Robyn wraps up 12 months of big bikepacking miles on the Camino
After an adventure-packed year in which senior videographer Robyn tackled enviable off-road excursions in Slovenia, Scotland and closer to home, her time with the Camino is over. She explains why it became her favourite bikepacking bike
I have had the pleasure of riding the Sonder Camino for well over a year now, and it’s time to wrap up this review and give you my conclusions about this bike.
It seems a very long time since I first looked at the shiny titanium frame of the Camino and turned heads at the office as I showed off its obscenely wide Bomber handlebar.
My first ride on it – jumping in at the deep end with a 400km off-roader across Wales – quickly revealed the best bits of the Camino.
Once it gets bags attached to it, the bike acquires a wonderfully stable, calm manner that makes bikepacking a genuine joy.
Since then, it has battled long days in Scotland, big mountains in Slovenia and even 100-mile road rides down to the seaside.
The Camino is nothing if not versatile and makes for a good endurance bike because of its relaxed geometry and stable handling.
I did reach the end of its capabilities off-road, though. It’s no quasi-mountain bike and it can feel overwhelmed on rocky and steep terrain.
Because of this, I quickly found myself swapping out to wider, tubeless tyres and a Redshift suspension stem.
I also reached the bottom gears far too quickly and ended up having to push hard on long Alpine climbs, when I would have preferred to spin.
Ultimately, this meant I swapped out to the SRAM Apex groupset that gave a much wider 11-52t range, which I found catered much better to bikepacking.
At the other end of the scale, the Camino feels a little ponderous on the road – it is a gravel bike after all, with the wide tyres and handlebar designed for a stable off-road ride.
In the end, this led to me swapping to lightweight carbon wheels and a PNW bar that is less ridiculously flared than the original Bomber.
Cutting the weight and reducing the bar width has given the Camino a more responsive, speedy ride feel and I can now keep up with roadies (just about).
Overall, I’ve found the Camino to be a great adventure buddy. It’s a versatile, fun, capable bike that makes long days and off-road exploring extremely enjoyable.
Though it isn’t a gnarly off-road monster, nor a race-ready gravel whip, if I had to choose a bike I’d want to take bikepacking, the Camino is the absolute best option for it.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 highs
I got the Sonder last year as a bikepacking bike, for ‘sillier, slower, longer adventures’. I have indeed taken the Sonder on silly and long adventures, but found that slowness is not part of the Sonder Camino’s makeup – nor mine!
My favourite moments on the bike were the long rides around Scotland, Wales and Slovenia, when the bike’s handling and luggage-carrying capabilities really elevated the Sonder above other bikes.
It is still the best-feeling bike I’ve ridden with bikepacking bags attached to it.
The mixed-terrain capabilities are what makes the Sonder stand out and why so many other Sonder Camino owners love their bike so much.
The wide clearance, great geometry and well thought-out spec mean it’s a pleasure to take on adventures.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 lows
I’ve had a number of mechanicals with the Sonder Camino that I think are down to cost-cutting spec choices. I had to replace the bottom bracket after only seven months.
I like mud and riding in the wet, but this was a particularly quick deterioration of the bottom bracket.
Other choices – the Goodyear tyres, wobbly SRAM Rival 1 hoods and short bottle-cage bolts – are easy changes, but are slightly annoying.
I also eventually found I needed different gearing. The original gearing on the Sonder was fine, but for serious long-distance bikepacking in Alpine environments, the gears were not low enough.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 long-term review verdict
Overall, the Sonder Camino is a great bike for adventure-loving gravel riders looking for a capable bike to ride off-road when bikepacking.
The Camino really shines when it’s carrying luggage; the geometry is stable, confident and fun.
It makes a fantastic travel companion. For the price, you get a pretty good spec too; the Nova wheels, SRAM Rival 1 shifting and hydraulic brakes stand out as great choices for the bike.
The Ti frame also works as a great base to customise the bike as you want – be that as a gravel racer or long-distance bikepacker. It makes the Sonder a fantastic choice for a wide variety of gravel riders who want a bike that can do it all.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 in brief
The Sonder Camino gravel bike range from Alpkit has a reputation that precedes it among bikepackers and gravel riders as one of the best all-round gravel bikes.
