Is It Time To Buy a Gravel Bike? 5 Reasons to Consider One...

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  • čas přidán 27. 04. 2024
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    I've been riding gravel bikes for over 10 years and in this video I want to share the reasons that they are so appealing and why you should consider one for 2024 if you haven't already.
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Komentáře • 97

  • @crazypyro777
    @crazypyro777 Před měsícem +4

    I have only used 1 bike since starting cycling over a year ago, my crux. Love it. Over 5k miles between road, trails, gravel.
    In the best shape of my life as an added bonus.

  • @larsh8560
    @larsh8560 Před měsícem +27

    Personally, owning both MTB, road and gravel bikes, I have find myself gravitating more and more towards the gravel bike. This to the point where I am considering just keeping the gravel bike and having different wheelsets for that bike. It's the most fun and versatile bike for me and the riding I like to do.
    But that's just my experience. I totally get that people have different styles and preferences. Whether this means people riding pure road, pure MTB, off-road on road bikes (with wide clearance) or MTB on road with slicks and aero-bars. Each to his own. Different types of bikes are not mutually exclusive categories, anyway.
    What I don't get is the need to tell people which bike they should ride. I suspect there will be (there already is) a lot of "just ride a MTB" or "just ride a road bike" comments.
    Go ride the (style of) bike you love the most on the terrain you love the most.

    • @edwinpalacios1377
      @edwinpalacios1377 Před měsícem +1

      What gravel, road, and mtb do you have?

    • @larsh8560
      @larsh8560 Před měsícem

      Gravel: Giant Revolt 0 Advanced
      Road: Cannondale Synapse
      MTB: Older Cannondale hardtail model
      @@edwinpalacios1377

    • @UKMitchy
      @UKMitchy Před měsícem +1

      I have mtb and gravel bike. i just bought a new steel gravel/adventure bike that uses boost mtb hub width. I'm giving up mtb anyway due to age, weather and fitness. I will get a nice set of wheels built for light days and keep and mtb wheelset for the touring etc.

  • @osborn.creative
    @osborn.creative Před měsícem +2

    I have a gravel bike and I also have a personal need for 2 different road bikes and a hard tail trail bike.
    It all comes down to what you need and what you want to ride.

  • @kippen64
    @kippen64 Před měsícem +3

    Drop bars are an absolute must on any bike I ride for more than 3km at a time. After 3km, flat bars start becoming the stuff of misery. I have made the embarrassing discovery that my lowest gear is 24/34. I have a triple crank set.

  • @sccxvelo
    @sccxvelo Před měsícem +3

    Been using CX bikes for my outdoor bike over 10 years for the exact reasons wider tires, comfortable yet responsive, more durable yet light, and freedom to ride most all places. Was given 2017 mid-high tier frame with entry level build CX demo bike with mech disc 1x11 15x100mmTA front late Dec 22 sitting in team storage and slowy working on it to update it to modern standards. That was after trying some newer entry gravel bikes felt way too planted then others were needing key upgrades right away to truaxle, etc. Go mid tier gravel bike if buying new should be solid frame, and build right away just choosing the best fitting bike.

    • @DR_1_1
      @DR_1_1 Před měsícem +1

      Same here, affordable aluminium CX to replace my old road bike, I changed the rear CX tyre with something slicker as I'm 80% on roads, and bought a new front wheel to have a choice of tyres if riding in humid conditions on trails.
      It's more fun to ride than road and gravel frames, but it's not for anybody I guess, and often limited to ~33mm tyres, not enough if you are really into trails - but in this case a MTB with suspension is needed anyway.

  • @yourdailymotion
    @yourdailymotion Před měsícem +1

    Having got back into cycling 15 years ago on a road bike, I then tried both mountain and hybrid. Then it was CX and adventure bikes. I often wondered what a 1X would be like and then in 2022 I became the owner of a Cannondale Topstone 4 with the Microshift Advent X 1X 10 speed. It was a revelation!.
    I ride mainly cycle tracks of loose gravel, tow paths and much rougher farm tracks. And some road sections, of course, some of which are VERY steep. The Topstone 4 handles all of the above with ease, as do the Microshift gears. I find the bike an excellent ride and when I bought it ( I soon added a second! ) the Alpine Blue model was available with a huge discount and a free Cannondale helmet!.
    My bikes get hard use most days and even if I could afford a much more expensive bike I wouldn't be tempted. My advice to anyone thinking of a gravel bike would be to get an entry model from a good manufacturer and have fun!.

