucleusProductionsBE
Looking for a new road bike and I think I'm in the same boat. I already have a gravel bike for "chill rides". Having a more aggressive roadbike that actually feels significantly different and "forces" one to become more fit, doing stretching, etc. Might be a good idea.
I have a 2016 Giany Defy Pro. Endurance bike of the year 2016. Its very good. Still my most used bike us a All City Gorilla Monsoon complete with racks, suspension seat and stem, Selle Anatomica saddle, 47C Goodyear Connector tubeless tires. The bike is my Cadillac and the Giant feels like a race bike in comparison! But the joy of riding any road surface in comfort is my jam! I came from steel frames, friction shifters and 11/2 inch tires on steel rims. There is joy in a simple do everything bike! Race bikes are narrow focused but beautiful too! It depends on the ride. Your favorite bike is probably the one you are currently riding!
I can relate. Many over-thought, over-priced bikes, over many years, many disappointments, and it boils down to one question: is/was/were there favorable kinetic feedbacks that made a bike part of the experience
I have two race bikes - an aero bike and a hill climber and had them fitted so they are comfortable. I’m 60 but my back is still fine and I LOVE to go fast. I tried the Defy and honestly it felt slow to me. At the end of the day ride what you love!
I tend to be in the speed = comfort school as well. I often ride alone at a brisk base in windy conditions. Being in a tucked position and having that snappy feel from a racier bike is nice.
Riding my old endurance bike now that I have a race bike feels like I’m riding in mud. So slow.
Yes, agree that wider tires are better for sure😃... But like my stack on the low side. It's been extra 🌬️ windy this year and being tucked definitely gets you through the wind easier/faster. If you're riding 400-500 miles per month that definitely adds up to time/watts saved so glad I still have my old Trek 1400 zx "Race" Bike... Plus it's light and easy to chuck around... Guess if I really wanted to make life easier, I'd just drop $$2.5k on a higher level electric and be done with human💪 powered cycling for good!!👍😮 ...Aaaahhhh, so much easier!!😅
I'm 60 as well. I'm fit and flexible and it's not my back on those bikes, it's my neck! My body feels great on those race bikes, but by the end of the ride the back of my neck is destroyed.
@@Windband1 My neck lasts about 5 hours riding. After that my neck starts hurting. For me, endurance or race, it always hurts just keeping my head up
Well said Sir. I'm a one bike does all rider, a Giant Defy, with mudguards for the non raining but still wet roads riding (and of course dry roads)
At 75 with arthritis I have a Cerevelo Caledonia with a slightly small frame, an extended head tube to limit neck estension and a prostate protecting saddle. Its very comfortable and I can easily get into the drops, although I try to avoid that these days!
Great point, well made. I ride a Canyon Endurace CFR and absolutely adore the bike. Super lightweight and easy on the eye. It makes me smile whenever I look at it, and I can never wait to get back on it for another ride.
reminds me of setting up Tri bikes in early 90s everyone had to have flat backs. for average person this meant slower times and more pain. by late 90s we were setting them up to be as comfortable as possible, a couple 60 plus guys were almost upright in aero bars, but they finished faster and happier. comfort is key
Got about 50K miles on my 23-yr old Trek 1000 road bike. I’m 63, riding about 3K leisure mi/yr and, while I can easily afford to upgrade, just don’t have a good enough reason to do it. 😎
have even older version of the same bike in yellow and blue.Love it
I have a Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen. Goes anywhere and perfect for everything! I'm glad that people are figuring out that you don't need a race bike unless you are actually in a race. If you are out for exercise, those few ounces are not going to hurt anything. Reliability, versatility, and comfort are much more important than getting to your destination 2 minutes sooner.
I have an Emonda that I absolutely adore for group rides and long, hilly routes and thanks to the carbon its not too bad for comfort but as an every day bike I always turn to my old Salsa Journeyman hybrid. I ride a lot like over 100 miles most week and chewed through that bike twice over only the frame and handlebar are original but it now has GRX gears. I love the 46/30 and 11-42. Its great as a commuter and errand runner to heavily load up and get around traffic, snow, ice, whatever. I even chewed through the wheels and upgraded to a cost reducing, semi custom carbon wheelset. It rides like a dream. Not fast but taking it easy its surprising how far I can get with it. I have done my longest rides on it including 158 miles with 12k climb in ONE DAY in Italy. But you just have to take it a little easier.
Completely agree! I switched from a road bike to a Parlee endurance bike in 2017 and will never look back. The carbon lay-ups, the shorter wheelbase and cockpit make for comfort be in a 25 mile short ride or a century.