Sonder claims the Camino is for “bikepackers, thrill-seekers and challenges big and small”, and it certainly looks the part. With its wide tyre clearance, mountain-bike inspired geometry, heaps of mounts and internal routing for a dropper post, the Camino seems set for adventure.
Before getting the Camino, I had been on the lookout for a bikepacking bike for a while. My prerequisites were the bike had to have enough mounts to attach lots of bikepacking bags, capable off-road abilities and hardy enough components to weather a UK winter.
The Camino range has the option of aluminium or titanium frames. The titanium-framed Sonder Camino I have chosen is near the top of the range, boasting a carbon fork, SRAM Rival 1 gearing and hydraulic disc brakes, but still costs a reasonable £2,449.
The new version has even more space for large tyres and enough mounts to keep the kitchen-sink lovers happy. I’ll be putting it to the test over the next 12 months.
Older updates follow
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 long-term review update four
Since I last updated you on the Camino, my plans with the bike have been stymied by various factors.
I had planned on riding the bike for my first ultra race – the Bright Midnight. I’d called in the then-new SRAM Apex groupset for this very event.
However, the groupset didn’t arrive with enough time for it to get fitted, so I took my Genesis Fugio instead.
Once back, there were various unseen compatibility issues with the new groupset.
One problem was the WTB wheels were fitted with a Shimano-compatible freehub body. However, the new Apex cassette required a SRAM XDR freehub. This meant ordering a new freehub body.
Up the bracket
Further to this, I had a fun time learning all about bottom brackets. The Sonder website says the Camino has a T47 bottom bracket, so this is what I ordered from SRAM.
Once it arrived, however, it was immediately clear this was too wide for the Camino. I spent a lot of time trying to work out the reason for this. Was it because it was a road T47 instead of a mountain bike T47? Or was it because it had the bearings externally (T47a) or internally (T47b)?
Eventually, after hours staring at bottom bracket sizing tables in utter confusion, I realised the Sonder website had the bottom bracket inputted incorrectly. The Sonder, in fact, has a BSA threaded bottom bracket, which is a different width from the T47 standard.
I finally picked up a DUB BSA bottom bracket, which was the correct size.
Finally, in the chaos of fettling and half-building the Sonder, the olives from the hydraulic brakes also disappeared, meaning they had to be reordered too.
This all added up to almost two months off the Sonder. It is very much a feature of the bike industry that different standards cause delay and confusion, even for those who are knowledgeable – I should have anticipated this.
I have gained a new respect for bike shops, who take on the ordering of specific parts with the myriad standards to look out for.
However, I can now confirm the Sonder is trail-worthy again, so let me run through the changes I have made.
Going electric
Firstly, the bike has been updated with the SRAM Apex AXS groupset.
The SRAM Rival 1 mechanical groupset that was previously on the bike is solid and dependable, and it performed well. However, I found myself running out of gears at both ends.
On fast group rides, there wasn’t enough at the top to stop me spinning out, and when carrying luggage up steep off-road climbs, the gears were not nearly low enough. I wanted gearing that was more like my mountain bike.
Fortunately, this summer, SRAM released its new Apex range. This provides a 1x drivetrain with a wide-range 12-speed cassette – much wider than the Rival 1 I had on the Sonder previously.
SRAM Apex AXS has a massive range – it comes with a 40t chainring at the front and an 11-50 cassette at the back. It’s my first time using electronic gears too, and I love them.
The shifting is clean, quiet and easy. I absolutely love the range and have found myself riding further and faster since changing to them. The hydraulic disc brakes are powerful too.
Built for gravel
I have also swapped over to WTB CZR i23 carbon gravel wheels. These hoops weigh in at 1,400g – around 500g less than the Sonder-branded aluminium wheels already on the bike.
The new wheels are made with gravel in mind, so the rims are built to be sturdy and withstand riding in rough terrain. They have Frequency hubs, with six pawls of engagement, which makes them very responsive, and also very loud, which I like.
Overall, the WTB CZR wheels are zingy and stiff, and they have handled being ridden fast down rocky bridleways with aplomb.
I chose 42mm Teravail Rutland tyres to go on the new wheels. These are good mud tyres for the winter season, and having been rated 5/5 stars in our group test last year, I was happy to try them out myself. So far, I can vouch for their mud and wet capabilities, as well as the good rolling speed on tarmac.