  • @endcensorship874
    @endcensorship874 Před měsícem +1

    I bought a Rodeo-Labs Trail Donkey two years ago, and it was the best purchase I ever made. It's my #1 ride, and is perfect for all the ways you described. Especially where I live with such crappy roads, it might as well me gravel all around me.

  • @niklaskristensson2231
    @niklaskristensson2231 Před měsícem +1

    Gravel with saddle and steerer suspension and fast wheels is perfect. Nice looking bike btw!

  • @ErwinPfuhler
    @ErwinPfuhler Před měsícem +3

    I favor my gravel bike over my road bike, because most rides include some off road sections, which are no fun with 25mm tires ;-).

  • @rah4981
    @rah4981 Před měsícem +1

    The bike I need is so small that it dosen't work that good for bikepacking, can't get all the camping gear with me, tried bikepacking with my road bike.
    The bags wil need to be small, still rubbing my wheels.
    So I bought a touring bike, with triple crank and bar end shifters.
    Very pleased with this choice, can ride exactly the same trails as a gravel bike.
    Plenty of low gears for hills and gets all the stuff with me in panniers.
    Use this bike for winter bike also, commuting to work with it, super comfortable to ride, weight dosen't matter to me.

  • @fennec13
    @fennec13 Před měsícem +4

    I have a Ti gravel bike with two carbon wheelsets (one for gravel with 45 mm knobby tires and the other with 32mm gravelking ss tires) .
    It has suited my gravel and endurance road riding adventures with no problems whatsoever ! I am running a 2x GRX810 setup.
    Is it as fast as a purpose suited road bike or as suitable on some gnarly MTB trails ? maybe not, but it's all the bike I need !

  • @ColinKlupiec
    @ColinKlupiec Před měsícem +1

    Nice video David. I have the Canyon Grizl with SRAM Apex AXS 1x. I can vouch for all the points you make. I'm surprised at how much enjoyment you can get out of this style of bike. Excellent versatility and value for money.

  • @jonathangreen7111
    @jonathangreen7111 Před měsícem +1

    Completely agree with you. I have a custom Burls titanium gravel bike with 2 pairs of wheels. My lightweight road bike is best for the smooth roads eg Costa Blanca/Mallorca but I love the versatility of the gravel bike for weeks/weekends away and the chance to ride different terrains.

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem

      Burls, there's a name I've not heard in years! Tested one of his bikes way back when I worked at RoadcyclingUK!

  • @TimR123
    @TimR123 Před měsícem

    I purchased a used Cutthroat two years ago. It is such a great 'all around' bike like you discuss. It doesn't replace my road bikes but kinda replaces my MTB since I don't prefer the super challenging MTB runs usually anyway. Funnily enough, I ended up building out my old rigid '90s MTB' with drop bars etc to be a second 'gravel bike' so my kids to join me.

  • @divil58
    @divil58 Před měsícem +2

    Long time road biker and just bought a Topstone Carbon 3 for exploring the dirty bits around Stockport/Cheshire.... currently loving it and going to take it to France with me instead of my road bike for 2 months in May! 😁👍

  • @brijnich
    @brijnich Před měsícem +3

    Each to their own and obv depends on the type of terrain you live by, but for me it's Road and MTB. The MTB covers more % of off-road terrain. BUT whatever floats yer boat

  • @tezzanewton
    @tezzanewton Před měsícem +2

    I have two gravel bikes, one road bike and one mountain bike. So basically, four bikes is the perfect sweet spot.

  • @3TZZZ
    @3TZZZ Před měsícem +2

    I only ride gravel bikes. I have two. One is a Cervelo Aspero set up with 32mm road tyres, which makes a brilliant road training bike and occasional gravel race bike with 40mm tyres; the other is a 3T Exploro Ultra set up with wider tyres as a road/gravel crossover bike for more varied adventures and bikepacking. I’ll never buy a road bike again.

