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Road Cycling “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” -- Ernest Hemingway

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Old 05-14-02 | 10:01 PM
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I know this is a Cross bike but I wanted other opinions too. The Cyclocross forum isn't a real happenin' place right now. What are your thoughts on this bike? I can get it for about $1200. At first I wasn't sure about the colors, but now I really like it. I've also put a link to Bianchi's page so you can look at the specs. Thanks
https://www.bianchiusa.com/site/bikes/road/12_axis.html
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Old 05-15-02 | 08:06 AM
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I don't know how it would be for 'cross, but it looks great for an all-around bike. Wide gearing, STI, ability to take fat tires, fenders, racks... it would be a killer commuter.

Except for those chichi low spoke-count wheels.

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Old 05-15-02 | 08:25 AM
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I think it looks great....In the future I would like to get my self a good cyclo-cross bike. Now the difference between that and a regular road bike is the wheels? Right? You can always switch the wheels to regular road wheels, when off the dirt trail, I would hope. Well anyways, I would buy it, if I had the money!:thumbup:
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Old 05-15-02 | 08:41 AM
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From: Not far from the Withlacoochee Trail. 🚴🏻

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DG,
Looks like a winner to me.

At www.roadbikereview.com it received a 4.4 out of 5 rating.
One person on that site said he paid $1000, three others paid MSRP of $1300.

Go for it. :thumbup:
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Old 05-15-02 | 08:53 AM
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I like the colour, actually. Celeste kind of grows on you... and it is, I am told, the colour of the universe.

Rager: A cross bike has some specialist adaptations to the standard road bike... It has a higher bottom bracket, which gives more clearance over trail obstacles; more tire clearance and cantilever brakes, that allow for wider, knobby tires [usually something like 28c-35c]; lower gearing, for grinding through the dirt, usually a 48-38 chainring combination up front rather than the usual roadie 53-39; a slightly compact frame -- vertically to allow for easier dismounts and portage, horizontally to give a slightly more upright position in the drops; usually slightly wider handlebars with a squarer top bend...

None of this means that you couldn't swap out the tires to 25c or 23c tires and use it as a road bike, though. Most 'cross bikes make perfectly capable road bikes, and I've used mine for 80-100 km road rides in bad weather. The geometry doesn't exactly favour racing -- a bit too upright, with the high BB -- but that dosn't mean anything.

Rich:Actually, I think it's quite nicely specced for 'cross. The CF fork is a nice touch and, though I like more of a solid block, the MTB cassette is a nice touch for climbing -- the 38/32 is almost 1:1! I think it's also a very nice all-arounder. In fact, I'm beginning to think that cyclocross bikes may be the perfect all-around design. Sure, there might be some compromises -- not as agressive as a full-on roadie, and not exactly set up for freeriding -- but for everything else, the geometry and spec [of most mid-range 'cross bikes, not just this one] is just right.

The irony is that the bicycle industry has been experimenting with hybrids and cruisers and flat-bar road bikes and whatever for 15 years, and yet here's an ideal, all-around design that's been around for more than half a century. An agressive manufacturer could spec a good quality, sub-22 lb aluminum 'cross bike and sell it as an all-around road bike for 450. That could revolutionize the bike biz.
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