Flares are out of fashion
Finally, I’ve swapped out the Bomber handlebar. I liked this bar, but always found it a little too flared. I didn’t benefit much from the flare when riding off-road and found myself tending to stay in the hoods.
So, I’ve swapped to the PNW Coast Gen 2 carbon handlebar. This is ridiculously wide at 480mm, with 20-degree flare on the drops. I am enjoying the width of this bar; it gives a mountain-bike like stability, making off-road descents (probably too much) fun.
Fresh adventures await
With all these changes, the Sonder Camino rides like a bike with new passion.
The stable and comfortable geometry that was always the best bit of the Sonder still shines, but with the lighter wheels, wider gear range and wider bar, it feels like a bike you could race across countries.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 long-term review update three
One of my favourite things about the Sonder Camino is its long-distance abilities, and I have been happily reminded of this fact over the last few months, as summer has rolled around.
Since last writing, I have updated – shock – nothing. However, I have put hundreds of miles into the Sonder and loved it.
The most significant journey I have undertaken on the Camino was a 600km Scottish adventure. I started in Glasgow, headed north on the West Highland Way and National Cycle Route 7, and then rode over the Cairngorms on a remote gravel track.
I headed west on the Caledonian canal, and then rode back through the beautiful wilderness of Glencoe, Rannoch Moor and Loch Lomond National Park to Glasgow, again on the West Highland Way.
The loop was a great mix of bridleways, rough gravel roads, princess gravel and smooth tarmac; a multi-terrain ride that suited the Sonder well.
Big miles
I was also doing significantly longer stints than usual – riding between 85 and 100 miles every day. I definitely felt I was putting the bike through its paces.
Other than a great excuse for filling up on deep-fried Mars bars, tablet and vegan haggis, the trip reminded me the Camino is such a lovely bike to ride long days on. It’s comfortable and stable, with a geometry that takes on rugged terrain with confidence and ease.
The larger 50mm Continental Terra Hardpack tyres do a great job of absorbing trail vibrations, reducing long-term fatigue on longer days.
As mentioned when I wrote about my Slovenian adventure last year, the Camino feels almost better with bags on. It floats down rough descents with a confident, planted feel.
Time for a change
I am planning on doing a very long ride soon, and I’ve decided on a few updates to the Sonder for that. The first is to swap out the groupset.
Though I like SRAM Rival 1, I’ve found that on very long days in the mountains, when carrying gear (and especially if you have multiple long days in a row), the gearing is not low enough.
At the moment, the Camino has a spread of 11-42t, which often leaves my laden bike and tired legs with nowhere to go on steep off-road climbs. I’ve decided to go for a lower spread, to conserve my legs and energy on longer, more hilly, multi-day trips.
SRAM is sending me one of its new Apex groupsets for this exact purpose. It comes with a 10-52t, 12-speed rear cassette, with a matching 40t chainring at the front. This will give a huge spread, and provide help when riding the Sonder up proper mountains, with some very big miles.
Comfort and compliance
I am also changing out the wheels. WTB has kindly provided a beautiful set of CZR carbon 700c wheels and WTB Resolute 42mm tyres to go on the Sonder.
The wheels weigh only 785g each, which is significantly less than the outgoing Sonder Nova wheels, which are 1,100g each.
The CZR wheels are said to blend comfort with compliance, and it’ll be great to see how they fare over a long, hard week of gravel riding. I’ll let you know more in my next entry.
Finally, I think I’m going to change the Bomber handlebar. I like it, but I would prefer something a little narrower; I don’t use it enough to justify how much drag it creates in headwinds.
I haven’t fully decided on the replacement yet, but perhaps something along the lines of the Zipp Service Course SL70 XPLR would be a good choice.
Once those key parts are changed, I am on my way to creating something I never thought I would; a lightweight gravel race bike – a worrying turn up for the books!
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 long-term review update two
Since my previous update, where I rode the Sonder Camino across Slovenia, I’ve been firmly back on UK soil.
I’ve spent the winter taking the Camino out on local routes near my home in the south west of England, sampling mud from every postcode in a 20-mile radius.
Tyres
Last time I wrote about the Camino, I detailed the new, wider Continental Terra tyres I was using. I can report these tyres have handled the winter well, and I really like them for both on- and off-road use.
