Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

TECH NEWS

Video Just In: Open U.P. (Unbeaten Path) frameset arrives for review

Promising versatility and gravel/adventure capability, the Open UP has a lot going for it

This orange beauty is the Open U.P. (Unbeaten Path) a gravel and adventure frameset designed by ex-Cervelo founder Gerard Vroomen and launched to much fanfare two years ago. With a certain gravel race on the horizon, we've got this frame in to see if it offers the performance, capability and versatility that we look for in a gravel and adventure road bike. On paper it certainly does, it's a bike that blurs the lines between a road and mountain bike.

Bigger tyres are a key part of a gravel bikes appeal and the Open appears to go wider than most. It'll take a 40mm tyre on a 700c rim but swap to a mountain bike 650b wheelset and you can go up to 2.1in in size. That tyre clearance provides a huge range of options to tailor the spec of the bike to match the demands of the roads and tracks you want to ride over. 

Open UP frame and fork - down tube.jpg

It's a full carbon fibre frame and this size medium (55cm) example weighs 1,150g, not exactly heavy for a reassuringly beefed up frame intended to handle some tough riding. It's feature-packed, but the most intriguing by far is the dropped drive side chainstay. It's shaped this way to provide the necessary tyre and chainset clearance whilst keeping the Q-factor narrow and the chainstays short. It's something we've seen on mountain bikes and a few other road bike brands are starting to adopt a similar approach.

Open UP frame and fork - head tube.jpg

Other details include a tapered head tube and BB386 EVO bottom bracket and full internal cable routing, compatible with any combination of mechanical or electronic gears, hydraulic brakes and 1x or 2x chainsets. The downtube has flattened sides said to improve frame stiffness while the seatstays are pencil thin which, in unison with the 27.2mm seatpost, should provide a reasonable level of comfort. 

- Open U.P. - Eurobike first ride review

Open UP frame and fork - bottom bracket.jpg

It's a disc-specific frame using the post mount standard and there are thru-axles, 142x12mm at the back and 15x100mm at the front. This is the only area where the Open UP has slightly been overtaken by the rapidly changing standards in the time since it was launched, with flat mount and 12mm front thru-axles increasingly looking likely as the de facto choice. Still, there's nothing actually wrong with post mount or 15mm thru-axles of course. As well as two regular bottle cage mounts, there’s a third on the down tube, and these top tube bolts are for fitting a bag, useful if you’re going bikepacking. 

Open UP frame and fork - stays.jpg

So that's the Open U.P. in brief, all that remains to do is get it built up. Open is a small company and only sells framesets, so you have to build it up yourself or get a good bike shop to do the job for you. We're not sure what to build it up with, there are some good examples of nice builds on the Open website and a SRAM 1x11 groupset seems a natural choice, so that might be an option. Any ideas?

- Showstopper: Podia's custom painted Open U.P. gravel bike

Open UP frame and fork.jpg

As for wheels and tyres, well we definitely want to experiment with different width tyres and really see how the bike handles and performs with everything from skinny road rubber to chunky mountain bike and gravel tyres. We're definitely going to try it on 650b wheels, I was impressed with the Panaracer Comet 650b tyres I tested briefly on the Mason Bokeh last year. It'll be interesting also to see if it can double up as a road bike with something like a 28mm tyre, and we'll of course try a 38-40mm gravel tyre on a 700c rim too.

The Open U.P. costs £2,300 and is available from https://opencycle.com/

- Buyer’s guide to gravel and adventure bikes plus 16 of the best

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

Add new comment

13 comments

Avatar
ped | 7 years ago
0 likes

 

Quote:

Flat mount brakes? What. Ever. Couldnt care less. Strangely I dont think about that when I'm riding it...