I'm 57, just got my 1st road bike since I was 15 years old. A Bianchi 928 carbon L, 2 weeks later pick up a Cervelo RS. 6 weeks today there is a Daccordi Vinci on its way to me.
I bike to work 6 days a week. About 20 minutes away. I gave up the truck. When I comes home, I can't wait to go back out and ride more. At 1st I was worried about the leaning over. Now I love it and prefer it. Each bike weighs less than 17lbs. This low weight, thin tires makes the bike go up hills by itself. The roads where I live are horrible. I have Campanology Ventos, Shimano r500, both are bulletproof. I'm gonna stay with what I have until I can no longer ride
Had a Cannondale SuperSix for several years and ended up with a cracked frame. Got it warrantied and found myself with a carbon Synapse frame as replacement. Found out that was probably the better choice and I didn’t know it until I could compare. Endurance frame with race bike parts is awesome.
I’ve never looked back after switching to mechanical brakes, friction shifters, 650bx 47mm tires, square taper bottom bracket with sub compact gearing all on a super comfy steel frame and fork. Coming in at a respectable sub 21 lbs.
Friction shifters, seriously? If there was any invention in bicycle technology in the last 50 years that made sense, it was indexed shifting.
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Shirley you can’t be serious. 😂
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Got Dia-Compe ENE Power Ratchet Friction Shifters on my commute bike. Buttery smooth, allows me to use flat steel chainrings on my triple chainset. Durable, reliable, needs very little maintenance. The clunk of indexed shifting is great on a race bike but feeling/hearing your way through the gears with friction also is worth doing, it's the cycling equivalent of sailboating.
@@einundsiebenziger5488The channel Path Less Pedaled has some videos about friction shifters. On my bikes I have one Rohloff and the others are indexed but I get that people want something that's simple and compatible to different cable pull ratios.
Btw for me if I had to pick something, it would be hub dynamos and LED bike lights.
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Friction shifting is great for people who like to tinker with their bikes and try different setups and different styles of riding and not have to worry about compatibility issues. They're also the easiest to repair which is why a lot of long distance adventure tourers like them (and rim brakes). You get pretty fast with friction shifters after riding with them for a short amount of time, it would never be good for racing these days but they're fine for the average person.
I have a Cube 2021 Nuroad C:62 SL. It's marketed as a gravel bike - but the frame looks a lot like other "tags". I absolutely love it. Some scoff at the single chainring being used on the road - I've never had a problem with it on my club rides. The 10-50T cassette has dropped a lot in price since I bought it and that "dinner plate" let's me tackle pretty much any climb I am faced with. On the high end it's usually me that chickens out before the capability of the gearset. The eTap AXS kit is just brilliant. I have the Schwalbe G-One R tyres - 40mm wide on this. I love them. We have some pretty terrible lanes around here in the Cotswolds and that tyre is defo needed a lot of times - plus it has surprisingly good rolling resistance. Only downside is price. Two recent club rides showed that big-time when we came across some very un-roadie friendly terrain. I love this bike - feel I can do anything I need to on the road - but can use it on tracks and gravel without any qualms.
Good advice. When I was racing years ago and rode a Pinarello with the same goemetry as the Deutsche Telekom team bikes at the time. It was so uncomfortable that I finally stopped riding it and then moved over to MTB. Too many people buy into the marketing hype generated by the TDF riders and the bikes they ride, but as you say, they don't think through enough about what they really need. Endurance bikes are great, I rode a Cannondale Synapse across the Italian and Swiss Alps in 2020 and agree that the more comfortable you are, the faster you will ultimately be in the end.
My TCR does everything I want it to and makes it fun. Can't imagine trading that in for an endurance ride when I'm able to comfortably ride 8 hours.
I have a Boardman Cx Team 2011 that I bought on eBay 11 years ago. I've used it for L'Etape du Tour several times, cycle touring with panniers, Paris Roubaix, Tour of Flanders, cyclocross, Mt Ventoux via the woods and round the Bugatti circuit for the Le Mans 24hr velo. Oh.... I also use it to go shopping. Does me just fine. 👍
I bought a Rondo Hvrt a few years ago based on your great review and Bike of the Year award. I absolutely love it - the adjustable Endurance or Race setup choice makes it so versatile and I love putting in the 650B wheels with super wide tyres for wicked gravel rides. I love it! I've ridden 100plus miles in great comfort.
Thing I found I bought the race bike which was an amazing tool of torture same as sports motorbike too, I’m 50 years old and have accepted I’m fat slow always last in the pack regardless of bike so I ride what’s comfortable now and I’m not obsessed by watts or power or speed and cycle with people of similar mindset. Forget the latest trends go out and enjoy your ride
Finally the right way! I'm proud to be une of the first one that had buy the first Trek Madone model back in 2012 ...also made in USA with life long warranty! It was very more comfortable than the madone and since than I had very good ride over many mithic roads across Alps and some gravel not programmed stuff all with great confidence. I'm very happy not to be alone!
