Fab Foodie
hanging-on in quiet desperation ...
- Location
- Kirton, Devon.
a lot has changed in twenty years. Gear changers have improved out of sight. Carbon forks have removed a lot of tarmac generated vibration. Clothing has got better. Clipless pedals, a novelty twenty years ago, are commonplace.
Your priorities should be
1. weight - yours, not the bike. Attend to your diet and cut down on the booze (and I'm not the kind of chap to suggest that lightly)
2. comfort (1). I'm afraid to say that I disagree with FF about the type of bike because I think that keeping your arms in the same position for seventy miles is terribly wearing. If somebody offers you a hybrid that is an absolute bargain, give it thought, but my advice is that bar-ends are a must on a flat bar bike.
3. comfort (2) your sit-upon will need toughening up if you are going to ride for two days in succession. This happens over time. There's no shortcut
4. comfort (3) get in to the habit of distributing your weight between saddle, handlebars and legs. Let each take a share of the strain. Clipless pedals will enable you to roll your weight around a bit to take the load of arms and bottom (see comfort (1) and (2)) and put more weight on your feet.
If you do get the bug then whatever you buy for £200 or even £300 will become a utility bike in fairly short order, but this ride matters, and I'd spend a bit of effort chasing down the bike best suited to the job. Your nearest Decathlon branch is in Reading, but if you can get over there then the Triban 3 is a fantastic bike for the money, and well worth considering. I don't know of anything for that kind of dosh that comes close.
If you can stretch to a Triban, then that's peachy, they're really excellent bikes and I agree with dellzeqq that cofortwise in the long run a drop bar bike ofers more hand positions and back angles than a flat bar, even with bar ends. But if £200 is the limit you'd probably get a better bike overall from a hybrid. Bar ends or butterfly bars on a hybrid improve comfort notably for little cost ... Many touring and expedition bikes these days are flat-barred so 2 x 70 mile days IMO shouldn't be too much of an issue.