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Here are five takeaways from this year鈥檚 test.
Here are five takeaways from this year鈥檚 test. (Photo: Justin VanAlstyne)
2020 Bike Test

5 Things We Learned at Our Bike Test This Year

What we learned from riding the best bikes of the year

Published: 
Here are five takeaways from this year鈥檚 test.
(Photo: Justin VanAlstyne)

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After putting 40 bikes through their paces on the roads and trails of northwest Arkansas, our team of 28 test riders had many things to say about the direction the sport of cycling is headed. Here are five takeaways from this year鈥檚 test.

Gravel Bikes Are the New Road Bikes

First lesson: gravel bikes matter more than road bikes. There are a number of reasons why the gravel category is now driving the drop-bar market.聽

For one, roads across the United States are becoming increasingly dangerous places for cyclists. Riding聽on less trafficked dirt and gravel roads reduces the likelihood of confrontations and crashes with motorists. Many of our test riders said they were making the switch to gravel because they鈥檝e had too many close encounters with distracted drivers聽or know a fellow cyclist who has been severely injured or killed while sharing the road.聽

Another, less morose reason for the growth in gravel-bike sales is that gravel strikes a chord with many cyclists that the 鈥渃omfort鈥 and 鈥渆ndurance road鈥 categories miss. Several of our older testers (who were accomplished road racers in their younger years)聽didn鈥檛 like the idea of 鈥渄owngrading鈥 to a road bike designed for comfort. However, they can get a more upright riding position, with a shorter reach from the saddle to the handlebars, on a gravel bike and still feel like they鈥檙e on something exciting. Similar reasoning also resonated with several testers who were transitioning from mountain bikes to drop-bar bikes and found the handling of road rigs too twitchy for their liking.

Even the best road聽bikes with intuitive handling and road-smoothing ride qualities, such as the 聽we tested, are still only the best tools for the job in a narrow range of applications. Gravel bikes, in contrast, cover a much broader breadth of possible uses. The and can be road-bike replacements because of their light weights and efficient geometries, making them聽excellent choices for gravel racing. At the other end of the spectrum, Niner鈥檚 carbon is racy enough for gravel events聽and also comes with rack and cargo mounts to carry all the gear you need for bikepacking adventures.聽

Unlike the marketing of traditional road bikes, which often features聽imagery of racing and suffering, marketing around gravel bikes focuses on exploration and adventure, without the unwritten rules and elitism of road-cycling culture. To be clear: there鈥檚 plenty of suffering in gravel racing, but for most participants, it鈥檚 an聽exercise聽in personal achievement and growth聽rather than the pursuit聽of a podium position.聽

Gravel has come a long way in a very short amount of time, and聽if this year鈥檚 test is any indication, this category is just getting started. My key takeaway from this year鈥檚 test is that it鈥檚 time to start thinking of gravel bikes as everyday road bikes, and to think of bikes designed for road racing as a niche within the cycling market.聽

Geometry鈥擭ot Suspension Travel鈥擠efines Modern Mountain Bikes

A few years ago, this bike test was filled with fat聽and plus-size聽mountain bikes and debates on wheel and tire sizes. In the past couple years, wheel and tire sizes have stabilized鈥攖he majority of mountain bikes feature 29-inch wheels with 2.4-to-2.6-inch-wide tires. The focus has shifted from rolling stock to frame angles.聽

Mountain-bike geometry is awash in experimentation. Companies are pushing the limits of how long and slack bikes can be. As a result, we鈥檙e seeing short-travel trail bikes with longer wheelbases, longer reach measurements,聽and slacker head angles than downhill race bikes from a decade ago. If this wasn鈥檛 remarkable enough in its own right, thanks to improvements in shocks and suspension designs, most of these bikes are also more efficient on the uphill than cross-country bikes from that same time period.聽

It鈥檚 no longer enough to judge a bike by how much travel it has: consumers must also take into consideration the interplay of frame angles and design, which can befuddle those who just want to ride a bike. Today鈥檚 raked-out steeds are exceptionally capable in most instances, though they do favor high-speed handling over slow-speed agility. As a result, there were some riders in our test team who yearned for more nimble, playful machines.聽

The industry鈥檚 current experiments in mountain-bike geometry make it even more important to test-ride before you buy. Two different mountain bikes with the same amount of suspension travel and different geometry will have very distinct personalities. It will be interesting to see where we are a few years from now. Will we still be going down the longer, slacker path? Or will rider tastes change, resulting in a return to more compact designs that favor agility over speed? Time will tell.聽

Women-Specific Bikes Are Becoming Less Common

One of the most interesting takeaways from this year鈥檚 test is that bikes designed and marketed to female cyclists are becoming significantly less common. Specialized and Trek have dropped women-specific models from their lines. Yeti has eliminated its Beti line of women鈥檚 mountain bikes as well.聽

Specialized has gone so far as to create a 鈥溾澛燾ampaign making聽the case that聽physiological differences between male and female cyclists are so slight that different frame geometry isn鈥檛 warranted. Gloves and saddles, however, are areas where Specialized believes these differences are apparent, but even then, some men鈥攎yself included鈥攈ave tried women-specific saddles from companies such as Specialized and WTB and found them to be more comfortable.