    • @tariqkamil7853
      @tariqkamil7853 Před měsícem

      Almost the same set up. Aspero (not the 5) with slicks and just got a Ritchey outback 4 weeks ago

  • @salzhaltigersalzhaufen586
    @salzhaltigersalzhaufen586 Před měsícem +2

    Personally for a gravel bike that is a sort of do it all bike I still don´t get why you wouldn´t want at least two chainrings at the front cuz I feel it´s not that much more complicated and it gives you a lot more range. Expecially when you want to go fast on a road you got your big chainring and for slower more technical terrain you can use your small chainring.
    Also what I always wondered about are there bikes out there that have a carbon fork with no mounting holes but then have custom clamps made for that fork so you can bolt bags onto your fork
    Over all I agree tho Gravel Bikes are great even though I have my road bike and sperate gravel bike just because I like to go fast on the road well and gravel bikes were unaffordable when I first bought my road bike in 2020

  • @the_derpler
    @the_derpler Před měsícem

    Sold my road bike a while back. Most of the riding I do here in the bay area involves mixed terrain. Also getting to a place where I could actually MTB requires me to ride a reasonable amount of road riding, going over the Golden Gate bridge w/ a mountain bike just feels painful to me :)
    So with that said, my most used bike is a Ritchey Swiss Cross w/ 700x38s

  • @Davidkaisermusic
    @Davidkaisermusic Před měsícem +1

    It’s funny, I bought a used 2016 Diverge as my “do-it-all” bike but tbh, it’s more similar to a road bike than newer gravel bikes so I’m converting that to a road bike and buying ANOTHER gravel bike to ride the rougher stuff. Strictly adhering to the N+1 rule of bike ownership

  • @sheriffdohboy
    @sheriffdohboy Před měsícem

    Picked up a 2018 Diverge E5 alloy with 105 as my first drop bar bike ever a few months ago…been on hardtails for commuting since for ever…the idea of being able to run a larger tyre on my first road bike being a major draw…it came with 32mil road tyres and I only threw on my first set of gravel tyres yesterday but kept it to a slim 33mil vittoria…I’m going on a trail ride with the kids soon..they are on hardtails so interested to see how I will go…TBH I am using the bike more on road than anything so now find myself lusting after a nice endurance bike…they definitely have a place but a real nice road bike still has a different aura

  • @sootymilly15
    @sootymilly15 Před měsícem

    Absolutely love my Canyon Grizl, hoping to do Lands End to John o groats next year and would choose the Grizl over my road bike (2024 Merida Reacto 8000)

  • @JeremieCorcos
    @JeremieCorcos Před měsícem +1

    Hi David, love your videos. When is Defy 2024 long term review coming out?

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem +2

      Filming and editing it at the moment, when it’s not raining

  • @lyellharrington7260
    @lyellharrington7260 Před měsícem +1

    Funny enough, I've been the down the road of been road rider only as fast as I could go too going crazy on the roughest mtb tracks I could, definitely spent alot of money on the bikes for those extremes. Yet out of all those bike I've only keeped my razor sharp criterium bike as the permanently mounted trainer bike used for warm ups only, it never sees the surface of any road these days, a useful but truly sad end for such a bike.
    So to fill the my need for riding without been bored out of my brains with either straight road riding (truly brain dead boring) or mtb only extreme rough stuff (mtbs have just got to good these days to be any fun, the risks needed for the fun rewards are to much and to painful when you balls up), I ended up spending high end for the cx bike first then gravel bike and have never looked back at dumping those other bikes out of my riding life.
    Now it's gravel bike 95% of my riding time and the last 5% on the cx bike, got the FUN & CHALLENGING FACTORS back into my riding and the rides are never boring, actually they do more too invigorate me to ride more miles and thus keeping me fitter which is a very good thing considering the injuires the body has accumulated over the decades of riding.