I think we need to get away from titles like "endurance", "gravel" etc. My last 2 bikes were based on the geometry and tyre clearance I wanted, along with things like frame mounts and the ability to fit mudguards. I couldn't care less what category the manufacturer put them in. As it happens, both were sold as 'gravel' bikes but that was irrelevant to the purchasing decision.
Always ask yourself what sort of riding you want to do and base you buying decision on that with the factors you suggest.
Marketing marketing my friend 😊😊!!
I agree for most non pro riders. I just bought a second hand bmc team machine while im in Toulon for a month. Its my first road/race bike in a while, at home I have a trek 520 disk and love it. Its a completely different animal but if i was out for a big day solo would 100% take comfort and sacrifice speed.
I like what you were saying there, my new Salsa Journeyer gravel bike could almost race a crit. Put a set of slick tires on it and 48 tooth chain ring on the front boom you're ready to go. Yes I did get this gravel bike with two in the front; I'm still a roadie 😎.
Get a steel bike, get your ear over the axis of steering (head tube) get your saddle and bars the same height. Enjoy riding in a safe straight line.
Steel is the best ride.
I own a Tarmac SL7 and bought a Roubaix last year under the promise of more comfortable rides.
The comfort was barely improved but the bike just felt so lazy. I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much.
I think a race bike can be just as comfortable in an era of wider tyres and lower pressures, unless you’re offended by stem spacers or are a nervous descender.
I rode my old Tarmac SL4 on century rides with total comfort. Sitting up in the wind on a sluggish bike is not comfortable to me.
thanks, I was thinking my RC520 lack in performance, your video made me realized, comfortable equals efficiency equals higher average speed for the most of us.
I agree with you, in parts. I think you should start the video by saying: if you, like me, only use bicycles for leisure, never participate in competitions, don't go after KOMs...You should consider an endurance bike.
I build my endurance bike and is very good when I build that it was 8.600 kilos now its 7.483 with the upgrades that I did I can.easily hold 42 khm in the straight keep on mind the wheels is aluminum everything is how you choose your components and how aero frames is not that much faster at the best the gave you 0.4 kmh per hour in the straight with the same watts
I agree with whatever opinions result in road race bikes staying long/low. More riders choosing endurance bikes is good. Fewer riders being shamed for having 50mm in spacers on race bikes is good too.
Too high handlebars can cause neck pain as well
Right. If you are a cosplayer then get a race bike. Well said.
You can race and take KOMs on an endurance bike - a lot of good endurance bikes are neither slow or heavy, and also have aerodynamic features.
Riding a bike that fits you properly is almost always faster. It’s not a case of choosing between a fast bike and a slow bike, both types of bike can be fast with the right rider.
Great case for buying a decent endurance bike from Warren Rossiter - as always, the voice of reason! Keep up the good work Warren.
I just got a Trek SLR Domane last June. Came from Cervelo S2 the last 8 years. I could never really get comfortable with the Cervelo, but it was fast. Usually got neck pain even with the stem flipped. NO neck pain with the Trek, nearly as fast even with 32mm tires and A LOT more enjoyable to ride. Also I ride 50/34 11-34. I crack up seeing guys with bigger chain rings nearly cross chaining riding cadence way too low.
The only bike I’ve got with a slammed negative stem is a Giant Defy that never leaves my trainer now. That does look better than my TCR with spacers. Next time I need a road bike, it will probably be endurance geo, as long as it’s still a fast bike.
100% Correct. I have been riding racing configurations for decades and almost annually ripped the rear derailleur off the frame sprinting up hills. I also break spokes every season due to the rough roads I ride on. In addition, I tend to jump the curb on the city streets around here. So, after a mechanical failure in a group ride, a Trec salesman sold me a Domaine, and I was delighted. I agree the ride is comfortable and I have fewer mechanical issues.
I ride in the A/drop groups and have no issue staying in the pacelines and little peletons that develop.
I see many guys/gals with race configurations with carbon fiber rims who clearly are not racers. They are (ahem) a bit tubby. These wheels' "Aero" benefits only kick in at about 20mph. Instead of spending several thousand dollars on fancy aero tires, they should get a personal trainer and try to drop that belly.
I agree. 1 bike, 2 carbon wheelsets, a zero offset seat post and and compact flared bars. Comfy wherever.
