rfneep
Well-Known Member
Hi. I’ve been following the forum for the past few years, and thought it was time make a small contribution. Please excuse the long narrative.
My back story (skip if you wish). I’ve kept a V2 Q451 Quest, converted to a Q559, out at my in-laws on the west coast for the past two years, and have gotten out there a few weeks each year. It’s been fun to learn to ride a MBB bike, and it has been useful for short day trips in northern CA. However, the longer the rides, the more the bike has felt, for want of a better word, mushy. The bike response seems soft when accelerating, and the bike feels a bit loose when pedaling hard. It's all subjective, of course, but the experience left me somewhat ambivalent about the Cruzbike. In addition, I’ve not been a big fan of the Quest cockpit; the seat and handlebars tend to lead to a somewhat cramped feeling in legroom.
So, I have concentrated on stickbike recumbents at home in the Midwest, both a 26/20 Volae Century and a 650c Volae Team. Nice bikes. However, on some long (> 50 mile) trail trips here at home I noticed more and more that the only physical action was in my legs and I had very little upper body engagement. I thought it was time to revisit a MBB bike at home.
I found a used Quest (V3 Q559) frame and decided to do some mods to change to my liking for use on crushed limestone trails and for commuting in town. A main design feature was that it is not meant to be speed bike like a Silvio or V, but a reasonable comfort, long distance bike and an in-town bike. That means an upright seat angle of 40 deg or so.
My approach was to use up parts I had laying around and not go overboard in spending a lot of $ but concentrate on functionality. Here is what I came up with:
my Trail Quest, or Q650b
Version 1: original try, using mostly spare parts: (I hope the picture comes through!)
Some details of differences from a stock Q559:
Wheels: 650b or 27.5 in Mavic CrossOne wheels (entry level at sale price))
Tires: Panaracer Pacenti Pari-Moto with Gravel King casing 27.5 x 42mm, or 42-584
Rear shock: Kind Shock AR-551 dual chamber air shock
Seat: Thorseat Carbon Easy (GS) Medium size
Seat brackets: Lower: simple homemade Al plates with Volae rubber washers for seat attachment
Seat brackets: Upper: Volae rubber washers plus Al plate to mount standard Quest seat rear brackets; Al extender plate to give full 35 - 45 deg adjust range
Seat Pad: Volae Carbon Comfort Dual Density seat pad; size Large
Handlebars: Soma Portola Dirt Drop bars, 53 cm width.
Shifters: SRAM 10-speed TT500 bar-end shifter
Brakes levers: Tektro RL520 long-reach aero levers
1 x 10 drivetrain: derailleur SRAM X.9; 11-36 cassette
Altogether, I think it cuts a nice look.
Now, how does it ride? Very nice! It does not feel at all like the V2 Q I have at the in-laws. The bike feels tight and responsive, and rides extremely smoothly. In the 50 miles or so that I’ve tested it so far (it has been winter here until recently …) it has felt as fast as my high-racer, and appears to climb better. It seems so smooth that you easily go over rough roads and hence can keep more speed (but I am not a speed biker by any measure). I don’t know what to attribute the differences to, but at least some combo of: the big wheels, wide supple tires, suspension-free fork, and stiffer front end, somewhat more laid back position, or all of the above. The cockpit feels a lot more open with better leg clearance than the stock system. I obviously need to get more miles on it, but so far, so good!
Just thought I'd point out how versatile the Quest platform is and how relatively easy it is to change it to your liking. Now, time to get more riding in as the weather improves here.
Ray
My back story (skip if you wish). I’ve kept a V2 Q451 Quest, converted to a Q559, out at my in-laws on the west coast for the past two years, and have gotten out there a few weeks each year. It’s been fun to learn to ride a MBB bike, and it has been useful for short day trips in northern CA. However, the longer the rides, the more the bike has felt, for want of a better word, mushy. The bike response seems soft when accelerating, and the bike feels a bit loose when pedaling hard. It's all subjective, of course, but the experience left me somewhat ambivalent about the Cruzbike. In addition, I’ve not been a big fan of the Quest cockpit; the seat and handlebars tend to lead to a somewhat cramped feeling in legroom.
So, I have concentrated on stickbike recumbents at home in the Midwest, both a 26/20 Volae Century and a 650c Volae Team. Nice bikes. However, on some long (> 50 mile) trail trips here at home I noticed more and more that the only physical action was in my legs and I had very little upper body engagement. I thought it was time to revisit a MBB bike at home.
I found a used Quest (V3 Q559) frame and decided to do some mods to change to my liking for use on crushed limestone trails and for commuting in town. A main design feature was that it is not meant to be speed bike like a Silvio or V, but a reasonable comfort, long distance bike and an in-town bike. That means an upright seat angle of 40 deg or so.
My approach was to use up parts I had laying around and not go overboard in spending a lot of $ but concentrate on functionality. Here is what I came up with:
my Trail Quest, or Q650b
Version 1: original try, using mostly spare parts: (I hope the picture comes through!)
Some details of differences from a stock Q559:
Wheels: 650b or 27.5 in Mavic CrossOne wheels (entry level at sale price))
Tires: Panaracer Pacenti Pari-Moto with Gravel King casing 27.5 x 42mm, or 42-584
Rear shock: Kind Shock AR-551 dual chamber air shock
Seat: Thorseat Carbon Easy (GS) Medium size
Seat brackets: Lower: simple homemade Al plates with Volae rubber washers for seat attachment
Seat brackets: Upper: Volae rubber washers plus Al plate to mount standard Quest seat rear brackets; Al extender plate to give full 35 - 45 deg adjust range
Seat Pad: Volae Carbon Comfort Dual Density seat pad; size Large
Handlebars: Soma Portola Dirt Drop bars, 53 cm width.
Shifters: SRAM 10-speed TT500 bar-end shifter
Brakes levers: Tektro RL520 long-reach aero levers
1 x 10 drivetrain: derailleur SRAM X.9; 11-36 cassette
Altogether, I think it cuts a nice look.
Now, how does it ride? Very nice! It does not feel at all like the V2 Q I have at the in-laws. The bike feels tight and responsive, and rides extremely smoothly. In the 50 miles or so that I’ve tested it so far (it has been winter here until recently …) it has felt as fast as my high-racer, and appears to climb better. It seems so smooth that you easily go over rough roads and hence can keep more speed (but I am not a speed biker by any measure). I don’t know what to attribute the differences to, but at least some combo of: the big wheels, wide supple tires, suspension-free fork, and stiffer front end, somewhat more laid back position, or all of the above. The cockpit feels a lot more open with better leg clearance than the stock system. I obviously need to get more miles on it, but so far, so good!
Just thought I'd point out how versatile the Quest platform is and how relatively easy it is to change it to your liking. Now, time to get more riding in as the weather improves here.
Ray
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