This.  1

Avatar
ricardowilson21 | 7 years ago
1 like

Had one of these for a year - still my favourite ride. Just awesome bike.  Started 2x drivetrain, just swapped to 1x11 Di2. Swapped because I kept dropping chain - despite chain catcher. The very tight clearances meant the chain jammed really solid - two of us couldnt shift it trailside.. Chewed frame up badly - but it is heavily overbuilt in that area. Martin at Biketreks has made a lovely 'bespoke' carbon patch.guard thingy over the damaged area.

 The bike is just awesome. Stooopid light, quick, comfy and capable. Flat mount brakes? What. Ever. Couldnt care less. Strangely I dont think about that when Im riding it.....

If youre trying to decide if you need one, you do. Just buy it. Pleasure remains long after the price has faded.....

Avatar
Ush | 7 years ago
0 likes

The asymmetry is actually quite pleasing.  Looks like a lot of thought and research has gone into this... nice to see something a bit different.

Avatar
tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

Cheers, Smed, really did miss that crying

 

Decent weight.. maybe the +1 to end them all..

Avatar
ricardowilson21 replied to tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

unconstituted wrote:

Cheers, Smed, really did miss that crying

 

Decent weight.. maybe the +1 to end them all..

well, you could tell your Significant Other that, but we all know its cobblers, dont we...?! 

Avatar
Miller | 7 years ago
0 likes

Does every gravel bike really need to have a 1x11 drivetrain? I don't think so. I have done a few UK gravel events now, where mud always features, and the front shifting on my 2x11 drivetrain has not given me any hassle. There's a good range of gears and I don't need a daft-looking wide cassette.

One other remark: do use tubeless for gravel events. When it catches a puncture you'll be immensely grateful.

 

Avatar
Al__S | 7 years ago
0 likes

Two bikes I've ridden recently have post-mount front brake and flat mount rear brake mounts (though both had/have a post mount brake on the back using an adaptor).

Avatar
tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

How much does it weigh?

Avatar
ClubSmed replied to tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
1 like

unconstituted wrote:

How much does it weigh?

According to the article

Quote:

It's a full carbon fibre frame and this size medium (55cm) example weighs 1,150g

Avatar
belabatnom | 7 years ago
1 like

Interesting that this is post mount. Is it sensible to get a post mount frame these days? It seems like it's on the way out (getting replaced by flat mount it seems)

I was thinking of getting a fairlight faran, but seeing that it was post mount gave me pause. 

I guess that all things get outdated in the end.

Avatar
dgmtc replied to belabatnom | 7 years ago
0 likes

belabatnom wrote:

Interesting that this is post mount. Is it sensible to get a post mount frame these days? It seems like it's on the way out (getting replaced by flat mount it seems)

I was thinking of getting a fairlight faran, but seeing that it was post mount gave me pause. 

I guess that all things get outdated in the end.

MTB brakes will be post mount for the forseeable future, so you can always buy a set of MTB disc brakes and use those.

Avatar
David Arthur @d... replied to belabatnom | 7 years ago
1 like

belabatnom wrote:

Interesting that this is post mount. Is it sensible to get a post mount frame these days? It seems like it's on the way out (getting replaced by flat mount it seems)

I was thinking of getting a fairlight faran, but seeing that it was post mount gave me pause. 

I guess that all things get outdated in the end.

 

There's nothing wrong with post mount, and it actually offers easier adjustment than flat mount for centering the caliper over the rotor. There'll be adapters to fit flat mount to post mount. The big USP of flat mount is that the calipers are more compact and sit flat to the frame so it looks cleaner. We'll be taking a closer look at flat mount in an upcoming feature

Avatar
belabatnom replied to David Arthur @davearthur | 7 years ago
0 likes

David Arthur @davearthur wrote:

There'll be adapters to fit flat mount to post mount. The big USP of flat mount is that the calipers are more compact and sit flat to the frame so it looks cleaner. We'll be taking a closer look at flat mount in an upcoming feature

 

Would be interested in hearing about adapters to fit flat mount brakes to post mount frames  in the upcoming feature. I was under the impression that this wasn't possible (and haven't found any adaptors myself) but I would love to be told I'm wrong. 

Latest Comments