Jesse Groves
Active Member
I am thinking about giving another try on a Cruzbike and wanted to get some opinions from people about the S40, or the prior iterations. I previously owned a V20 and rode it exclusively for about 6 months. I had a lot of comfort problems on it which were rectified by putting the Thor seat on with short chain stay and curved slider; doing that resolved the comfort issues while riding. However, I ultimately gave up on the V20 because of constant pain in my upper back/neck (cervical/thoracic area) that was present all the time, on or off the bike. It got to the point at the end where I was unable to find any comfortable position and my neck/back hurt even when lying down in bed or in a recliner; basically, it hurt all the time no matter what.
I sold the V20 in April of this year and bought an M5 that I have been riding since. After about a month off the V20, my neck/back pain finally went away. Looking back on it, I think I pulled a muscle in the cervical/thoracic region and that I never took enough time off the bike to let it fully heal, and that each time I rode thereafter, I would re-injure or exacerbate the injury so that it got worse and worse.
I am thinking about revisiting the Cruzbike for a couple reasons. First, other than the neck/back pain, I enjoyed the handling of the FWD and the interaction with the upper body. To me, the Cruzbike felt very "sporty" in its handling and was fun to ride.
Second, I recently did a ride with a lot of climbing...11,200 ft over 104 miles...the ride is called 6 Gap and is billed as the toughest ride in the Southeast US. I live in Florida, so this was the first time I rode anything with "real" climbs; there are some hilly areas in Florida, but the climbs here, while quite steep, are very short, so not very similar to what I encountered on 6 Gap. Overall, the M5 did ok on the climbs and I was able to make it up everything without having to walk, and was a BLAST on the descents FLYING past the roadies like they were standing still. However, I think I can do better on the climbs with the FWD drivetrain; my experience, based on comparison of power data taken at the pedals and at the drivewheel, is that I lose more power on RWD than on FWD...about 8% greater power loss (power loss on the RWD is about 10%, while only 1-2% on the FWD using the same power meters). Those comparisons I did were on relatively flat ground where I was riding exclusively in the higher gears, pretty much staying in the big ring and somewhere in the 15 to 11 range on the cassette. On 6 Gap, there were extended periods where I was in the 31 chain ring and 28 to 36 range on the cassette; I really noticed how mush grinding comes from the middle pulley in that gearing and I suspect that I was losing even more power in the drive train than what I experienced on flat ground. Long story short, I am interested in giving 6 Gap another try, but this time with FWD to see the difference on the climbs.
Finally, I am thinking about the S40 instead of V20 because I also want something that can mix in with road bike groups better. I was nowhere near as aero on my V20 as Larry or Kyle Larsen, but I was still too fast on it to ride with groups, plus, it is low enough that it makes it very difficult for roadies to draft me. I am very aero on the M5 and quite a bit faster on it on flat terrain and it is out of the question to even consider riding with my local group, unless I want to do a recovery ride and annoy them by being off to the side instead of pulling through.
So, I am curious to hear any opinions about riding the "road" versions of the Cruzbike with groups and how well it matches up. I dont expect it to align perfectly, but it does look like roadies would get a better draft and that I would also be a little slower on it, so that I can still get a workout even when riding with groups.
Thoughts? Comments? Maybe I am just N+1 crazy?
I sold the V20 in April of this year and bought an M5 that I have been riding since. After about a month off the V20, my neck/back pain finally went away. Looking back on it, I think I pulled a muscle in the cervical/thoracic region and that I never took enough time off the bike to let it fully heal, and that each time I rode thereafter, I would re-injure or exacerbate the injury so that it got worse and worse.
I am thinking about revisiting the Cruzbike for a couple reasons. First, other than the neck/back pain, I enjoyed the handling of the FWD and the interaction with the upper body. To me, the Cruzbike felt very "sporty" in its handling and was fun to ride.
Second, I recently did a ride with a lot of climbing...11,200 ft over 104 miles...the ride is called 6 Gap and is billed as the toughest ride in the Southeast US. I live in Florida, so this was the first time I rode anything with "real" climbs; there are some hilly areas in Florida, but the climbs here, while quite steep, are very short, so not very similar to what I encountered on 6 Gap. Overall, the M5 did ok on the climbs and I was able to make it up everything without having to walk, and was a BLAST on the descents FLYING past the roadies like they were standing still. However, I think I can do better on the climbs with the FWD drivetrain; my experience, based on comparison of power data taken at the pedals and at the drivewheel, is that I lose more power on RWD than on FWD...about 8% greater power loss (power loss on the RWD is about 10%, while only 1-2% on the FWD using the same power meters). Those comparisons I did were on relatively flat ground where I was riding exclusively in the higher gears, pretty much staying in the big ring and somewhere in the 15 to 11 range on the cassette. On 6 Gap, there were extended periods where I was in the 31 chain ring and 28 to 36 range on the cassette; I really noticed how mush grinding comes from the middle pulley in that gearing and I suspect that I was losing even more power in the drive train than what I experienced on flat ground. Long story short, I am interested in giving 6 Gap another try, but this time with FWD to see the difference on the climbs.
Finally, I am thinking about the S40 instead of V20 because I also want something that can mix in with road bike groups better. I was nowhere near as aero on my V20 as Larry or Kyle Larsen, but I was still too fast on it to ride with groups, plus, it is low enough that it makes it very difficult for roadies to draft me. I am very aero on the M5 and quite a bit faster on it on flat terrain and it is out of the question to even consider riding with my local group, unless I want to do a recovery ride and annoy them by being off to the side instead of pulling through.
So, I am curious to hear any opinions about riding the "road" versions of the Cruzbike with groups and how well it matches up. I dont expect it to align perfectly, but it does look like roadies would get a better draft and that I would also be a little slower on it, so that I can still get a workout even when riding with groups.
Thoughts? Comments? Maybe I am just N+1 crazy?