  • @WayneCouyon
    @WayneCouyon Před měsícem

    I have a Tarmac SL8 with Rapide CLX wheels and 28 mm tires. It's hands down the best road bike I ever ridden, and I owned most of the high(er) end ones during the past three-four years. It's almost as comfortable on our shitty roads as a good endurance bike, it's fast and effortless at speed as an aero bike and climbs like a dedicated climbing bike.
    All this doesn't change the fact that drivers on the road pass me by half a meter without reason, that I get yelled at, honked at etc. just because I'm also trying to be a part of road traffic, and so on. Sometimes when I go for a ride, I get home more anxious than I was leaving the house. It's absurd. I found myself to gravitating towards forest roads, byways wherever I can, utmost speed and efficiency be damned.

  • @vegasbornmedia
    @vegasbornmedia Před měsícem

    What’s the frame weight of the new Ventum GS1 featured here?

  • @chrisbenson_madeira
    @chrisbenson_madeira Před měsícem

    I have been eyeing the Crux as a next purchase for road/gravel/light singletrack. Technically a cx bike, not gravel, but those lines are blurry these days. Wish it had a UDH compatible frame though.

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem +1

      Technically it’s a gravel bike now 😜 UDH is bound to come to the next update

  • @3TZZZ
    @3TZZZ Před měsícem +1

    Here’s a slightly curly gravel bike question for you David (and / or the brains trust). ...Taking the mullet config further. Why not combine a road 2x crankset, with a mtb rear deraileur and cassette. EG SRAM D2 Road 46/33 chainrings on wide cranks (and wide front derailleur) with Eagle 12 speed AXS rear derailleur and 10-52 cassette?
    What would prevent it? Eagle Chain too short for 46 - 52?
    Imagine, then the bike really would be a jack of all trades, master of none. 46-10 for road / 33-52 for heavy bike packing loads!
    Anyone tried it?

    • @3TZZZ
      @3TZZZ Před měsícem

      Old school! …who even makes a triple these days?

    • @3TZZZ
      @3TZZZ Před měsícem

      @@kippen64 I’m not interested in a triple. I’d like to know if 46/33 double road chainrings can be used with a mullet / mtb rear derailleur and cassette?

  • @scrumartist5630
    @scrumartist5630 Před měsícem +1

    honestly an xc mtb is the all road bike
    and a race bike on the other end
    while a gravel in between only half asses it imo

  • @Cycling_Crazed_Fool
    @Cycling_Crazed_Fool Před 26 dny

    I personally think it’s the best bike for me. Most of my trails are very sedate so a gravel bike makes those trails feel exciting. They are fast enough on the road for most as well. Also and this is the big factor, the U.K. roads are soo poor that a focused road bike can be dangerous at times. 2 sets of wheels is perfect.

  • @TheCmcyclist
    @TheCmcyclist Před měsícem +2

    I need gravel trails close to where I live without having to travel for a couple hours. At any rate, if I do decide to ride gravel I'd just add 35mm tires to my endurance bike. Maybe not as functional as true gravel bikes with 45mm+ tires but for as little as I ride gravel 35mm tires on my endurance bike will be just fine.

    • @simple4586
      @simple4586 Před měsícem +1

      35's are absolutely fine! I ride mine the same and its enough for non-technical gravel.

  • @paulgordon7526
    @paulgordon7526 Před měsícem

    I have 3 road bikes 1 gravel bike my Free Ranger (Which I use most of the time even on the club rides) and a Boardman Hybrid with suspension. Should I sell my road bikes and just go Gravel? I'm now reaching 62 years of age so super fast riding is out of the question being that I average 23 to 28kmph on the road depending on conditions.

  • @Kittyjesus503
    @Kittyjesus503 Před měsícem

    Depends on where you live and how you ride. Where I live and as slow as I ride a Gravel bike makes sense. Too slow for a group rides and not rowdy enough for actual MTBing gravel bikes are still limited, just less limited.

  • @kcvfr400
    @kcvfr400 Před měsícem +1

    Put a double ring on the front and I can see the reasoning. Single front chainring is way to slow, clunky and less fun. My gravel bike feels like it can do so much. More like a replacement for my winter road bike and moutain bike, in that it has guards and more winter friendly tyres.