Frequently, bikes marketed to female riders are equipped with narrower handlebars, smaller diameter grips, shorter crankarms, and, in the case of some full-suspension models, shock tunes聽better suited to lightweight riders. In many instances, these are smart component considerations that apply as much to smaller men as they do to women.聽

Despite the shrinking field, we included women鈥檚 models from 听补苍诲听. These companies focus as much on creating a space and promoting a riding culture for women as they do on making bikes for them. Some of our female testers appreciated these bikes聽and said that the presence of women-specific bikes made them feel welcome in the sport. Others preferred the unisex bikes.

Two of the mountain bikes provided an interesting study: the Juliana Joplin and the Santa Cruz Tallboy. The Joplin聽shares the same frame as the Tallboy. Aside from paint schemes and logos, the carbon frames are identical. When it came to which bike they would actually purchase, our female testers overwhelmingly gravitated toward the Tallboy over the Joplin. One tester felt the Santa Cruz name carried more cachet. Another rider noted that while she appreciated Juliana鈥檚 commitment to getting more women on mountain bikes, if she were to purchase one of these two models, she would buy the Santa Cruz, citing its broader appeal when the time came to resell.聽

Electronic Shifting Reigns Supreme on the Road but聽Not so Much on the Trail

Many of the road and gravel bikes we tested were equipped with SRAM鈥檚 wireless eTap Axs shifting or Shimano鈥檚 Di2. Testers had their own opinions as to which system they preferred (more on that later), but everyone agreed that the light touch, ability to reprogram button functions, and shift speed and accuracy on both were significantly better than cable-actuated systems. I wouldn鈥檛 be surprised to see cable-operated drivetrains disappear from high-end road and gravel groups within a few seasons.聽

The story was different on the dirt. Several of our test bikes featured SRAM鈥檚 Eagle Axs聽electronic drivetrains, and a few e-mountain bikes were still sporting Shimano鈥檚 aging 11-speed XT Di2 system. This Di2 drivetrain lags significantly behind its cable-actuated, 12-speed counterpart in terms of range of gearing. In contrast, SRAM鈥檚 12-speed electronic-mountain-bike drivetrain is up to par, but it wasn鈥檛 the hit I thought it would be. Several test riders commented that they didn鈥檛 like the shape of the Eagle Axs聽shift paddles and聽didn鈥檛 feel that the shifting was as fast or intuitive as high-end, cable-actuated drivetrains.聽The lever layout was enough of a hindrance that they wouldn鈥檛 buy a bike equipped with the system, they said. Other testers got along well with Eagle Axs聽but worried about the replacement cost if they wrecked a rear derailleur鈥攖hat鈥檚 a $700 fix.聽

Shimano Has Drivetrain Dominance鈥攆or Now

The battle between cycling-component behemoths Shimano and SRAM is relentless, but for 2020, Shimano has the upper hand both on and off the road.聽

On the road side, Shimano鈥檚 Di2 system edges out SRAM鈥檚 eTap Axs聽drivetrains in terms of button function, layout, and shift feel. Shimano鈥檚 new gravel-centric GRX group was also a big hit. Riders loved the shape of the GRX hoods and brake levers. The hoods are taller than those found on Shimano鈥檚 Ultegra and Dura-Ace levers in order to provide a more secure handhold when riding rough roads with hands perched on top of the levers. Shimano also adjusted the pivot point on brake levers to provide more leverage from this position. In my opinion, this is something the company should incorporate into its entry-level road groups as well.

SRAM held dominion over the mountain-bike drivetrain market for nearly a decade. The company deserves full credit for advancing single-chainring drivetrains to the point they are today. Shimano was woefully slow to react, and the company鈥檚 1×11 drivetrains were lackluster, but the latest 12-speed XTR, XT, SLX, and Deore groups outclass all of SRAM鈥檚 comparable offerings. We noted how much better Shimano鈥檚 drivetrains shifted under power when we were stomping on the pedals. The ability to fire off multiple downshifts with a single throw of the release lever鈥攁 patented feature absent from SRAM鈥檚 shifters鈥攃ame in handy each time we sprinted out of turns.聽

This fight is far from over. SRAM isn鈥檛 a company to rest on its laurels. Next season it could be a very different story.

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