Completely agree.. And it’s frustrating that some endurance bike are still getting a bit racy. For me, the Defy is now a touch to long and low.
I went from F8 to Domane.. Okay, the Trek does n’t have zip the Pina has, but I tend to be quicker over all, as the Domane floats over the rough and is so easy to descend fast on. I look forward to multi days on the Trek, unlike the Dogma.. Unfortunately the pro peloton sells more bikes than a bike fit 🤷🏻♂️
Endurance bikes are made to suit different types of riders, some like the latest Defy are tailored more towards the sporty rider who basically wants a race bike but with a bit more comfort for going fast over long distances. There are plenty of young fit riders now competing in ultra distance races for example, where a classic race bike isn’t quite ideal, but a sporty endurance bike is.
Others like the Domane or Roubaix are more relaxed geometry that’s more suited to less flexible riders and those who ride at a more leisurely pace.
There is plenty of space in the market for different types of endurance bike, not every one has to be really short reach and high stack.
Even gravel bikes are becoming stupidly racier nowadays, what a shame. They just don't work with my super long legs and quite average/short torso and arms.
I ended up designing a Titanium bike that I would call an Endurance Gravel bike (super high stack of 600mm, short reach of 379mm with top tube of only 540mm, upright seatpost at 75 deg, relaxed steerer at 71.5 deg, clearance for 50mm tires). The bike I have dreamed for years. Hope I can build it over the next few weeks, and this time with an almost slammed headset ... Because the frame allows :)
Incredible!
Great post/video, w proven facts and thorough explanation. And I’ll share (briefly) my own experience.
I “accidentally” bought an endurance bike- (not knowing) “exactly” what I was specifically buying. But having read the specs, and test ride the bike- and….Aaaaand logically “buying into” the style it self-I went: well, I want longer comfortable rides, Endurance bike is what I want.
Right of the bat- the bike/frame-felt incredible. It was like-as if I was flying, on a flat road, not a descend.
I wanted to test a true race bike-for comparison, honestly-not even close.
The best choice I’ve made. And this post proves it!
I have a Ribble Titanium Endurance bike, after having a Cannondale Super Six Evo the Ribble is such a blessing, so comfortable and nice to live with. There is no question however over a timed, uniformed course at the same power output the Cannondale was faster about the equivalent of 2 minutes over 40km. FYI
At 63, endurance geometry is my first choice. I can still go plenty fast on a bike that's more stable and a bit cushier. I have a 2000 Allez Pro M4 with 39/53 and 11-21 9-speed. It's fast, stiff, twitchy, and really gets power down; it's a lot of fun to ride for 90 minutes or so. Its chainstays measure 400mm and its wheel base is not quite 1000cm. My favorite road bike is my Battaglin San Luca with 36/50 and 11-27 11-speed, in Columbus steel with 410mm chainstays and a 1030mm wheelbase. The longer chainstays and especially that additional 30mm of wheelbase make a big difference in ride quality but give away nothing in terms of speed or perceived power transfer. Or maybe it's the Columbus steel. It's all the above, no doubt.
at 70, love my bmc roadmachine
I'm only in my 40's, and got a steel bike with "sensible"/"middle of the road" geometry. After getting steel, I'm never going back. The bike itself soaks up the poor surface roads I ride on, and my position gives me a good balance between efficiency and comfort. Even if I give up a little speed, the comfort that combination gives makes everything so much more enjoyable; I can comfortably go farther and for longer. It's great.
Having spent years promoting gravel and aero and saturated that market, it's time to persuade us to buy another kind of bike 😂
Well, gravel bikes have closer to an endorsement geometry, so at least they were onto something there. I love my gravel bike.
Most people just don't have anywhere to ride a gravel bike. Most places the roads are paved and trails are single track. So it's a bike that worse on pavement than a road bike and worse on trails than a mountain bike. Sure if you live somewhere with miles and miles of dirt roads then I'm sure they would be the best thing ever.
@@sevenrats you have a point but the times when I want to do gravel I don't need to take a train or go by car I can just ride to the trail. That is the good thing about gravel bikes. It's not about fast rides but flexibility. Going to reach the trails 60/70 kms away I don't even think about using my mtb but with the gravel bike I can. Having two road bikes (winter and summer),gravel, and mtb i never get bored. Of course city bike for commuting... Life is never boring
@@sevenrats the closest gravel road to my house is about 1.5km and I can do hundreds of kilometres locally on gravel. I have a road bike, but my gravel bike is actually better suited to most road riding (due to road condition and bike comfort) and the performance quite comparable.
@@DavidHinton-vl7ti Congratulations!
