WWYD: Rebuild or replace (gravel bike question)
I have an older 2011 Kona Jake the Snake that I've put a shit ton of miles on between being my commuter, my very occasional road/gravel bike, and my trainer. MOST of it's miles are trainer miles, but I put probably 300 gravel/road miles in the summer too. It needs a solid rebuild, everything that moves on that bike is shot. It was the base model of that bike, so heavy wheels, crummy shifting, etc. Priced out Microshift Sword components, and it's looking like I'm in at about $300-$350 for everything I need (including some new brakes, cables, chain, grip tape, etc.).
That's sort of getting to the point where I could "think" about putting that toward an updated bike with some disc brakes and low level componentry.
Would you:
1) Spend the money and keep the Kona rolling
2) Hang it in the garage and get something a little newer
If #2, who's watching good deals? Or who's sellin :). They seem everywhere. Seems like it's not impossible to find an entry level gravel bike for $6-$900...
WWYD: Rebuild or replace (gravel bike question)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sfotex
Disk brakes = more modern rim/wheels choices that easily take wide tires... Canti's can be fickle to get around wide tires/narrow rims too. Kind of like the QR hubs. But not the end of the world.
I heard about this dude that even won the Tour de France with rim brakes a long time ago..
Yes. The rim is the issue with tire width. I can’t seem to get a decent tire over 30 on there. Maybe less. There’s a fair bit of room in the frame but I’d need some new wheels to run anything wider than that, and screwed and spacing means options are limited. Rims just too narrow to accommodate anything decent unfortunately.
It’s a weird conundrum. I have some bike prices in front of me now, just trying to decide. Leaning toward getting a new bike but gonna sleep on it.
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WWYD: Rebuild or replace (gravel bike question)
Use your 90s Stumpjumper with mustache bars and 45-50 tires. Cantilever brakes are fine for this, I’ve rode thousands of miles of dirt and gravel roads with them.
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WWYD: Rebuild or replace (gravel bike question)
Unfortunately, that stumpjumper is no longer in my possession :(. I also rode it for thousands of miles on dirt (technically and smooth), even with a nonfunctional rear shifter/derailer and tired front suspension fork.
Even with good pads, the cantilever braking did not compare to discs, even old avid mechanical disc brakes, in wet conditions. I felt that my trail riding skills got pretty good on that specialized riding steep trails in Skeggs Point and Joaquin Miller in heavy rains when rim brakes can only slow you down but couldn’t stop you until you get to the flats.
I’d use my old American Eagle bike for this use, but I can’t seem to find/source wheel and freehub/freewheel that’ll work for the rear spacing. I tried a sturmey-archer internal hub for a while, but it kinda sucked and it weighed a ton. Currently, it’s fixed, which is fun on dirt and gravel, but limiting on steeper stuff.