Though they’re a little slippery on mud, they have fared well in icy conditions, and shed mud with ease.
Saying that, I have found the limit of the tyre clearance. I ended up getting so much mud stuck in between the forks before Christmas that I had to resort to carrying the bike across the rest of a field and poking the dirt out with a stick – very demoralising.
There is another British winter problem I’ve encountered recently; farmers cutting their hedges and scattering the bridleways, paths and roads with thorns. After a couple of pesky punctures, I decided to set up the Continental Terras tubeless.
This was a pretty painless procedure, especially using Muc-Off tubeless valves and tape, which have so far held their own against the south west’s most rugged gravel paths.
Mechanicals
I have run into a few mechanical problems with the Sonder over this winter. One issue I have is with the Bomber handlebar. Though I’m enjoying the shape of the bars, the extreme angle of the hoods is putting pressure on the SRAM hoods and levers.
The levers are not designed to be installed at such a flare, and so when you press on the levers to change gear, you put a lot of pressure on the one screw that holds the hoods firm. At this angle, the screw is at its weakest, which is causing it to loosen – meaning the hoods have started to bend and not bear weight.
I have been re-tightening these bolts every month or so, which solves the situation temporarily, but you have to remember to do this, which isn’t ideal.
I have also had to replace the bottom bracket. A mixture of a very sloppy winter, and my own over-enthusiastic cleaning with the garden hose led to the internal bearings seizing.
Though this isn’t hugely difficult to replace, it’s a shame the SRAM GXP bottom bracket isn’t serviceable; so, if it breaks, you have to get a new one.
It hasn’t had the longest life, but I will probably blame myself here – the hose I was using was obviously powerful enough to get into the bottom bracket and cause the bearings to seize. You live and learn!
Upgrades and additions
A few small changes since my last update have included the adding of a beautiful blue alloy bottle cage. Because the bike is such a monochrome colour, I think it looks lovely and brings a nice little pop of colour. I will hopefully add some matching bolts to enhance the look.
In my last update, I said I was planning on adding a gravel fork. I’m still hoping to do this, but the search for the perfect fork is ongoing. Now I’ve imagined the Sonder as a quasi-hardtail, I can’t imagine it as anything else…
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 long-term review update one
Since I took delivery of the Sonder Camino, I have been thoroughly testing its claims of long-distance ability.
The best thing I have done so far is take the Camino for a tour across Slovenia. This was around 200 miles of mixed-terrain riding, from Ljubljana over the Julian Alps to the border of Italy and Austria.
To get the Camino ready for luggage-carrying duties, I added a rack (I used a Tortec Velocity Hybrid Rear Rack, which has seen many miles on the back of my old touring bike), along with Ortlieb’s 8-litre Fork Packs and Apidura’s front burrito bag.
World-class gravel
As a place to cycle, Slovenia comes highly recommended – it’s very accessible and has probably the best gravel climb I’ve ever done. If you like cottage cheese, they put it in and on every dish, so you never have to worry about getting enough calories in.
The Sonder Camino was the perfect bike for the trip. I was totally blown away by how nicely it handles with luggage on; the steering is always calm and stable, and off-road it feels planted and steady.
The geometry – with its shorter reach and lower bottom bracket – makes you feel as if you’re riding in rather than on the bike. When you’re carrying a lot of weight on the bike, this is not a bad thing because it feels very stable.
The position you sit in is very comfortable on long days out, too, with the Bomber handlebars enabling lots of hand positions.
With almost an Everest of climbing over the week, including one 20km climb with many stages of 22 per cent incline, I would have loved a lower gear; perhaps a 52t 12-speed cassette. However, I did manage to ride up everything, so it wasn’t an impossible task.
The Nova wheels and Goodyear Connector tyres impressed me with their mixed-terrain capabilities, jumping from smooth tarmac mountain roads to rocky river paths and fire roads with no complaints.
Overall, the Sonder Camino impressed throughout the trip. I loved how it felt with bags on, and how comfortable it was, whether grinding up mountains, riding on fire roads or coasting on bike paths. I’ve said it before, but to me, this is a perfect bike for touring.
The great Divide
On a slightly different note, I also used the Camino to ride the Calder Divide, a 100-mile bikepacking event in the Peak District.