As you point out, the difference in geometry between the tcr and defy is small. It’s actually this small that the only significant changes are the stack, wheel base and tire clearance. You can easily make up stack and if you don’t need more than 32mm tire clearance, you would be hard pressed to notice the differences. BUT the defy has internal cable routing and is on average 1000 more expensive. So I chose the tcr, am riding 28mm and couldn’t be happier.
The all new Defy has slightly more aggressive geometry to the 2018 era one I have. Unfortunately, my 2018 doesn’t have the tyre clearance they have now….
I agree. But the question will always remain ' am i going as quickly as i could be? Is this the fastest tool for the job?' While these questions are present , Endurance bikes will never truly be the one and only option.
I doubt you'll be much slower on an Endurance bike......and if you're not racing, why does it matter? #partypacerules
@@Andy_ATBIt matters to enough people to make it matter. Thats the point.
If speed matters to you then it matters to you. It’s absolutely legitimate! I have two race bikes - an aero bike and a hill climber and had them fitted so they are comfortable. I’m 60 but my back is still fine and I LOVE to go fast. I tried the Defy and honestly it felt slow to me. Ride what you love!
I have a Canyon Aeroad and I love it. 62 years young.
I still have my CAAD12. Awesome bike, and recommended by you!
Same
Sure is ,Hit many PRs on mine - A bike you could still win on still today
I got properly into cycling in lockdown. My hybrid commuter took me so far and then I had the long wait as road bikes were in short supply. The power of marketing is phenomenal. I ignored pure aero and tourers. After that I did my best to pick my way through the reviews and had a Boardman SLR 9.4 and a Vitus Vitesse lined up. The Vitus won as it was in stock (and I was seduced by the romance it was Sean Kelly’s brand). I’ve no idea how my reach and stack match up to an endurance geometry. I thought those two were pretty similar. I do know my bike is great fun and I’m happy.
This is incredibly sensible and logical advice for (dare I say +90%) of riders out there. However I am equally certain that +90% will ignore it. “Looking pro” on a Sunday morning ride is the most important thing to many. We all know the rider with the lateset gear getting dropped and then claiming a heavy night out or that their CTL, ATL, TSS are slightly off that day…😂
You're right. I've owned all type of bikes in the recent years, all carbon with ultegra level builds. After riding for years and trying different bikes, I'm convinced that I need a modern endurance bike, nothing Else. Comfort and distance riding is key. The whole nimble handling and aggressive position is only for racing conditions, which few people do.
I agree on the fact that comfort makes most of us faster. However, after riding a year of races on a Canyon Endurace I switched to a gravel bike with similar geometry and I love it. I do retain the comfort, but I also have two wheelsets that allow me to fit 28mm tires for a gran fondo, or swap in my 38mm’s to take a good amount of offroad. Best balance in my book.
I have a bike custom-made based on the Soma Wolverine 4.0 frame design: RD Broski sliding dropouts, split in chainstay for belt drive upgrade, monster cross, off road touring, road and gravel riding. It fits all these categories. I guess it's also endurance, the frame is Ti.
Great video! I totally agree with it. I'm the proud owner of a Bianchi Infinito XE. Very comfortable, not sluggish at all and can take 32mm tires if you are so inclined.
HOOOO BOYYY...after 69-years of cycling, nothing has "ruined" my love of cycling than looking at YT-vids on the subject. Ughhh......blah blah blah. Happiness does NOT require all the hype. sheeshhh....
They all love their lycra costumes.bike outside a coffee shop says it all.
Agreed. I have five bikes including one endurance geo bike. 90% of my riding is on that bike.
90% of my riding is on my 'endurance' bike. But only because I don't want to wear out my nice race bike components for commutes. So it isn't that it's not as comfortable as I'm just as comfortable on both for all day rides, but that I consider it better so I don't want to use it for usual rides. Almost like a nice suit. Doesn't mean it's less comfortable...but wearing your going out suit to the office makes no sense.
I've got $30 wiggle tyres on my endurance bike. I've got $80 ones on my race bike.
To say, I don't think it's as black and white as endurances get used more because they are more comfortable.
if money was no object I'd ride the race bike everywhere.
I totally agree with you. I'm running a subcompact crank with an 11-36 cassette & 32mm tires. While on my adventure- turning bike because of the weight of cargo, I'm happy to have disk brakes on my everyday bike I like rim brakes.
I agree on the gearing. I'm 60 years old and my FTP is around 200-215, somewhere in there. I never use my hardest gears. Usually when I'm descending I'm freewheeling, recovering from the climb I just did, not cranking down the hill! I would be better off two teeth less in the front and two teeth more in the back! Hahaha!
