CassidyAce
Senior Retro Guru
I decided to buy an entry level road bike. The rationale is that I have limited time for riding and I thought that a road bike would get me further, faster, and therefore open up more routes. I've been riding on a lot of country lanes on rigid MTBs recently and the roadies look much, much faster. In due course, when availability returns to normal levels, I probably will get a new drop bar bike of some description, with disc brakes (the only thing I really miss riding retro all the time) but, for now, I thought I'd get an entry level road bike to see what I like, what I don't like, and what to watch out for in the future.
The last time I rode a road bike was probably in 1999 and I think it was a Raleigh Clubman: 10 speed, down tube friction shifters, old school. This time, I was looking for modern(ish) and definitely entry level, on the assumption that the geometry might be more newbie-friendly. I'm not looking to race, or beat Strava times, or compete in any way—just go further in limited time and enjoy more of the countryside. So, I set a budget of between £200-£400 and searched in the usual places; Trek, Giant, Specialized, Dawes seemed like suitable search terms for what I was after. A 2011 Specialized Allez Elite caught my eye and was a contender—Specialized's bikes have been good to me—but it was 90 miles away and, well, I wasn't that keen on the slightly garish red and white paint job. The reviews were good, though. If I buy a gravel bike, a Diverge would be the first line I'd look at.
Much closer to home, though, and in more tasteful paint, there was a Pinnacle Dolomite 4 from 2015. Not disc brakes, but tapered head tube, internal cable routing, carbon fork, Tiagra components. (Is that the road bike equivalent of Alivio?) But isn't Pinnacle just Evans' version of Carrera, I thought? A bit too budget. However, reviews indicated that at least some are a bit better than that. It cost £700 new and, apparently, weighs under 9kg, which sounded pretty good, coming from a MTB background. Perhaps roadies would find that heavy. Anyway, £210 BIN sounded reasonable, but I put in a bid and, as the only bidder, got it for £150. Under budget—bonus! I could scarcely go wrong at that price.
Anyway, as a road bike ignoramus, I was wondering: Has anyone got any experience, good or bad, of Pinnacle bikes? How do these newfangled shifters-next-to-brake-levers work? What are those weird little things, visible through the drops, that look like cable connectors of some sort? Are caliper brakes as strong as V-brakes? How do those tyres offer any grip in the wet?
Any opinions, answers gratefully received.
The last time I rode a road bike was probably in 1999 and I think it was a Raleigh Clubman: 10 speed, down tube friction shifters, old school. This time, I was looking for modern(ish) and definitely entry level, on the assumption that the geometry might be more newbie-friendly. I'm not looking to race, or beat Strava times, or compete in any way—just go further in limited time and enjoy more of the countryside. So, I set a budget of between £200-£400 and searched in the usual places; Trek, Giant, Specialized, Dawes seemed like suitable search terms for what I was after. A 2011 Specialized Allez Elite caught my eye and was a contender—Specialized's bikes have been good to me—but it was 90 miles away and, well, I wasn't that keen on the slightly garish red and white paint job. The reviews were good, though. If I buy a gravel bike, a Diverge would be the first line I'd look at.
Much closer to home, though, and in more tasteful paint, there was a Pinnacle Dolomite 4 from 2015. Not disc brakes, but tapered head tube, internal cable routing, carbon fork, Tiagra components. (Is that the road bike equivalent of Alivio?) But isn't Pinnacle just Evans' version of Carrera, I thought? A bit too budget. However, reviews indicated that at least some are a bit better than that. It cost £700 new and, apparently, weighs under 9kg, which sounded pretty good, coming from a MTB background. Perhaps roadies would find that heavy. Anyway, £210 BIN sounded reasonable, but I put in a bid and, as the only bidder, got it for £150. Under budget—bonus! I could scarcely go wrong at that price.
Anyway, as a road bike ignoramus, I was wondering: Has anyone got any experience, good or bad, of Pinnacle bikes? How do these newfangled shifters-next-to-brake-levers work? What are those weird little things, visible through the drops, that look like cable connectors of some sort? Are caliper brakes as strong as V-brakes? How do those tyres offer any grip in the wet?
Any opinions, answers gratefully received.