Conversion of Road Bike to Touring Bike

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dolphinbrain

New Member
I have a road bike and am planning to convert it to a touring bike. Anyone has any recommendations of what I should look into and perhaps if it is even a good idea to do so?
 

hubbike

Senior Member
Wouldn't be my choice. I think road bikes are designed for speed, at the expense of comfort and rugged durability. If your racer is any good, you'll probably ruin it by adding panniers, lower gears etc. Why not buy a (possibly 2nd hand) tourer designed for the job?

I guess it depends what you want to do with it. If its very light weight touring then I guess a road bike may have a few advantages (speed). if your looking for a cheap option, 2nd hand mtb's are great for touring (but slow).

If you are just looking for a 'taster' of touring then you could stick everything on plastic and go "credit card" touring with just a handlebar bag. Or else get a companion to come on holiday with you by car to take all the stuff. But neither of these options are as liberating as carrying all your own gear and heading off.
 

willem

Über Member
Depends a bit on how racey the road bike is. If it is a modern highly specific racer, forget about it. If it is an older steel racing bike, and even with perhaps more clearance for wider tyres, you can use it for hostelling or very light camping. In that case, a Carradice Nelson Longflap or Camper Longflap may be the most appropriate bags.
There are problems with road bikes:
Most frames are not stiff and strong enough for serious touring.
Modern road bikes lack the clearance for a tyres wider than 28 or even 25 mm without mudguards. Narrow tyres on a loaded bike have to be pumped up very very very hard.
Modern racing wheels with few spokes and fancy patterns are often not strong enough.
Geometry is nervous and uncomfortable.
Gearing is too high.
They may lack fittings for a rear carrier, although that can often be solved.

Older racing bikes often had stronger frames, more clearance, a more comfortable geometry, and fittings for a rear rack. They were more like what we now call an audax bike. If you have one of those, you can use it, provided you limit the luggage to something like 10 kg. That is possible: ultralight hikers carry less. Visit their websites for inspiration.

So if you want to go this way, and if your bike is not too racey, focus your attention on lightening your load, take a hard look at your rear wheel (perhaps get a traditional handbuilt 36 spoke rear wheel with a heavy rim), avoid anything off road, fit the widest possible touring tyres (Panaracer Pasela), get SKS raceblades for mudguards, perhaps raise your handlebar, lower your gearing somewhat.

Hope this helps. Touring is fun.
Willem
 
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