JselRollTide
New Member
- Region
- USA
Hi All,
Regular road cyclist here, located in the Seattle area. I am a moderately experienced rider and have primarily used my Trek Domane SL6 for the last 3 years. Most of my rides are between 10-20 miles, with the occasional longer one if my toddlers let me.
I'm in a position to commute to work a couple times of week, which is about 13 miles each way and I'm excited about the prospect of riding a bit more. I'm a bit of research nerd and have narrowed down my selection to 6 bikes, all with relatively similar attributes. Fortunately, being in Seattle I have a plethora of options in terms of local shops and pretty much all brands are available.
Must have's for me are:
E-Bike Comparison Chart (FYI some of the specs are little off on this site, but not by much. E.g., Bulls Iconic has a 120 mm shock and it's listed here at 100 mm)
My current takeaways (prices at local shops and before tax)
I'm not a bike mechanic by any means, I ride pretty hard - hoping to purchase a bike that with routine maintenance will last for years. The only thing stopping me from getting a bike in the next month or so is if there's a new bike/technology on the horizon that is worth waiting for.
Are there any of these bikes I should steer away from? Is there a bike I should remove from the list as they are unable to support a rear child seat? In the event I'm biking through weather, would any of these bikes be poor choices?
Not seeing a lot of first hand experience with any of these bikes except for the Specialized, would love to hear if anyone has ridden these before.
Thanks for any insight!
Regular road cyclist here, located in the Seattle area. I am a moderately experienced rider and have primarily used my Trek Domane SL6 for the last 3 years. Most of my rides are between 10-20 miles, with the occasional longer one if my toddlers let me.
I'm in a position to commute to work a couple times of week, which is about 13 miles each way and I'm excited about the prospect of riding a bit more. I'm a bit of research nerd and have narrowed down my selection to 6 bikes, all with relatively similar attributes. Fortunately, being in Seattle I have a plethora of options in terms of local shops and pretty much all brands are available.
Must have's for me are:
- Class 3 (>80 Nm due to hills)
- Front Suspension
- Child seat compatible through rear rack mount (not only compatible, but confident inspiring)
- Approved to bike through moderate rainy weather.
- Ability to do gravel on stock wheels/tires, and a minimum range of 30 miles at the fastest mode.
- My budget is stretched to about $4500 out the door, if there's a relatively compelling reason I could potentially boost that up to $5000, but I'm very unlikely to do so.
- I'm 5'7 (29"/30" in seam), my wife is 5'2.5, bonus points if we can fit on the same bike
E-Bike Comparison Chart (FYI some of the specs are little off on this site, but not by much. E.g., Bulls Iconic has a 120 mm shock and it's listed here at 100 mm)
My current takeaways (prices at local shops and before tax)
- Bulls Iconic Evo 1 Speed ($3999) checks all the boxes, only issue is the weight as I believe it'll be the heaviest of all the options. The 120mm of travel is great, but probably an overkill.
- Marin Sausalito E2 ST ($3249) looks fantastic, but it's pretty bare bones (no racks or anything included) and the tires are a bit narrow and very much road specific and no knobs. My main concern with this one is a child carrier on the back with my 30 pound 4 year old and the front suspension is there, but it's pretty minimal
- Gazelles are all $500 - $700 off original price. Stock, they all have fairly narrow tires, only 1.75". But apparently can go up to 2.35" before needing to take the fenders off. However, not really interested in making mods to a brand new bike unless it's the winner.
- Gazelle Ultimate C380+ HMB ($3999)
- Gazelle Ultimate T10+ HMB ($3499)
- Gazelle Medeo T10+ HMB ($3099)
- Specialized Turbo Vado 5.0 ($4000 after $1000 off) this one also checks a lot of boxes and is actually available locally (at least per their website). I've read quite a few negative reviews on the 3.0 and the 4.0, but I believe the 5.0 is sound.
I'm not a bike mechanic by any means, I ride pretty hard - hoping to purchase a bike that with routine maintenance will last for years. The only thing stopping me from getting a bike in the next month or so is if there's a new bike/technology on the horizon that is worth waiting for.
Are there any of these bikes I should steer away from? Is there a bike I should remove from the list as they are unable to support a rear child seat? In the event I'm biking through weather, would any of these bikes be poor choices?
Not seeing a lot of first hand experience with any of these bikes except for the Specialized, would love to hear if anyone has ridden these before.
Thanks for any insight!
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