- 12,240

- Marin County
Took the Cervelo out for a big ride yesterday...honestly the first genuinely big ride on that bike. 62mi/100km and 5500ft of elevation. It did really well and it was probably the first 100k ride I've done where I didn't feel absolutely wrecked at the end...which I attribute to it fitting me correctly, having more compliance, and generally being a more stable bike than my old nervous Cannondale. I could have easily done 100 miles if it was a flatter route (It was a 6.5hr ride). On the old Cannondale (and I think also on the Ribble to a degree), I was in a very quad-dominant riding position and so my quads have become very strong in relation to my other leg muscles. The fit on the Cervelo has me in a lot more balanced position with regards to my legs and yesterday, for perhaps the first time ever maybe, I felt significant soreness in my glutes and hamstrings after around 3.5hr of riding. I think once I put a lot more miles into this bike it will eventually be for the better (considering they are the strongest muscle), but yesterday it ended up being my limiting factor.
The Cervelo is so good at just all paved road riding, and so comfortable, that I've been considering making the Ribble a little more off-road dedicated so it isn't redundant. I can sneak a 650bx2.1 in the frame so I think I might do that and swap the bar to a flat bar with MTB controls. Most of the off road opportunities around here are a lot more rowdy than a gravel bike is really intended for and I've felt myself pretty limited by the drop bar setup on technical descents, not to mention the 700Cx40 tires on there now. The main concern about doing this would be making the bike less suitable for longer rides...but I could also get some clip on "bar-ins" to help make up for the lack of hand positions if I were to do a longer ride.
The Cervelo is so good at just all paved road riding, and so comfortable, that I've been considering making the Ribble a little more off-road dedicated so it isn't redundant. I can sneak a 650bx2.1 in the frame so I think I might do that and swap the bar to a flat bar with MTB controls. Most of the off road opportunities around here are a lot more rowdy than a gravel bike is really intended for and I've felt myself pretty limited by the drop bar setup on technical descents, not to mention the 700Cx40 tires on there now. The main concern about doing this would be making the bike less suitable for longer rides...but I could also get some clip on "bar-ins" to help make up for the lack of hand positions if I were to do a longer ride.