Chinese Open Mold Gravel / CX Bikes
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drider85, sounding all very good so far.
Did the frame come with the qr dropouts too or just TA?
Interested to hear on how it further compares to the superx in terms of handling, liveliness on accelleration and climbing and comfort. I love my 2012 di2 supersix and I'm now looking for a disc supersix like bike that will also take 27.5 offroad tyres. I reckon this wcb-r-125 might come close.
What year is your superx?
Did the frame come with the qr dropouts too or just TA?
Interested to hear on how it further compares to the superx in terms of handling, liveliness on accelleration and climbing and comfort. I love my 2012 di2 supersix and I'm now looking for a disc supersix like bike that will also take 27.5 offroad tyres. I reckon this wcb-r-125 might come close.
What year is your superx?
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This is how I have it built currently. I apologize for it uncouth appearance. I was far to excited to ride it before finishing it.
It appears they can make/mold the frame for QR or TA no ability to go back and forth.
The bikes that I have own to compare this to are a 2016 Super X (44) and a CAAD10 (50). Disclaimer: I think sometimes handling characteristics are size dependent. This bike is in a far different category than CAAD, Super X and Super six's have ridden. Those bike are happiest when raced, pushed and railed in to corners. They all are generally snappy, lively and closer to nervous. They beg to be pushed a little harder or faster and would rather go around the rough then through. Although the Super X had good large bump absorption in the rear.
This bike is quite the opposite. It is asking you to ride a little longer to find rougher road you may normally avoid. Find a dirt road, side road, rough road, two track or even the occasional single track (single track is a theory I still need to confirm). The bike felt planted and wanted to ride straight through the rough. The vibration dampening/ride feel was closer to muted compared to the lively feel of the others. I have had similar conclusions comparing some high end name brand carbon mountain bikes to there open mold alternatives. Although it is difficult to pin ride quality with tire size being so different. It felt good going up hill. If felt planted as always and stiff going up hill with very little sense springiness or snap like a Super or CAAD.
It appears they can make/mold the frame for QR or TA no ability to go back and forth.
The bikes that I have own to compare this to are a 2016 Super X (44) and a CAAD10 (50). Disclaimer: I think sometimes handling characteristics are size dependent. This bike is in a far different category than CAAD, Super X and Super six's have ridden. Those bike are happiest when raced, pushed and railed in to corners. They all are generally snappy, lively and closer to nervous. They beg to be pushed a little harder or faster and would rather go around the rough then through. Although the Super X had good large bump absorption in the rear.
This bike is quite the opposite. It is asking you to ride a little longer to find rougher road you may normally avoid. Find a dirt road, side road, rough road, two track or even the occasional single track (single track is a theory I still need to confirm). The bike felt planted and wanted to ride straight through the rough. The vibration dampening/ride feel was closer to muted compared to the lively feel of the others. I have had similar conclusions comparing some high end name brand carbon mountain bikes to there open mold alternatives. Although it is difficult to pin ride quality with tire size being so different. It felt good going up hill. If felt planted as always and stiff going up hill with very little sense springiness or snap like a Super or CAAD.
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- Posts: 58
- Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 3:30 pm
drider85 wrote:This is how I have it built currently. I apologize for it uncouth appearance. I was far to excited to ride it before finishing it.
It appears they can make/mold the frame for QR or TA no ability to go back and forth.
The bikes that I have own to compare this to are a 2016 Super X (44) and a CAAD10 (50). Disclaimer: I think sometimes handling characteristics are size dependent. This bike is in a far different category than CAAD, Super X and Super six's have ridden. Those bike are happiest when raced, pushed and railed in to corners. They all are generally snappy, lively and closer to nervous. They beg to be pushed a little harder or faster and would rather go around the rough then through. Although the Super X had good large bump absorption in the rear.
This bike is quite the opposite. It is asking you to ride a little longer to find rougher road you may normally avoid. Find a dirt road, side road, rough road, two track or even the occasional single track (single track is a theory I still need to confirm). The bike felt planted and wanted to ride straight through the rough. The vibration dampening/ride feel was closer to muted compared to the lively feel of the others. I have had similar conclusions comparing some high end name brand carbon mountain bikes to there open mold alternatives. Although it is difficult to pin ride quality with tire size being so different. It felt good going up hill. If felt planted as always and stiff going up hill with very little sense springiness or snap like a Super or CAAD.