I dithered about which bike to take for this, because it’s officially a mountain bike route, but in the end I decided on the Camino since it’s been so dry this summer.
To get it ready for the event, I swapped out the tyres for the 50mm Continental Terra Hardpack. These are large enough to dampen some of the trail chatter.
I also borrowed Tom Marvin’s Redshift Shockstop suspension stem. The stem is an interesting piece of tech; the polymers inside it work to give around 20mm of effective travel. This helps take some of the sting out of riding on rough surfaces all day, reducing strain on your hands.
The Calder Divide was a beautiful and hard day out, circling the Calder river basin and climbing up and down the Peaks and the Yorkshire Dales a few times.
The Sonder Camino felt quite under-biked on the route, and I had to do a fair amount of walking up AND down. I missed having a suspension fork and a dropper post, so perhaps a mountain bike would have been a better choice.
However, I was very impressed by how much difference changing the tyres and stem made to the bike; they both helped to smooth out some of the rougher trails.
The Sonder also did a good job on the smoother sections of gravel – it rips on towpaths and fire roads.
With winter now set in, I’m planning to switch to a pair of Teravail Rutland gravel tyres with larger knobbles for the mud, along with some sort of mudguards.
Reflecting on how much I missed having a hardtail on the Calder Divide, I also have been thinking about gravel suspension forks, especially since Rob has been enjoying his XPLR fork so much on his long-term review Rå Valravn gravel bike.
So watch this space, my Sonder Camino might be a very different bike in a month or so!
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 specifications
The Sonder Camino’s frame is built with aeronautical-grade titanium, and it looks very smart with clean welds and internal routing.
Alpkit suggests titanium is an excellent choice for a gravel bike; it’s lighter than steel, but has a pleasingly twangy ride that helps absorb some of the trail chatter.
The frame is paired with a carbon monocoque fork with a stealthy-looking matt black finish.
As you might expect from a self-styled bikepacking bike, the Camino comes with a range of mounts to attach luggage.
There are mudguard mounts, rear and front rack mounts, cargo cage fork mounts, top tube mounts and the down tube has triple mounts on the top and bottom for expedition-style bottle cages.
There is ample room for wide tyres – up to 700c x 50mm or 650b x 2.2in, which is well into mountain bike territory.
There is also routing for a dropper post, should you want to head down the mountain bike route, although dropper posts on gravel bikes are becoming more and more common. The Camino gets a BSA threaded bottom bracket, which Sonder says is for durability and ease of mechanics.
It’s fitted with SRAM’s Rival 1 1×11 groupset, with a SRAM Rival 1 GPX chainset. The 11-42t cassette should be low enough to spin up most hills, without losing too much speed at the other end.
Also fitted are SRAM’s Rival 1 hydraulic brakes, paired with large 160mm CenterLine rotors for off-road stopping power.
The Sonder Camino comes with aluminium Sonder Alpha 700c wheels, shod in Schwalbe CX Comp tyres. My bike, however, came with different wheels and tyres due to parts shortages.
I had lower-spec Sonder Nova 700c wheels and Goodyear Connector tyres in 700x40mm. These are tubeless-ready, but they come with tubes in the box.
The finishing kit is almost universally own-brand, with a Sonder seatpost and Sonder Abode saddle, and the wonderfully flared Sonder Bomber handlebars.
The full build, without pedals, weighs in at 9.6kg for a medium.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1
- Sizes (*tested): S, M*, L, XL
- Weight: S: 9.5kg; M: 9.6kg; L: 9.7kg; XL: 9.9kg (all without pedals)
- Frame: Titanium
- Fork: Camino Carbon, Monocoque
- Shifters: SRAM Rival 1, 1x, 11-speed
- Derailleurs: SRAM Rival 1, long-cage, 11-speed
- Wheelset: Sonder Alpha 700c UK-made (my bike came with the Sonder Nova wheels instead)
- Tyres: Schwalbe CX Comp, 700 x 35c (not mine)
- Brakes: SRAM Rival hydraulic, flat mount
- Bar: Sonder Bomber, 56cm
- Stem: Deda Zero, 70mm
- Seatpost: Sonder seatpost, 31.6mm
- Saddle: Sonder Abode, 158mm, black
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 geometry
The Sonder Camino draws on trends in mountain bike geometry, with a longer, slacker shape.