  • @ianthedondaws7559
    @ianthedondaws7559 Před měsícem

    Grevil f in stealth black and ekar…👍

  • @robertdewar1752
    @robertdewar1752 Před měsícem

    Would you recommend a CX bike, or a gravel bike. And what are the differences?

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem

      depends on the tyre clearance of the CX bike in question, and how wide a tyre you want really

  • @WhaJMc
    @WhaJMc Před měsícem

    The anti gravel brigade is active today. If you have trail at your doorstep or if you don't mind driving to the trails (something I'm trying to do less of) then a mountain bike might be fine. However if you ride a mixture of road and trails then a gravel bike is worth considering. Me I've gone for an all road bike with two wheelsets (gravel and road).

  • @IvanB2311
    @IvanB2311 Před měsícem

    David, what do some blogers mean, when saying that gravel and endurance bikes are cumbersome and dull?

  • @chrism5433
    @chrism5433 Před měsícem +1

    David wouldn't flat bars be a lot faster and manovrable on the trails . Not really lot of areo needed on gravel roads lol . ??

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem +2

      seen how fast the pros do Unbound? In my riding I find the drops a good position for faster longer gravel sections than wide flat bars on a mtb, one reason why for me it's a faster option on smoother tracks

    • @mctrials23
      @mctrials23 Před měsícem +1

      Thats a question of "whats a gravel trail". On a proper trail you wouldn't want a gravel bike. On anything up to and including many blues in the UK you would be much faster on a gravel bike. I have a short travel MTB that does everything within my wheelhouse when it comes to trails but I sure as hell wouldn't want to do any road riding on it or cover more than 40km in a day on it.
      Gravel bikes are a mix of both MTB and road bike but leaning much closer to a road bike. If that doesn't cover your riding, get a MTB.

    • @chrism5433
      @chrism5433 Před měsícem

      @@davidarthur I'll have get a gravel bike , it seems like a lot fun especially in winter days when main roads are not the greatest, no trails just good dirt gravel pathways in the forest that's what I would like lol thanks again 🚲🍺

  • @billwinnenberg2003
    @billwinnenberg2003 Před měsícem +1

    I understand that a gravel bike can be a fine road bike. However if you are really into road riding, and have a good road bike, a gravel bike set up for the road will not be the same. Gravel bike geometry will leave you wanting on the road, especially when cornering and accelerating. A gravel bike set up for the road will never match the quickness of a good road bike, in my opinion…

  • @illuminatustm
    @illuminatustm Před měsícem +2

    But I already have one

  • @WerdnaLiten
    @WerdnaLiten Před měsícem

    Unless you race, then most people don't need a race bike - being influenced by pros is laughable. Just get two sets of wheels to cover road/ odd-road bases.......and a Gravel bike is all you really need.

  • @thomasb.4219
    @thomasb.4219 Před měsícem +1

    One question: who is this one person who doesn't have a gravel bike yet? 😉

    • @scottf3456
      @scottf3456 Před měsícem +1

      People who don't live near gravel. The only gravel in my area is a canal path filled with walkers.Who wants to ride with walkers?

  • @Silidons91
    @Silidons91 Před měsícem

    I thought I needed an SL8 because it's the fastest bike ever made, ever ever

    • @davidarthur
      @davidarthur  Před měsícem

      If you want a road race bike, then yes. It’s not much cop on gravel though

  • @3-Angels-Message
    @3-Angels-Message Před měsícem

    Own gravel and MTB's. Spend 90% of the time on the gravel.

  • @Chimy1423
    @Chimy1423 Před měsícem +7

    Road Bikes for Asphalt... Mountain Bikes for anything else. I have a Trek Pro Caliber hardtail. Fast on gravel roads and comfortable on hard terrains.

  • @gur262
    @gur262 Před měsícem +3

    Or you throw TT bars on a XC MTB hardtail and get better Offroad and... better on road because aero.

  • @tyrionlannister9376
    @tyrionlannister9376 Před měsícem

    2 bikes for 2 entirely different purposes. This looks like nothing in comparison to Trek Madone. That's for the road. MTB and front suspension and 2.30 tires. Why make things more difficult than they really are?