Do you have any pics of the non-drive side? Also did you figure out the axel standard? I bought one of these and I'm trying to get a few remaining parts together before the frame arrives.
Sorry been a bit busy pre season with assembling Team bikes. Here is a link, not from Hongfu though, they seem not to have updated their page with it yet
http://www.onlinecyclingexperts.com/201 ... fm028.html
Notice that the BB is BB386 not BB86
Frame weight in 54cm is 1034g
Fork 430g
http://www.onlinecyclingexperts.com/201 ... fm028.html
Notice that the BB is BB386 not BB86
Frame weight in 54cm is 1034g
Fork 430g
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- Posts: 28
- Joined: Wed May 11, 2016 2:07 am
I ordered a Workswell WCB-R-125 and received it today. I'm planning to build it up with SRAM 1x stuff. I've already purchased Rival hydraulic shifters/levers/discs and a Force 1 crankset. I wasn't expecting to get it so soon after I ordered it (less than 2 weeks) so I've still got to figure out what parts I want for the wheel build and grab a few other bits.
I thought it was interesting that they added a metal chainstay protector.
I thought it was interesting that they added a metal chainstay protector.
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sun Apr 23, 2017 1:48 pm
dustinmeyer wrote:I ordered a Workswell WCB-R-125 and
I thought it was interesting that they added a metal chainstay protector.
Any updates? Would love to hear your review.
dustinmeyer wrote:I ordered a Workswell WCB-R-125 and received it today. I'm planning to build it up with SRAM 1x stuff. I've already purchased Rival hydraulic shifters/levers/discs and a Force 1 crankset. I wasn't expecting to get it so soon after I ordered it (less than 2 weeks) so I've still got to figure out what parts I want for the wheel build and grab a few other bits.
I thought it was interesting that they added a metal chainstay protector.
Which fork are you going to use?
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- Posts: 28
- Joined: Wed May 11, 2016 2:07 am
I wasn't expecting to receive the frame so quickly so I hadn't ordered all of the parts for the build by the time it arrived. It only took 13 days from the order date to arrive. That's pretty impressive since my Workswell 066 took about 30 days to get here when I ordered it last year.
Anyway, I have all of the parts now and finished building the wheels and setting them up tubeless over the weekend. I hope to route the cables and such tomorrow. I'm using the stock fork and the following components:
Stan's Grail Rims (24/28)
Sapim CX-Rays
Novatec R135-11/D771SB Hubs
38mm Specialized Trigger Pros (set up tubeless)
160mm SRAM Rotors
SRAM Force 1 Crankset (Swapped the chainring for a 44)
SRAM Rival 1/22 Shifters
SRAM Rival 1 Rear Derailleur
SRAM XG-1150 Cassette (10-42)
SRAM PC1170 Chain
Time ATAC XC8 Pedals
3T Ergonova Pro Bars (edited: thought I had ordered the Aeronova bars)
Kalloy Uno Stem
Fizik Bar Gel
Fizik Performance Bar Tape
Fabric Scoop Shallow Saddle
Arundel Sideloader/OtherSideLoader Bottle Cages
This is my first build with hydraulic disc brakes so it should be interesting. The levers came out of the box with the calipers already attached and filled with fluid so I assume that I need to take them apart and drain the fluid so I can route the cables internally.
Anyway, I have all of the parts now and finished building the wheels and setting them up tubeless over the weekend. I hope to route the cables and such tomorrow. I'm using the stock fork and the following components:
Stan's Grail Rims (24/28)
Sapim CX-Rays
Novatec R135-11/D771SB Hubs
38mm Specialized Trigger Pros (set up tubeless)
160mm SRAM Rotors
SRAM Force 1 Crankset (Swapped the chainring for a 44)
SRAM Rival 1/22 Shifters
SRAM Rival 1 Rear Derailleur
SRAM XG-1150 Cassette (10-42)
SRAM PC1170 Chain
Time ATAC XC8 Pedals
3T Ergonova Pro Bars (edited: thought I had ordered the Aeronova bars)
Kalloy Uno Stem
Fizik Bar Gel
Fizik Performance Bar Tape
Fabric Scoop Shallow Saddle
Arundel Sideloader/OtherSideLoader Bottle Cages
This is my first build with hydraulic disc brakes so it should be interesting. The levers came out of the box with the calipers already attached and filled with fluid so I assume that I need to take them apart and drain the fluid so I can route the cables internally.
Last edited by dustinmeyer on Wed Apr 26, 2017 5:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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