I can only agree...just bought a Giant Defy and even though I'm less "aero" than on my last bike, I'm sure I'm faster cause I get less tired...no pain anywhere, pure joy to ride
I just got a new Scott Addict 10 and it’s a total game changer, loving the endurance gearing and geometry. My other bike is a Giant Revolt 2 gravel bike and it’s great for those windy days when I want to hide from the wind in the trails. No aero bike here!
Although I’m not cycling much now due to health reasons I have loved my only drop bar leisure road bike, an All City Mr Pink, 48/34 Sugino, SRAM Force gearing, 30mm Strada tyres… it does exactly what you are advocating and I had that set up a decade ago for the rough old roads here in rural New Zealand. Plenty of oldies like me out there on carbon bikes and skinny tyres, they need watch this video.
Completely happy with my SL7; its the perfect Sportif bike. I have a gravel, Fat, mtb, zwift and trainer SL7 for everything else. The switch to 28mm tubeless and low psi is the key.
I went for a gravel bike with endurance geometry, a double chainset and bought another wheelset for the road. Works a treat.
I currently own about 40 bikes... and have owned roughly 400 to 500 bikes in my life... most of them in the past 15 years... most of the carbon road bikes. I agree with most of this video but of course it depends on the rider (age, speed, power output) where they live (flat or hilly our mountainous) and what type of riding they mainly do (solo, group, road, gravel, touring, racing, gran fondo, centuries, etc). One reason I have so many bikes is that I have homes in 3 different states--all with completely different climates and topography--ranging from beach house in Hawaii to a city house in the Rockies... so I need a pretty wide range of bikes. I do fast group rides in the city--with sprint zones up to the mid to high 30 mph range--and solo canyon rides from 5000 up to 10000+ ft--with descents up to 45+ mph on twisty mountain roads. And of course mountain and gravel riding as well.. and some slower century rides through the countryside or along the ocean. So, yeah, I agree that the "average" non-professional rider--if having to choose just ONE bike--should probably choose something in the endurance / gravel capable orientation... but if you have the means and the garage space and you do a variety of different riding, a nice, fast racing bike never hurts--for the shorter, sprintier group training rides--and a nice, ultra-light (15 lbs or less) climbing bike with the right gear ratios (50t up front with 11-32 in the back) is a must have. One thing I would add to the video is that you don't need to go out and buy an expensive new bike. For $500-ish you can buy an AMAZING bike--Tour-de-France / pro-level bike--from 10 or 15 yrs ago--that is STILL WAY MORE BIKE than most of us need. I pick them up all the time... Trek Madone 6.9 w/ full Dura Ace... for $500... $600... $700-ish if you want nice carbon wheels. Or a smokin' hot S-Works Epic for under $1000... full carbon / full XTR / full suspension / under 24 pound rocket... etc. In America at least there are TONS of amazing used bikes for sale at GREAT prices. So... why not have a really sweet bike for all occasions?
I bought a Domane last year and had the bike shop exchange the factory standard 11-34 cassette with an 11-36 as I live in a quite hilly area. I love the comfort of the endurance geometry and I love the fact that I can spin up most hills without completely knackering myself. I don't know if that is considered cheating, and I don't really care either as it means I get out there much more frequently and enjoy it so much more.
When looking to buy my first road bike two years ago, i did my research. Based on my preference for long distance over speed, I went with a endurance bike. It might not be as bling as an aero bike, but its a great km cruncher.
I have ridden a Specialized Secteur for more than 10 years and updated to a Rose Pro SL. Both endurance „entry level“ bikes with 105 gearing and relaxed geometry. I can still ride plenty fast if I want to and achieved decent fitness, which is more than enough for me as a dad of 3 with limited riding time available.
I think that the recent bikes change the feeling on the road. The large tyre of 28 or 30 mm with low inflation (4 at 5.5 bars) make a general impression of feeling a smooth bike if you compare with the 23 mm type at 7 bars. The confort is now also on the race bike except some aero models. Because the last question is the drop who depend of flexibility, age, osteoarthritis, and off course duration of ride. I have 57 i run the Giant Defy 2020 (endurace bike) with the most low position of handelbar, 28 mm tyres and 1,5 kg wheels Mavic Ksyrium SL. When i'm good i run at 28km/h during 2 hours. I think that the limit is not my bike, but my 82 kg (1,73 m) and my âge. I think that the TCR (race bike) would'nt do me any good. I agree with bike radar. Thanks.
Remember when you buy a bicycle, you are not Greg LeMond and you will never be Greg LeMond. For most of us it’s not about speed, it about comfort. The more comfortable you are the more you will ride and that’s what it’s all about. Don’t bother if you dig your bike out, dust it off and go 5 miles, a couple times a year. Try to ride 3 to 4 times a week. Give yourself time to notice the difference and your improvements. You will get better. When you do you will ride more because you will love what it does for your body and mind.
