The Pinarello is a road bike. Sorry. I'm sure its very light though. You
really need to
learn a little about reading a bike geometry chart if you're offering that up as an alternative.
The Cannondale is probably one of the better options for a general purpose full power gravel ebike out there. Its not without its drawbacks. Tire clearance is fairly small for a modern gravel bike (42mm unless you size down to 650b wheels), and it (at least currently) uses an older Bosch controller that isn't compatible with their range extender. So your only option for having more than the stock 500whr battery is to carry extra spares (this was my main hangup with the Topstone as well as the Niner I linked earlier in the thread). And its not even
that much lighter (the Topstone Neo 5 is ~40lbs, and the rigid Salsa is 46lbs). A few of those pounds will be the larger battery. ~1 will be the dropper post.
And again, going back to geometry (which you have completely ignored this entire thread, presumably because you don't know what they mean), they are
very different. I'd recommend reading the link earlier, learning at least a
little and then looking at the geometry for the Topstone vs the Tributary. You're comparing bikes with a 4° headtube angle difference, 72mm difference in wheelbase, 25mm difference in chainstay, 5mm difference in bb drop, and so on. Obviously designed for different things.
I don't think Salsa is "infallible in its wisdom" (lol). They are good at their niche though. The Tributary is a niche bike.
I'm in the US, so its definitely available where I am.
No s*it, really?
I can't speak for the speed restrictions in other countries. Saying that gravel is for high speed and ultramarathons is stupid and elitist. Most people who ride gravel aren't doing ultra distance rides, nor are they riding at high speed.
Looking forward to reviews from owners.
As I posted in the other thread, my bucket list overnighters are in the 50-100 mile range. The
Slate Springs loop is one I've ridden bits and pieces of on a MTB, and its
very rugged. The Tributary would seem to be purpose built for those sorts of rides. You can sneer if you want, but I personally think its cool someone is making an ebike for people who want to do backcountry overnighters like these.