It has a noticeably long wheelbase at 1,073cm for a size medium. When it’s paired with the head angle, which is reasonably slack at 69 degrees, the steering should feel confident and stable off-road, especially when descending.
The stack and reach figures – 582cm and 395cm respectively – give quite an upright, central seating position, making for a comfortable and confident ride.
Sonder says the bike is made for agile handling. There are four sizes, from small to extra large, but they all have relatively short stems of 50mm or 80mm. This will keep the handling feeling responsive and direct.
| S | M | L | XL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Seat angle (degrees) | 74.5 | 74 | 74 | 73 |
Head angle (degrees) | 69 | 69 | 69 | 69 |
Chainstay (mm) | 435 | 435 | 435 | 435 |
Seat tube (mm) | 460 | 490 | 520 | 550 |
Top tube (mm) | 536 | 562 | 592 | 629 |
Head tube (mm) | 150 | 170 | 190 | 210 |
Fork offset (mm) | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 |
Bottom bracket drop (mm) | 73 | 73 | 73 | 73 |
Wheelbase (mm) | 1,051 | 1,073 | 1,105 | 1,132 |
Standover (mm) | 752 | 773 | 795 | 815 |
Stack (mm) | 563 | 582 | 600 | 619 |
Reach (mm) | 380 | 395 | 420 | 440 |
Why did I choose this bike?
I have done a lot of gravel riding in the last few years, and over that time I’ve found myself becoming more interested in doing rides that are longer, slower and more silly.
I was therefore on the lookout for a bike that could handle lots of terrain types, from tarmac to trail, be loaded with bags, and wasn’t built with overly complicated tech.
I noticed how many people were riding Caminos during a gravel group ride. I was interested in the extreme flared bars that come with the bike, and how differently all the iterations of the Camino were built up; some had styled their Camino as rigid mountain bikes with butterfly bars, while others were paired down with thin tyres and racks into a do-it-all commuter bike.
I was also, I admit, swayed by the Camino owners’ enthusiastic praise for their bikes.
The Sonder Camino already has a well-established reputation as a great bikepacking rig. This year’s version comes with even more mounts and wider tyre clearance, so I was keen to get my hands on one and start riding.
I liked the flared handlebars too, which are aesthetically very interesting and certainly start conversations.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 initial setup
The Sonder Camino was easy to set up out of the box, and is provided with some Sonder-branded tools to help you put it together – a nice touch.
All that was required was to turn the bars, put on some pedals, fiddle with the exact height of the seatpost and pump up the tyres – all straightforward to do. Then I was free to jump on and pedal it home that very evening.
My next move was to attach a water bottle cage and some fork mounts for an upcoming bikepacking trip. This was a slightly less fun experience.
I found the bolts very short – far too short to go through the bottle cage mounts and secure into the frame, so I had to dig out some bog-standard black steel bolts to use instead.
This isn’t a huge problem, but if you want your bolts to match your frame, you’ll have to get additional longer titanium bolts to fit.
I adjusted the brake levers’ reach so I could comfortably use them, which when they were set further from the bar posed problems for using the drops.
The bike’s effective top tube is quite long, and I ended up fitting a shorter 50mm stem to bring the bars closer to me when seated.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 ride impressions
The Camino represents a number of firsts for me. It’s my first titanium bike, my first time using SRAM on a drop-bar bike, and my first time using those very flared handlebars.
The bike arrived right at the start of a week’s holiday, so for its first ride, I took the Camino 250km across Wales.
It was a good test; there were plenty of hills, a mix of terrain and extra weight on the bike. The trip got off to a bit of a false start when I decided – half an hour before we needed to leave for the train – to fiddle with the headset, only to drop all the parts inside the head tube.
It took half an hour to fish everything out and rebuild, so I wouldn’t recommend doing this in a hurry.
Once we’d started, the bike rode with genuine confidence. The titanium gravel bike frame has so far been impressive – lightweight, responsive and pleasingly shiny.
For someone as accident-prone as me, I’m delighted by how shiny and clean it looks, even after the wear of bike bags, being carried through a patch of brambles and having a small crash into a bog.
