Drop bar off road advice please
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
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Drop bar off road advice please
I'm hoping to do some off road stuff this year (cambrian and sdw itts, plus, if I'm lucky, torino nice are on the bucket list). I'd really like to put together a drop bar 650b/29er bike that is adequate on the road, but capable of some proper off road stuff. I'd like the option for mounting cages on the forks and want something pretty bomb proof, so thinking steel or alloy throughout. Would like the option of fitting 50c tyres, so decent clearance is a must. I come from a purely road background, so drops are a must. For reference, I'm currently using a boardman Cross bike, but it lacks the clearance I'm after and has carbon forks that I'd fear for on anything really rough.
The shand frames look spot on, but out of reach price wise. The salsa fargo looks v interesting, so I'm keeping an eye on ebay. Neither the ribble 725 or the sonder caminos have metal forks with anything cage bosses, so I've ruled them out. Ditto the Mason bokeh, which is also a bit pricey. Is there anything obvious out there that I'm missing?
TIA,
Tom
The shand frames look spot on, but out of reach price wise. The salsa fargo looks v interesting, so I'm keeping an eye on ebay. Neither the ribble 725 or the sonder caminos have metal forks with anything cage bosses, so I've ruled them out. Ditto the Mason bokeh, which is also a bit pricey. Is there anything obvious out there that I'm missing?
TIA,
Tom
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
If you are 5'9" to 6', I might know of a crmo project frame and fork you could try out. Matches your needs 100%. Just let me know.
- johnnystorm
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Genesis Vagabond andBombtrack Beyond are quite similar to a Fargo.
Salsa Journeyman is alloy with carbon forks but with the cage mounts and cheaper new than a Fargo.
Almost anything Surly make is all steel with fork mounts, plenty out there with drop bars fitted.
Salsa Journeyman is alloy with carbon forks but with the cage mounts and cheaper new than a Fargo.
Almost anything Surly make is all steel with fork mounts, plenty out there with drop bars fitted.
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Thanks Johnny - great advice. James, I'll drop you a line now!
- Bearbonesnorm
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Don't be concerned about using carbon forks off-road, they won't break. I'd generally avoid alloy forks off-road like I'd avoid putting my nob in a mangle ... they tend to be very harsh and unforgiving.
I also wouldn't rule anything out because it doesn't have cage mounts. They're great when additional capacity is required but there's a surprising amount of 'aero drag' when they're fitted.
Genesis Vagabond could be worth a look as it seems to tick all your boxes.
I also wouldn't rule anything out because it doesn't have cage mounts. They're great when additional capacity is required but there's a surprising amount of 'aero drag' when they're fitted.
Genesis Vagabond could be worth a look as it seems to tick all your boxes.
May the bridges you burn light your way
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
You could try to contact Shona and Rich, from Keep Pedalling bike shop in Manchester. I'm sure they can give you good advice.
Or you could buy the Ribble or Sonder and get forks separately.
Or you could buy the Ribble or Sonder and get forks separately.
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Thanks folks. The vagabond looks interesting norm and point noted re the knob/mangle aspect. I must admit I've never broken a pair of carbon forks through normal use, but did once send a loose front light through my wheel and the mess it made of the forks has always made me a bit wary of them off road. And good suggestion re swapping out the forks on a sonder, Javi. I'd like to have the extra capacity afforded by fitting anything cages, despite any extra drag - only done one multi day ride and my inability to pack small meant I ended up binning my bike packing luggage and fitting panniers - couple of extra 6 litre dry bags would have made all the difference.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
I reckon this is a good option, but the frameset and complete build is a bit spendy for me:
https://www.thelightblue.co.uk/Sport/5L ... -One-By-MT
Great bike though, taking proper 29" tyres.
Or get a camino or vagabond and get the fork only. I'm thinking of doing the same on my arkose:
https://www.tritoncycles.co.uk/frames-f ... ork-p17805
But the A/C is 425mm so fairly tall and resulting minor implications to geometry etc.
https://www.thelightblue.co.uk/Sport/5L ... -One-By-MT
Great bike though, taking proper 29" tyres.
Or get a camino or vagabond and get the fork only. I'm thinking of doing the same on my arkose:
https://www.tritoncycles.co.uk/frames-f ... ork-p17805
But the A/C is 425mm so fairly tall and resulting minor implications to geometry etc.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
vs the 400mm of the Arkose, some might put it at slightly more than 'minor'minor implications
(but others could say I'm fussy in that respect)
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Indeed, I think I'd have to be fairly desperate for fork bosses to go with it in the end...
- Bearbonesnorm
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
I've been increasingly thinking (lusting) over bikes of this ilk. A bike in this category, alongside my hardtail, would cover pretty much all my bases.
I've come across some Singular Swifts that seemingly play well with drops, I presume this would make it fargo esq.