For years I felt a pull from the marketing because I love the look of many areo bikes, especially with a slammed stem and carbon wheels. But I resisted. While I still love the look, I'm content with my endurance bike (Cannondale Synapse). Love it, actually. Fit is completely dialed in. It's fast and good on hills, which is a must in my area. Also have a steel road bike (Ritchey Road Logic). Guess it's considered endurance. Don't know. Don't care. Love that bike too. Just wish I could run 35mm tires on her.
Well said. I personally ride a 2020 Giant Revolt Advanced 2. Over the years, it has been kitted out, and the only remaining stock part is the stem, lol. 650b Hunt Mason X Adventure Sport wheels for the dirty stuff, Zipp 303s for the tarmac. The only handicap road or gravel is me, lol.
I agree. An endurance bike is light of enough to race and do some gravel riding by placing wider tires. But not extreme gravel riding which is ok.
In your example of the Giant, the smaller large chaining (43) with even smaller sprocket(10) is a misguided way to weight-savings, not needed in this category. A 53x12 weighs only grams more, but a 11t or 12t starting sprocket is more efficient (the other sprockets will also be the next size up, so same gear range). It also makes for more durability where the deivetrain has longer wear. Durability here, and better efficiency as a free benefit, seem more important in this category. In case you're unaware, when you get to 11 and under, the sprocket is less round and starts to cost in efficiency, 11t having been chosen as the smallest for this reason, and has remained so for a very long time. This "compact" setup is a fad, thanks to ignorance and marketing.
I am the commuter type of cyclist. For me it's just a mode of transport whenever the distance isn't too far.
But expanding the "not too far" range is where an appropriate bike comes into play.
I just got my eyes on a travel bike. Looks as comfortable as a drop bar bike can possibly be, with 29" by 2.25" tyres.
It triggers a "must have" reflex. I just have to clear out my garage first.
I have owned two Domanes and recently bought a Giant Revolt gravel bike. Truth is, the more comfortable the bike is, the more you will ride it. I am 61 for reference.
Canyon Endurace 2018 model with disc and a 12mm stem. 52/36 and 11/32. Its geometry is basically identical to the Ultimate and it’s a race bike with 30 mm tire clearance. I’ve also ridden light gravel with it on 25 mm tires with no problems.
When I returned to road bikes, after a 20 year gap, I didn't know a great deal about them, but, with a preference for long (100 mile plus) rides, I knew I wanted two things. - good puncture resistance, and comfort. The first was taken care of by trial and error tyre selection, and now I get a puncture maybe once every 25,000 miles. Looking into the second priority, besides opting for wider tyres, I discovered that endurance bikes are designed for the long rides I favour, eventually settling on a Specialized Secteur, and, later, a Roubaix. Over the years since I've sometimes wondered if a race bike might not after all have been a better choice, and been tempted to buy one, a thought I've always managed to resist. So it's good to see my original instinct confirmed here
I'm less enamoured by the move towards larger cassettes. Living in flat East Anglia, I still find a 25-11 is fine on all my bikes, paired with either 50/34, or, in the case of the Secteur, a 50/39/30 triple (triple cranksets have gone out of fashion since). There are hills here - up to 20% here and there, but they're all short sharp climbs, and I find I can get up any of them easily with those combinations. In fact rarely even need the 30 ring on the Secteur.
25k miles is how often time-wise…? Just curious….
About once every two years or so.@@PRH123
Seven years ago, I bout a Cube Attain GTC Pro based on Warren's review. 50/34, 11-32 and clearance for 32c. Its as good now as it was then. I've upgraded the wheels to Hunt Mason X Four Seasons and plopped some ultegra level brifters on there. The temptation to upgrade to something with eTap or Di2 is there, bit the return on investment just doesn't justify it.
Same here. Bike holding up well. I can keep my size 56 under 8kg. Alu wheels.
I have a 2019 Cannondale Synapse and it's by far the most comfortable bike I've ever ridden. I do 95% of my riding on it these days and, if I ever upgrade, will look for something very similar. My other bike is a 1988 Colnago, however, and it's notably faster and more lively when I take it out. Were I racing again, I'd want the modern equivalent, but suspect I'll never see a peloton from the inside ever again.
Caught that Fairlight Strael @7:53! Well done. Steel is real, my friends
I love my Strael and Secan from Fairlight...covers all my needs
I have just bought the new Giant Defy Pro 0. As it s winter here in Canada I have yet to try it. My other bike is a Giant TCR Pro. As I am turning 70 next fall I wanted a more comfortable bike for long rides, especially on the poor condition roads in Quebec.
