Surly Long Haul Trucker - 500 mile review

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yashicamat

New Member
I've put this into the reviews section too, but thought I'd pop it here if anyone wanted to comment / discuss.:laugh:

In early summer this year, I decided it was time to buy myself a decent touring bike.:laugh: Biting the bullet on cost, I decided to set myself a ceiling in the order of Dawes Galaxy type money. The Galaxy was the obvious initial thought being virtually a household name, but my LBS also stocked Surly bikes, a brand I'd never heard of before really. I spent some time looking at reviews and it would seem that the LHT is a worthy touring machine.

Back to the LBS eventually (after scraping the funds together), I gave both a Galaxy and the LHT a good test ride. While the quality of the Galaxy was evident, I was bowled over by the solid feel and smooth ride of the LHT. The components were all good quality too, so I purchased the Surly at the end of July, complete with SKS mudguards, a rack and a Brooks B17 saddle.

Here was the bike upon getting it home that day:

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Well, 537 miles further on and as we enter winter, I gave the bike a good service and clean, dismantled the drivetrain and thoroughly cleaned everything and decided to reflect on the miles covered since I bought it.

During a 3 day tour of Shropshire in August the bike was very comfortable and remarkably easy to handle, even loaded up with camping kit, be it batting along a flat lane or slicing up a twisty downhill road. It would seem that the frame is equally well suited to both loaded and unloaded use, with day rides being comfortable although it does ride better when loaded. The only slight issue I felt was that it was lacking braking power a little (especially when loaded up), so as part of this service I've upgraded the front pads . . . we'll see how this goes. This bike is very stable at speed, I've had it to nearly 50mph on a wide fast downhill locally and it was steady as a rock, but with the aforementioned lack of braking power, I wouldn't take this bike over 30mph with any amount of kit strapped on.

The bike 130 miles into the tour of Shropshire:

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The gearing is absolutely perfect, there are low enough gears to drag the fully loaded bike up 15% gradients, yet enough top end to keep some pedalling going on fast downhills. I rapidly tired of the indexed bar ends for the rear mech and switcing the indexing off resulted in a much more pleasant gearchange with no nasty clicks from the index.

The bike seems to draw a lot of comments, partly because of the unusual colour, but also because the brand seems to be relatively unknown on this side of the pond. Probably a good thing too, as it hopefully is less of a target to theives.

Overall I am very pleased with the bike, it is a bit heavier than some of the competition, but at the same time it feels like it will go on for decades . . . in fact, I'm sure it will.:laugh:

The bike now:

537milesin.jpg


Cheers,

Rob
 

dubman

Guru
Location
Derby
Hi great review ;) i also picked up the same bike this summer and have covered about 450 miles. I have to agree its a really great bike and for the money takes some beating.
 
You could swap out the front pads for salmon Kool Stops - fantastic smooth braking power - "the best brake shoes you can buy at any price" - Sheldon Brown. If that’s not enough, swap out the front brakes for Tektro CR520 or 720's (from dotBike or Zepnat) - I've done both and its more than enough braking.
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HelenD123

Legendary Member
Location
York
Spandex put some cheap brake pads on our Galaxies and the braking is much better than with the original pads:wacko:. Sorry, I don't know the make.
 

Banjo

Fuelled with Jelly Babies
Location
South Wales
Great looking bike. A friend of mine has one and loves it.

Never seen a washing basket used as a pannier before though:-)


537milesin.jpg


Surly riders seem to have a certain style.
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OP
OP
yashicamat

yashicamat

New Member
Ha ha, excellent, I wondered who'd be the first to spot the cask loitering in the background.:laugh: Full of 36 pints of 5% chocolate stout for Christmas.:smile:

The washing basket acts as an interim recycling sorting box . . . . well, that's the idea anyway.
 

monkeyjo

Active Member
Location
London
New Horizon said:
You could swap out the front pads for salmon Kool Stops - fantastic smooth braking power - "the best brake shoes you can buy at any price" - Sheldon Brown. If that’s not enough, swap out the front brakes for Tektro CR520 or 720's (from dotBike or Zepnat) - I've done both and its more than enough braking.

That's what I did first with my Dawes Horizon. Sadly the braking is still rubbish so I might go down the CR520 route. I've got Tektro Oryx brakes at the moment and they really are poor.

Yashicamat, do have Tektro Oryx on your Surly?

I'm really tempted to buy a LHT frame next year...
 

Flying_Monkey

Recyclist
Location
Odawa
LHTs always look the business. Actually most Surly bikes do...

A friend of mine here rode from Kingston, Ontario to Halifax, Nova Scotia on one this past summer. He's still riding it so it must have done the job!
 

irc

New Member
Location
Glasgow
I got a LHT frame built up with a mixture of new parts and bits off my old Galaxy. Main choices were LX parallel push V brakes with Dia Compe 287 levers, bar end shifters, gearing of 22/32/42 front and 11-34 rear. Handbuilt rear wheel from Spa Cycles with a Sputnik rim on XT hub, and Tubus racks front and rear.

Compared to the Galaxy the handling was much more solid. Perhaps a bit stiff when riding unloaded. Fully loaded it is faultless. I can ride hands free at any speed. There is no flex under load. It just goes where it is pointed.

I used it for a 4500 mile USA coast to coast. The only bike problems I had were 3 punctures and a gear cable needing adjusting.

One of the small things on the build that made a difference was that the bars had a shorter than usual drop from the tops to the drops.Although it was only maybe an inch less the bar end shifters felt much closer to hand than they did with the old bars.

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