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Reviews
Affixing along your top tube behind your stem, the $29 Century Bag from eoGear is a perfect place to perch your portables.
The Jones diamond frame features everything a touring cyclist could need: rack and fender mounts; room for fat, comfy tires; three water bottle cage mounts; a shorter effective top tube and high, comfortable handlebars.
It’s nice to see that a big company like Specialized has not totally abandoned steel as a frame material, especially for an all-rounder bike like this. This is the kind of bike that encourages such impromptu adventures.
The Domane is designed to give the rider an advantage under difficult conditions with a unique seat tube and top tube junction that soaks up big bumps and high-speed vibration.
The San Marcos is “the bike any road rider who doesn’t race but rides mainly on the road ought to be riding,” according to its creator.
We've put the Quick CX to work on a mixed-surface commute where it tackles everything from asphalt to crushed limestone, gravel, and more.
A lot of people immediately associate Norco with gravity and mountain bikes, but the Canadian brand actually has many bikes designed specifically for commuting and street use.
At Bicycle Times our portable potables come in all shapes and sizes. Here are three types of water bottles we often carry, and some new bottle cages designed to carry them, and more.
A motorized cargo machine has many advantages. I can bust a move quickly into the flow of traffic, even with a heavy load on board. Riding at the same speed as traffic is a heck of a lot safer than being a slow-moving vehicle in a fast-moving world.
We put three pairs of tires to the test from Continental: The Supersport Plus, the Country Plus, and the Touring Plus.
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Justin Steiner
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