100% agree. The only thing is on my defy I changed the 11-34 cassette to a 11-30 because on the 11 speed the 11 13 15 jump in ratios on the top end drove me crazy. On the new 12 speeds it's not an issue. Run a compact 50/34 crank
Sloaping top tube is the best thing ever. You can get the cockpit higher, but don't have to look at a spacer stack :D
I only have something like 10mm of spacers under the stem and I can ride on the drops for ages. In fact, I have all positions in full use and alternate between them all the time.
I'm in this camp, just from the gravel bike as an all road bike perspective. Where I live in Ontario, the nearest gravel road is about 1.5 km away and takes me on glorious rides along Lake Eries shoreline. I've done long road rides with almost slick tyres, but mostly have a set of Rene Herse Steilacoom 700Cx38 tyres on that I'm too lazy to switch out. My bike is steel and a decade old now, but there's no reason it couldn't last the rest of my life. (Don't misunderstand that comment, it may not be my only or my last bike.............). I do get to ride in the UK occasionally (challenging as SW Ontario doesn't have hills) and your roads are certainly no better than ours, the condition of which means that you have to concentrate so hard on the road bike, to avoid the potholes and construction defects that it detracts from the ride. And the benefit of losing a few grams from a bike would be far outweighed by losing a couple of kilos from me.
Gravel frame with 2 wheelsets. 1x for simplicity. All in one drop bar bike. Good enough for any weekend road ride with carbon wheels and 32mm tires and fantastic on discovery rides with XC grade wheels and 50mm tires.
I bought a DeRosa Merak which is described by DeRosa as a race bikes. This is the finest handling bike I've owned. And I have owned a LOT of bikes. I had a 14 lb Look which rode terrible, jumping around under me on climbs. The heavier DeRosa handles so much better that there's no comparison. I even have a heavy gel saddle on it. This bike is so great that I intend to sell off most of my bikes and get some space in the garage.
Couldn't zgree more. What did I end up buying? A fulltime on aero bike with deep section carbon wheels.....and....a gravel bike on the side. Doublet the money While the best option is in your comments. I would now choose a gravel bike with two wheelsets. Probably a Scott Addict or a Merida scultura endurance
Bike fit specialists recommend that riders with proporsionally shorter legs and longer torso take a race geometry bike. For example Tarmac instead of Roubaix.
Really enjoyed that please post a video going over the endurance bike options out there
Got myself a Merida Scultura Endurance 5000 like shown on your video. Excellent. Dropped the tyre pressure to 4bar. Just right in the Netherlands.
I think endurance bikes are the way to go for most of us. Still, I think many if not most of gravel bikes fall pretty close. After all, they are not that different. They usually have a little wider handlebars for better control when riding off-road and gear range shifted towards this application either. And of course, wider tire clearance. All this will make us slightly slower on the tarmac, but I would argue the increased versatility is well worth consideration.
The biggest impact on performance is ergonomic comfort. I don't know any bike with this discription. I had a Giant defy advanced, sold it and go a steel frame with long wheel base touring geometry, improved my time over 50 km by minutes with so much more comfort.
When i got my ORRO Venturi STC i realized i had the perfect bike that was both comfortable on any ride and aero.
After not using it for full 6 months I ended up selling my canyon endurance.
I totally agree that for us mortals comfort is what we should prioritize if we can also have aero and a great looking bike as in my case then i think it's optimal.
I switched from an endurance bike to a Cervelo R5. I've never been more comfortable or happy on a bike. I don't feel cramped in the handlebars and can stretch out on the downhill.
Endurance bike like Defy still come with 105 crank with 50/34 and cannot smailer, also come with 32c tyre. But gravel bike's Grx 48/31 crank and 35+ tyre make it more comfortable. Also functionality and resale are better than endurance I think. Geo should be similar cause they all have longer wheel base comparing to road bike.
I recently upgraded from a vintage Cannodale Criterion setup. The shop tried selling me on an endurance bike. I took one for a test ride. I am glad I did. I can see the benefits of an endurance setup. However, it was not for me. The handling was too sluggish, the position was too upright, and the pedals were too low (I jammed them into the ground several times in just a few minutes). At nearly 50 years old, the endurance bike should have been the choice. But, given my previous bikes and other hobbies, like speed skating, I had to go with something more aggressive. I ended up on a Cervelo Soloist. The riding position is more relaxed than the crit bike and the handling is more sedate than I am used to. I have gotten used to it. I am enjoying the smoother ride of the wide tires and an overall geometry that isn't trying to actively kill me.