IanSmithCSE
Guru
- Location
- Worcester, Worcestershire
Good afternoon,
I have recently finished a 6 month experiment where I decided to question everything that I know about bikes and ride an entry level bike (aluminium frame with Claris) in the maker’s spec and see what conclusion I would come to at the end.
Now I have been told before that my posts are too long, but there is also this thread https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/dumbed-down-not-much-of-interest.284089/ so what should I do?
By need I mean the point where dropping a feature means that I am far less happy cycling rather than I could do it on a single speed non alloy steel bike but wouldn’t want to.
The 6 month duration was intended to allow me to become fully acclimatised to the basic bike and have no rests from any annoying issues by getting the best bike out and going for a blast and all is well again.
I also decided that I would not change the basic bike from the maker’s specs as this is what they thought the customer wanted and what someone buying for the first time would assume was “correct and there must be something wrong with me.”
The basic bike is a Norco Valance aluminium/Claris https://www.norco.com/bike-archives/2017/valence-a-claris/ (maker's old page, uk model had different tyres) and the best a Jamis Xenith Pro carbon/Ultegra Di2 https://road.cc/content/review/68753-jamis-xenith-pro a review.
About a year ago I broke my 531 steel framed bike which was mostly evenly spec’ed at around the Shimano 600 level and this represents what I considered as normal and should be seen as the basis for many comparisons.
Being used to 52/42 and 11-25 I found the basic bike to be an effective 1x7 as 50x28 is the same gear as 42x24.
This post is mainly intended to give a background for other posts which will detail specific aspects in an attempt to keep those posts focused but the results – TL;DR
You can still buy the wrong bike.
An exception to the factory spec rule was that occasionally during the test period I would swap the Norco wheels out for the Sora/DP12, also moving the 11-32 cassette, over and every time I started to enjoy the ride again and at the end of the trial I put the RS10s on and it felt even better.
Wheels, Tyres and Gears, the wheel weights are wheels, tyres, tubes and cassette
Norco Own Branded - 700x28 Vittorria Randonneur, 8 speed 11-13-15-18-21-24-28-32, 3.54kg
Jamis Shimano RS10 – 700x23 Vittoria Rubino Pro, 10 Speed 11-12-13-14-15-17-19-21-23-25, 2.77kg
531 Sora/DP12 - 700x23 Halfords own brand, 8 speed 11-13-15-17-19-21-23-25, 3.61kg
A tyre called “Randonneur” would be expected to prioritise excellent mileage and puncture resistances which it does, bit for me it did so too much as the expense of being fun.
Bye
Ian
I have recently finished a 6 month experiment where I decided to question everything that I know about bikes and ride an entry level bike (aluminium frame with Claris) in the maker’s spec and see what conclusion I would come to at the end.
Now I have been told before that my posts are too long, but there is also this thread https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/dumbed-down-not-much-of-interest.284089/ so what should I do?

By need I mean the point where dropping a feature means that I am far less happy cycling rather than I could do it on a single speed non alloy steel bike but wouldn’t want to.
The 6 month duration was intended to allow me to become fully acclimatised to the basic bike and have no rests from any annoying issues by getting the best bike out and going for a blast and all is well again.
I also decided that I would not change the basic bike from the maker’s specs as this is what they thought the customer wanted and what someone buying for the first time would assume was “correct and there must be something wrong with me.”
The basic bike is a Norco Valance aluminium/Claris https://www.norco.com/bike-archives/2017/valence-a-claris/ (maker's old page, uk model had different tyres) and the best a Jamis Xenith Pro carbon/Ultegra Di2 https://road.cc/content/review/68753-jamis-xenith-pro a review.

About a year ago I broke my 531 steel framed bike which was mostly evenly spec’ed at around the Shimano 600 level and this represents what I considered as normal and should be seen as the basis for many comparisons.
Being used to 52/42 and 11-25 I found the basic bike to be an effective 1x7 as 50x28 is the same gear as 42x24.
This post is mainly intended to give a background for other posts which will detail specific aspects in an attempt to keep those posts focused but the results – TL;DR
You can still buy the wrong bike.
- Flat pedals without clips/clipless and 28mm “touring tyres” along with the “wrong” gears caused me to lose interest in riding.
- The bike came with platform/SPD but SPD and an odd shaped ankle after a few breaks are not compatible, no pedal retention was a real downer as I am used to toe clips/straps.
- I wouldn’t choose to ride a 1x7, but possibly a 1x8 and a 1x9 definitely.
- Claris STI front shifting is worse than downtube shifting
- I lost a lot of fitness as a result of the wide gear ratios and no retention.
An exception to the factory spec rule was that occasionally during the test period I would swap the Norco wheels out for the Sora/DP12, also moving the 11-32 cassette, over and every time I started to enjoy the ride again and at the end of the trial I put the RS10s on and it felt even better.
Wheels, Tyres and Gears, the wheel weights are wheels, tyres, tubes and cassette
Norco Own Branded - 700x28 Vittorria Randonneur, 8 speed 11-13-15-18-21-24-28-32, 3.54kg
Jamis Shimano RS10 – 700x23 Vittoria Rubino Pro, 10 Speed 11-12-13-14-15-17-19-21-23-25, 2.77kg
531 Sora/DP12 - 700x23 Halfords own brand, 8 speed 11-13-15-17-19-21-23-25, 3.61kg
A tyre called “Randonneur” would be expected to prioritise excellent mileage and puncture resistances which it does, bit for me it did so too much as the expense of being fun.
Bye
Ian
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