My new Felt V100. |
Last summer I was riding Ponderosa Way and mused that the rough surface and steep inclines would be well suited for a Gravel Bike, the bike industry's newest marketing ploy to get us to buy more bikes. Well, their insidious strategy has worked on me. The other day after visiting a local Home Depot I wandered into a nearby bike shop, Bob's Cycles of Roseville. There I found a Felt V100 on sale for less than half price, $450 versus a msrp of about a grand.
I actually resisted the temptation of immediately buying it and looked at the market for gravel bikes. It seems like there are quite a few out now. Two other candidates for my price range was the Performance Access Old Turnpike and the Mongoose Selous Sport at Nashbar, plus a host of others available in the web nowadays.
I was really liking the Performance bike, but it was rapidly disappearing. I found a 54 at a San Diego shop, but I wanted to try the 56, plus being on holiday, it would have been a little...awkward. Finally, realizing that it was $200 more than the Felt finally made me decide to wait.
Weighing all the pro's and cons of the bikes available, I decided that the Felt offered the most pro's, with a good frame and carbon fork that seem to be shared with the other V-series Felts, including the V55 which costs up to $2,200, the Tektro discs and a decent Claris drivetrain all at a very competitive price.
When I got home I went by Bob's. The one I had tried out was gone, but they had a couple more at their Fair Oaks location. They transferred one over and the next day I was back. This bike was called a size 56, which the sales guy said was good for me. Evidently, the Felt sizing is based on effective toptube length, as opposed to seattube, as the seattube was only 52 cm's.
Looking at the reach from tip of the saddle to the handlebar, I thought I'd need a longer stem, but now that I've done a little riding, I think it fits pretty well. With those long STI brifter levers you do stretch out quite a bit. The only thing I don't care for is the large amount of seatpost showing, but that's just cosmetic. The height of the handlebars are at the same level as the saddle with no adjustment whatsoever.
Disc brakes are a new feature for me. |
The frame and forks are fairly straightforward, time alone will tell if they hold up well. The geometry seems pretty laid back with a headtube angle of <72 degrees. Trail is similar to my Mercian Tourer, somewhere in the low 60s. The bike handles no-handed very well, yet feels pretty nice on the twisties on Ridge Road.
The Shimano Claris shifters and derailleurs are the lowest level STI, but are working well right now. That they are only 8 speed is actually a bonus for me since all my other cassettes are 8's as well. The crank is a compact road with 50/34 chainrings. Combined with the 11-32 cassette I have an adequate low gear for an unloaded tourer, but I think the 50 is not so useful. I hope to swap that out for a 46 or 48 later on, which will give me more useful gears. Strangely, all the information I have read about the V100 indicates that it should have an FSA Tempo crank, which uses a traditional square taper bottom bracket. But both V100s I've seen at Bob's had the Shimano "RS200" compact crank. Looks like it's a square taper BB. Maybe this is why the heavy discount was applied; they ran out of FSA cranks? I'm thinking of upgrading the cranks to something radical, we'll see.
I'm pretty interested in the disc brakes. They are Tektro Miras, certainly not a top of the line brake, but they seem to work pretty well for now. I look at these as good training examples that I can learn disc maintenance on, before I upgrade to something a little nicer, probably the TRP Spyres, still mechanical, but supposedly superior, with both pads pressing onto the rotor, where the Miras have one moving pad and one fixed. I really don't want to get into a hydraulic disc on a bike.
A look at the rear disc. |
When I brought the Felt home, the first thing I did was install a Brooks B17, as the stock saddle didn't look great. I then removed the stock Vittoria 32c tires and installed my 37c Continental Tour Rides. The Conti's actually measure a true 35mm wide and they easily fit this frame. According to some literature I've read, Felt says a 40c will fit. Well, maybe so, if it's a narrow one!
An interesting feature on this bike are the unusually wide handlebars, the ends' width measure 49.5 cm's, while at the levers, the width is about 45! This actually feels pretty good and will no doubt be nice to have in rough conditions.
A look at the clearance with 37C (a true 35C) tire. |
I've only taken the Felt on road rides so far, but on those I felt pretty comfortable. I got used to the shifting pretty quickly, although I did have to make a couple of adjustments to the rear derailleur. The front derailleur has a "half click" trim action that seems to work quite well. I find that riding on the brake hoods is quite comfortable, but so is riding in the (slightly compact) "drops". Had I gotten a larger size, I may have been stretched out a bit too far.
Set up for riding. An interesting feature is the internal routing for brake and derailleur cables. |
Another tweak, switched saddles to the Swallow. |
Size: 56
Seat tube, (C-T): 520mm.
Head tube, horizontal, (effective?): 565mm.
Front Center: 621mm.
Wheelbase: 1041mm.
Chainstays: 430mm.
BB drop: 70mm.
HTA: 71.5.
STA: 73.5mm.
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