Thankfully, I have so far resisted talking obsessively about how great titanium is, avoiding becoming one of those titanium bike owners you get stuck with on a group bike ride. There are still many months left, though…
The Camino’s ride is very comfortable, with an upright position given by the wide, short handlebars and built-up stem. This makes it genuinely comfortable on long days out.
That said, I found the wide bars and upright position make this a bike more suited to slower days, especially if you’re going into a head wind.
The Camino handles beautifully with bike bags on, the steering made confident by the low bottom bracket and slack head angle. It sails across bumps in a stately way, feeling planted and sure of itself.
The Sonder Bomber handlebars definitely took a bit of time to get used to. They are very short and have a quite extreme flare to them, which Sonder says is for off-road comfort and control.
I was excited to use them – I rarely use my drops, and I was hoping the Bombers would offer more hand placements with as much control as the hoods.
They’re comfortable to ride off-road, with the angle of the flares taking off some pressure in the wrists. They offer heaps of control and allow for multiple hand placements.
I did find myself missing straighter bars on longer road sections though – I’ll have to see how they feel over the next few months. The Bomber handlebars are also great for carrying extra load, because they’re wide enough to allow for large and long front bags.
I really liked the SRAM Rival 1 gearing that comes with the Camino. The single-lever shifting was initially slightly confusing for me after years of using Shimano, but I quickly got used to it, and was pretty happy with the clean shifting performance, even under load.
Though the Sonder Nova wheels rolled smoothly, I was less impressed by the Goodyear Connector tyres. During the four-day trip, I got a puncture every single day, which wasn’t amazing considering how dry it was. They aren’t set up tubeless yet, and this will be one of my first upgrades.
While they might not be the most puncture-proof, I found they rolled fast on the road and had a reliable grip on dry gravel.
The Camino did a great job on the trip, handling off-road sections and luggage-carrying with confidence and comfort. This is in no way the last trip of the season, so you’ll have to come back and see how it fares with different wheels and tyres in a month or so.
Sonder Camino Ti Rival 1 upgrades
There are a number of changes I made to the bike straight off. Firstly, I changed the saddle. I prefer a saddle with a central cut-out, so I opted to fit a Prologo gravel AGX. I also put on some Ortlieb fork cages for front panniers, but eventually I’d like a front rack instead.
I changed the stem straight-off too. This is because I found the effective top tube too long to reach the brakes comfortably, even after fiddling with the reach adjustment on the brakes.
I am at the very lower end of the medium size, and like many women, have a shorter reach than what is standard on unisex bikes. I swapped out the stock stem for a 50mm Giant one, which gave a better position for reaching the brakes comfortably.
The main change I’d like to make in the next month or so is to switch the wheels and tyres to something a bit wider. A 700cx50mm tyre sounds perfect.
These will definitely be tubeless too, because like everyone else I don’t love getting punctures.
BikeRadar‘s long-term test bikes
BikeRadar’s long-term test bikes give our team the opportunity to truly get to grips with these machines, so we can tell you how they perform through different seasons and on ever-changing terrain, through a year of riding.
Some choose a bike from their favoured discipline and ride it hard for a year, others opt for a bike that takes them outside of their comfort zone.
We also use our long-term bikes as test beds for the latest kit, chopping and changing parts to see what really makes the difference – and help you decide which upgrades are worth spending your money on.
These bikes also provide an insight into the team’s riding through the year – how they like to ride and where life on two wheels takes them, from group rides on local lanes and trails, to adventures further afield.
To see all of the BikeRadar team’s long-term test bikes – and to stay up-to-date with the latest updates – visit our long-term review hub.
Product
Brand | sonder |
Price | 2449.00 GBP |
Weight | 9.6000, KILOGRAM (M) – |
Features
Fork | Camino Carbon, Monocoque |
br_stem | Deda Zero, 70mm |
br_frame | Titanium Frame |
Tyres | Schwalbe CX Comp, 700 x 35c |
br_brakes | SRAM Rival Hydraulic, Flat mount |
br_saddle | Sonder Abode, 158mm, Black |
br_wheels | Sonder Alpha 700c UK Made |
br_shifter | SRAM Rival 1, 1x, 11-speed |
br_seatpost | Sonder Seatpost, 31.6mm |
br_handlebar | Sonder Bomber, 56cm |
br_availableSizes | S, M, L, XL |
br_rearDerailleur | SRAM Rival 1, Long cage, 11-speed |