Recommend a sporty hybrid

Recommend a sporty hybrid

Author
Discussion

joestifff

Original Poster:

844 posts

119 months

Wednesday 14th May
quotequote all
Currently go out twice a week on my old giant racing bike. It’s 20 years old. Each ride is roughly 20 miles. Has 23mm tyres and curly bars. It’s a lovely thing. Was cheap 15 years ago at £150 and has done me well.

I’ve put up with the bars. But never loved them. Always much preferred flatter bars with easier to reach brakes etc.

I am by no means a racer. I got out for enjoyment. Don’t really track times. Not interested in beating last time and just chuck on a hoody and shorts. No Lycra here. Even stick to a pair of high tops to ride in!!

But I enjoy it. But after 1,000s of miles I still think I’d prefer a hybrid. But maybe on the sporty end. Not a gravel bike.

I’ve looked at new and second hand. But not sure. New I can get through cycle scheme. Second hand obviously cheaper but less choice.

Bike I’ve seen and kind of interested in:
Merida Speeder 500
Giant fastroad
Cannondale quick 1
Specialized sirrius 4.0

So does anyone ride such things? Any recommendations? I want something good but not bank breaking.

Any tips much appreciated.

OutInTheShed

10,936 posts

39 months

Wednesday 14th May
quotequote all
I sometimes meet a few people with hybrids.
Different people have different ideas about what a hybrid is all bout.

For the kind of riding that many people seem to like hybrids for, you could consider either a CX bike with flat bars or maybe a 'semi-old school' mountain bike with suitable tyres. A hardtail with 27 gears, a front fork that doesn't weigh a ton and tyres biased towards road can be a pleasant thing to ride on roads, tracks, bridleways. A CX frame and fork with flat bars and mountain bike gears is great up to the point you wish you had front suspension.

You could do worse than a modest mountain bike, disc brakes, 27.5 wheels 2 x 10 gears. My mate has one which cost him £250 in covid, probably worth £150 now, plus you'd want tyres for £40 or so?

Or maybe sort the bars with brake levers more accessible from the top or those 'auxillary levers'?

Craikeybaby

11,171 posts

238 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
I've got an Orange Speedwork - it is a flat bar gravel bike, but built up with MTB components. I paid £450 for it second hand, and it is a fun bike to ride, I bought it for commuting, but take it out for fun too.


Doofus

30,194 posts

186 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
I have a Whyte Shoreditch, which is definitely a street rather than gravel bike, but it has decent tyre clearance, is light and accelerates well.

plfrench

3,421 posts

281 months

Saturday 17th May
quotequote all
Saw these recently and didn’t realise there was a flat bar gravel bike niche, but seems to fit what you’re thinking of…



https://www.scott-sports.com/gb/en/product/scott-s...

BunkMoreland

1,809 posts

20 months

Thursday
quotequote all
plfrench said:
Saw these recently and didn’t realise there was a flat bar gravel bike niche, but seems to fit what you’re thinking of…



https://www.scott-sports.com/gb/en/product/scott-s...
"flat bar gravel bike"

We just call that a rigid mountain bike like we used to ride in the 90s!

fking manufacturers and their idiotic naming bks! laugh

mike9009

8,044 posts

256 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Hi, I have an 11 year old version of this ...

https://www.halfords.com/bikes/hybrid-bikes/boardm...

Currently on offer. Mine has been superb over the years but has been semi retired now. ( I have succumbed to an ebike but use it far more regularly for my commute) Light weight, comfy, fits your description.

Let's to have a decent set of components too.....