And your summary of the week on BikeRadar

By Stan Portus

Published: Friday, 20 September 2024 at 06:00 AM


How often does a mainstream cycling brand do something that different? Okay, they may find a way to make a bike more integrated or lighter, decide to get behind a new cycling sub-discipline (has anyone heard much about downcountry recently?), or add a ‘speed sniffer’. 

But, ultimately, these changes feel like finessing a formula rather than making anyone go ‘wow’. Except influencers, of course. 

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. As Alex Evans argued recently, maybe bikes are just great now. Yet, I feel that if we shift our focus to different bikes and aims, we can still see great innovation, even if it’s not on Grand Tour bikes. 

Cargo bikes are one example. From once being a niche thing you’d occasionally see couriers riding, they are now used commonly to ferry kids to school, or unbelievably, deliver eggs, at least in my overly middle-class east London enclave.  

One bike that launched this week that arguably fits into this category of innovation is the Brompton G Line, the brand’s first off-road folding bike, which it hopes will appeal to a broad audience. 

It’s more intriguing than the other bikes released this week, the now-slighty-more-affordable Specialized Stumpjumper 15 and the Santa Cruz Hightower which is… er, more capable than before.

With these thoughts in mind, Will Soffe’s feature on the history of mountain bike innovations made me think. Maybe it’s time we bring back the genuinely inventive. And hey, maybe Ribble has.