Open Cycles, a bicycle brand started by Cervélo co-founder Gerard Vroomen, and up until now only offering a 29er mountain bike, has launched the new Unbeaten Path, a ‘GravelPlus’ bike made for cyclocross, gravel racing and adventure riding. The carbon fibre frame features disc brakes, thru-axles and clearance for up to 55mm wide tyres and accepts mountain bike wheelsets and cranks, making for plenty of build options to suit different riding and terrain requirements.
The company describes the new bike as a “GravelPlus frame, a gravel grinder without limits.” Gravel and adventure is a burgeoning category of bikes, essentially cyclocross bikes modified to be more versatile to tackling a wider variety of terrain and with adjusted geometry to suit longer rides. They're not easy bikes to categorise, they loosely fit in the gap between cyclocross and mountain bikes, but there's no fixed design formula, each manufacturer has its own slightly different approach.
Open says the new Unbeaten Path has a fit and position closer to a road or cyclocross bike than a mountain bike, but an important distinction to other bikes is the fact the frame has been designed to readily accept mountain bike cranks and tyres, providing plenty of interesting build options, depending on what you have in mind. A bike built for gravel racing is going to be quite different to a long distance bikepacking setup, and it seems that versatility is key to the new Unbeaten Path. The clue is in name. It’s the sort of frame that, through tyre and component choice, you can tailor to your specific riding and terrain requirements.
Open has designed the frame to accept up to 55mm wide tyres. That means it can easily take a 33mm cyclocross or a 28mm slick road tyre, but it can also accept a 2.1in mountain bike tyre on a 650b wheel. Why a 650b wheel? Because the smaller diameter wheel produces about the same outside diameter as a 700c ‘cross tyre. A 650b wheel with a bigger tyre would give roughly the same outside measurement as a cyclocross wheelset, but you would benefit from the much larger tyre volume for more cushioning and traction.
The frame and fork are made from carbon fibre, with a blend of different modulus carbon used in key places. The down tube features a ‘flat-out’ profile, oversized with the outside faces flattened and reinforced with strategically placed strips of ultra-high modulus carbon to boost frame stiffness. There’s a 142x12 rear thru-axle and BB386 EVO bottom bracket. Frame weight is a claimed 1,150g for a size large.
See those two bolts on the top tube? They’re for fitting a bike bag, making it well geared towards any bikepacking exploits. One omission is the lack of mudguard mounts, which some UK cyclists that like the versatility to run mudguards in the winter will bemoan, but few of these cyclocross-inspired gravel bikes tend to come with them. With a bike able to run a range of tyre sizes, including mountain bike wheels, fitting full-length mudguards could be tricky to accomodate.
To provide maximum crank, tyre and front mech clearance, the Unbeaten Path frame features asymmetric chainstays with a dramatically lower driveside chainstay. This effectively lowers the chainstay out of what is quite a crowded area, and provides stacks more clearance. Open also claims this lower position allows the tube profile to be increased for additional stiffness, and is twice the width it would be in the regular location.
With its R3, Cervelo popularised skinny seatstays, and the new Unbeaten Path features ‘wire stays’, extremely thin vertically chainstays and seatstays to provide a bit of compliance. The seat tube angle has been designed around a 27.2mm zero seatpost because it saves a bit of weight over a setback post.
Thru-axles are becoming commonplace on cyclocross and gravel bikes, and Open has developed what it likes to call ThruThread dropouts. It reckons most thru-axle frames are heavier than quick-release frames, so has developed a system that uses the same threads that hold the thru-axle to lock the derailleur hanger into the frame, which it claims saves a bit of weight. It has adopted a Syntace X-12 rear thru-axle, popular in the mountain bike world, along with a 15mm in the fork. The fork is a custom painted 3T carbon fibre model.
All the cables and brake hoses are internally routed and the MultiStop entry and exit ports allow the frame to be easily adapted for different groupsets, from 1x11 to 2x10 and electronic shifting. If running a single chainring setup the front mech hanger can be removed.
“For me personally, this is probably my favourite frame ever, because it best reflects how I most like to ride,” says Gerard Vroomen. “Asphalt is great to get you to the places where the real fun happens, and that is on gravel and dirt, away from cars and other fun-crushing obstacles. Over the past years, it's been hard to miss that many people feel this way, witnessing the emergence of gravel rides and other adventurous styles of riding.”
The Unbeaten Path will be shipping in July and cost $2900 for the frameset (no UK price at this stage) and will be available in either brown or orange, which colour they go with is up to you, they’ve cast open voting for the colour choice on the website. http://opencycle.com/UP
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19 comments
this is definitely the type of bike im looking for at the moment, but I think a santa cruz stigmata is much better value,,, i do like the brown
@Dr_Lex: There are tons of thru-axle wheel options because we use the 142x12 MTB standard, not some new-fangled road disc standard nobody needs. Saving 3 grams and making all wheels in the world obsolete doesn't sounds like a good trade-off to me.
Anyway, so you can use a 29er wheel with a cross or road tire and a 650b wheel with mtb tire.
As for the brown, it's a fantastic color but indeed, not much point arguing about taste. And that's why we had the people vote on the color it would be and it looks like (as expected) orange is winning, though not nearly by the expected margin so we'll see where we stand by week's end.
Cheers,
Gerard
One more thing regarding mud guards, there is only so much room to play with. Fitting 2.1" tires and road cranks into the BB area with a chain stay length of only 420mm, there isn't room for full mud guards. But of course you can fit a seatpost-mounted guars and fit a fork with eyelets to give you the biggest possible tires and 90% of the mud-guard protection.
Others would call it chocolate-brown and delicious. Everyone has an opinion on colour, even when they nothing about nothing.
love the brown.
but don't see the point in going on to a comments section just to tell someone my opinion of colours.
: )
That diarrhoea brown has to be the worst colour I've ever seen. If the only justification is that it doesn't show the mud as much, I'd rather look at mud. In any case, mud is usually more towards black and grey than sh**t brown.
Brown.
Seriously?
Mud-brown highly practical for an off-road bike I'd have thought. Do you want to spend your time riding it or cleaning it?
I thinks I have a new dream bike...
I thinks I have a new dream bike...
Like it. Some great ideas there and yet another choice in what is becoming a popular field. Now just need a little more wheel choice for through axles.
Solution is a set of Hope Pro 2 Evo hubs and whatever rims you feel necessary.
So... No mudguards then? Not too useful for the UK I'd say.
I imagine if you're out for a fun blast on your gravel muncher you're not too bothered about getting a bit dirty.
Plenty of UK cyclists not using mudguards though...
True. I prefer having them, so not to useful for me
The Unbeaten Path gravel bike, sounds like the path has been well beaten already... specifically with gravel!
I like that 650b thinking. Initially I was going to say that a bike that can take 55mm wide tyres is going to look really undertyred with 28c road on there. But that pretty much takes care of it.
650B tyre compatibility is a really cool idea. Also that bottom bracket seat stay junction is truly a impressive piece of moulding.