  • @redauwg911
    @redauwg911 Před měsícem

    framesets starting at $2,599 and complete builds going to $10,499.

  • @kevjh.45
    @kevjh.45 Před měsícem

    when i first started riding mtb in the 90's this was often seen done by rigid riders..
    Do we need it this time around. Not too sure on that.
    I would buy a decent steel road bike with good tyre clearance and have the best of all worlds.

  • @dailykatdos2347
    @dailykatdos2347 Před měsícem

    Yeah and still slower than a road bike..! 😂

  • @percar70
    @percar70 Před měsícem

    Gravel bikes looking more and more like a 90’s MTB everyday

  • @user-qy8ph8tf3d
    @user-qy8ph8tf3d Před měsícem +4

    Come on then, go do some mountainbiking on it. Let's see how you survive anything but a blue trail for them kids. We'll wait.

    • @waynetravers6836
      @waynetravers6836 Před měsícem +4

      What point are you trying to make?

    • @mctrials23
      @mctrials23 Před měsícem +1

      @@waynetravers6836 I assume that its not a MTB. Thankfully his sage wisdom has stopped me from taking a gravel bike to Bike Park Wales. I was this close as well!

    • @user-qy8ph8tf3d
      @user-qy8ph8tf3d Před měsícem

      @@waynetravers6836 My point is that this marketologist bullshit needs to stop.
      You can't do any mtb stuff that requires your wheels to leave the ground on a gravel bike.
      Some pro mtb riders may get away with it, regular riders won't. Roadies will never get any positive emotions on a gravel bike doing mtb stuff. Beginners wil simply injure themselves doing mtb trails on a gravel bike, whereas on an MTB both roadies and beginners will be fine in the same place.
      Any gravity focused riding will simply destroy your gravel bike in a couple of sessions. If you have to pay for it with your own money it matters.
      If you are not interested in doing gravity riding it is fine, but don't lie about bike being able to do it if a couple of pro DH riders did on a bike that was given them for free to discard that shipwreck after making a video.
      Same case can be made for no gears needed if a pro road riders can climb at 39:22 ratio. Pros can get away with doing things you won't, and that same pro woudln't chose 39:22 ratio if it was his own bike.
      Don't see no pro mountainbikers ride their local trails at their own time on gravel bikes, even though they are pretty much the ones who can do it.

    • @AlexDresko
      @AlexDresko Před měsícem

      This is categorically false, and I'm proof.

  • @dragonnetx
    @dragonnetx Před měsícem +25

    Nah I don’t. Either pure road bike or mountain biking. I don’t believe the lies of the industry.

    • @cauldron101
      @cauldron101 Před měsícem +3

      Right said! I am all pro for this. A gravel bike seems like a road bike that want to go to the mountains. The stability offered by the flat bars and the suspension of a mountain bike is a whole different thing than a road bike with fatter tires and perhaps a 1x drivetrain.

    • @mctrials23
      @mctrials23 Před měsícem +14

      Not sure they are lies, there is plenty of terrain that is perfect for a gravel bike and shit on a road or MTB. I wouldn't have one if all I did was road cycling or proper MTB but if you want to eat up the miles on light offroad/road then they are perfect.

    • @yukiko_5051
      @yukiko_5051 Před měsícem +1

      I tried riding my 23c roadbike on gravel yesterday. Apparently you can do it, even though marketing said it's not good at all. Yet i am having a blast riding on gravel once in a while

    • @Hintonbro.
      @Hintonbro. Před měsícem +5

      So two bikes instead of one for both. I think “the industry” will appreciate you!

    • @daviddawn9043
      @daviddawn9043 Před měsícem

      100%

  • @daviddawn9043
    @daviddawn9043 Před měsícem

    Hate gravel no intention of doing gravel and gravel is a name gimmick.

    • @WhaJMc
      @WhaJMc Před měsícem +2

      A bit like "Mountain" biking.

  • @zj8330
    @zj8330 Před měsícem +1

    1 reason to not get a new bike: my salary🥲