What I really like the look of (off the peg) is the Kona Sutra ltd. Maybe swapping the forks at a later stage for some carbon triple mount jobbies. Anyhow holding out for some real world reports on them.
http://www.konaworld.com/sutra_ltd.cfm
I've come across some Singular Swifts that seemingly play well with drops, I presume this would make it fargo esq.
What I really like the look of (off the peg) is the Kona Sutra ltd. Maybe swapping the forks at a later stage for some carbon triple mount jobbies. Anyhow holding out for some real world reports on them.
http://www.konaworld.com/sutra_ltd.cfm
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
I heard some really good things about that bike from someone with opinions I trust, 'you'd love it' amongst other things.Anyhow holding out for some real world reports on them.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Been lusting after a kona sutra ltd for a while and it'll be a good while more before I could buy that or anything else
My drop bar 29er is a steel charge cooker 3 with genetic digest bars, 2.3" tyres, recently went back to 100mm front suspension. works well for me despite the ugly short high stem work-around due to the long TT.
But I was really enjoying riding my Genesis vapour CX with 40mm tyres too. I need drop bars due to wrist issues and in don't ride super rad gnar anyway.
My drop bar 29er is a steel charge cooker 3 with genetic digest bars, 2.3" tyres, recently went back to 100mm front suspension. works well for me despite the ugly short high stem work-around due to the long TT.
But I was really enjoying riding my Genesis vapour CX with 40mm tyres too. I need drop bars due to wrist issues and in don't ride super rad gnar anyway.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Are you looking for a drop bar MTB (monster cross style), with 2 inch or more tyres, or a gravel bike that can take some off road
I'd say a good proportion of people here ride MTBs with a rigid fork and will happily do 'proper' off road, just a bit slower than if you had suspension (or in my case a lot slower )
Personally I have rigid carbon forks which have cage mounts (that I've not yet used) and they've taken everything my clumsy style has given them
I'd say a good proportion of people here ride MTBs with a rigid fork and will happily do 'proper' off road, just a bit slower than if you had suspension (or in my case a lot slower )
Personally I have rigid carbon forks which have cage mounts (that I've not yet used) and they've taken everything my clumsy style has given them
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
There's always the new Arkose.
https://singletrackworld.com/gritcx/201 ... than-ever/
RE carbon point, those forks are ADKs, they make good stuff.
https://singletrackworld.com/gritcx/201 ... than-ever/
RE carbon point, those forks are ADKs, they make good stuff.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
So basically slightly wider and beefier than the 2017-2018 bikes? ie wider rear end, wider rims, wider range (comparing the 2018 Arkose 3 to the 2019 D3). Is that a 3 pack mount on the down tube?
- Bearbonesnorm
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Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Thanks once again for all the advice. Jameso has been good enough to offer me the loan of a steel frame set that looks spot on, so hopefully I'm on my way.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Lighter frames, slimmed in some places and stiffened in others, ie refined. 142 or 135 rear, swappable dropouts. Wider rims andPaulB2 wrote:So basically slightly wider and beefier than the 2017-2018 bikes? ie wider rear end, wider rims, wider range (comparing the 2018 Arkose 3 to the 2019 D3). Is that a 3 pack mount on the down tube?
- yes, on the Dirt spec models. Road spec are on 30mm WTBs and there's a set of 3 bottle mounts on the DT - hi/low bottle or Anything Cage etc.Bearbonesnorm wrote:Riddler 45's James?
All specs here (for answering Qs more than a stealth ad, understood if removed) https://www.evanscycles.com/search?text=arkose%202019
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
I do like the look of that James, is is singlespeedable (looking for a frame and forks to replace my aging Singular Peregrine)?
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
That journeyman by Salsa looks nice, and surprisingly affordable.
That said, the Bombtrack Hook ext-c makes me want to do sex wee. It is quite possibly the most beautiful bike ever built.
That said, the Bombtrack Hook ext-c makes me want to do sex wee. It is quite possibly the most beautiful bike ever built.
Last edited by ootini on Fri Jan 11, 2019 8:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
The Alfine model is - not sure how many frames we'll have available though as it's a bit niche. The Arkose S was popular in many ways but we didn't sell that many. It's a shame as SS rando-packing appeals to me in a weird way - think I'll get the Monzonite for that.Scud wrote:I do like the look of that James, is is singlespeedable (looking for a frame and forks to replace my aging Singular Peregrine)?
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
Jameso, looks like the womens D3 tall is essentially same size as men's medium. As a man, would it be daft to look at the woman's version to get the slightly smaller front chain rings? Or am I missing something?
Cheers
Cheers
Re: Drop bar off road advice please
This seems to of swung by with useful timing -
http://www.bikepacking.com/index/drop-b ... ikes-29er/
Re- the kona sutra ltd (or road based konas generally). Biggest size is 58cm, I'm 6"4 and ride 60cm road bikes wonder if this is a consideration..
http://www.bikepacking.com/index/drop-b ... ikes-29er/
Re- the kona sutra ltd (or road based konas generally). Biggest size is 58cm, I'm 6"4 and ride 60cm road bikes wonder if this is a consideration..