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Two-Position Switchgrade Duo Review: Splitting the Difference

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Two-Position Switchgrade Duo Review: Splitting the Difference

The original Switchgrade tilt-adjust saddle clamp from Canadian manufacturer, Aenomaly Constructs offered nose-up, nose-down, and nose-neutral settings. But when Travis first rode it, he found the angles a couple degrees too extreme for his terrain. So today, he’s excited to share his review of the new two-position Switchgrade Duo, along with some of his signature soapboxing on saddle settings.

Drop Best AXS for Reverb Droppers

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Drop Best AXS for Reverb Droppers

Fair Bicycle, the maker of Drop Best, the device that allows you to adjust your effective seat tube angle, just announced Drop Best AXS for your RockShox Reverb posts. Now, you can add adjustability to your AXS or Transmission-equipped bike by keeping the same exact stack height of your dropper. The Drop Best AXS is made from high-strength 7075 aluminum and uses the strongest, 12.9 grade, US-made fasteners, and Swiss coatings for corrosion resistance.

See more at Fair Bicycle.

Fox Introduces Transfer Neo Wireless Dropper Post

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Fox Introduces Transfer Neo Wireless Dropper Post

Fox has entered the electronic dropper-post market with the Transfer Neo. Travis has one arriving any day now, and will publish a review in just a few weeks. That’s when we’ll indulge in philosophical musings about what this might mean for the shifting dominances of SRAM, RockShox, Shimano, and Fox. But for now, we’ll just cover the facts.

Wish List: Vol. 1 – Tools, Trucks, Bottles, and Butts

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Wish List: Vol. 1 – Tools, Trucks, Bottles, and Butts

Welcome to the first installment of Wish List, where Radavist contributors share their dreams of things that don’t exist, but maybe should. Some will be slightly niche but perfectly reasonable ideas that have every right to exist. Others will be impractical, expensive, and/or dangerous fantasies that probably should remain fantasies. Travis dives in first with a list that spans this spectrum quite nicely.

Dropper Post Seat Bag Review Roundup

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Dropper Post Seat Bag Review Roundup

The most fun addition to any bike? Ask Colt Fetters and the answer is unquestionably a dropper post. He’d argue that droppers are more fun than suspension, fancy wheels, and wireless shifting, because getting the saddle out of the way is key to maneuvering a mountain bike to its fullest potential. But for multi-day riding, running a dropper can present logistical challenges. In the following roundup, Colt reviews seven dropper-post compatible seat bags to ensure that you don’t have to compromise carrying capacity in exchange for confident descending on multi-day mountain biking missions.

JPaks DropperStopper

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JPaks DropperStopper

New from JPaks is the DropStopper dropper post collar ($22.99). No matter your dropper stanchion diameter, the DropperStopper will limit your post’s travel, protect the stanchion, a solid mounting point for a DropperPak, and function as an emergency clamp should your post lose pressure, and refuse to stay up. The included TPU shims don’t require you to measure anything at the time of ordering.

Includes: 1 -M4 stainless steel bolt + 2 TPU shims (25mm & 26mm dia compatible)

Available in 3 sizes and four flavors with a LIFETIME warranty

Check out more at JPaks.

Fair Bicycle: Drop Best Universal Delivers Offset to Your Dropper Post

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Fair Bicycle: Drop Best Universal Delivers Offset to Your Dropper Post

Last month, we shared the Drop Best, a mechanism that gives a RockShox Reverb forward or reverse offset. With 27mm of offset, you can change your seat angle by 2º, i.e., from 74º to 76º. This week, Fair Bicycle, the manufacturer of the Drop Best announced three Universal Drop Best models that work on any dropper post, depending on the dropper post hardware. The UC M6 uses M6 hardware, the UC M5 uses M5, and the UC F21 is for Fox Transfer posts that use the Fox Transfer MY2021 head design.

Check out the all-new universal Drop Best models at Fair Bicycle.

Under the Hood: Reviewing Gravel Drop-Bar Dropper-Post Remotes from Crankbrothers, PRO, ENVE, Easton, and Wolf Tooth

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Under the Hood: Reviewing Gravel Drop-Bar Dropper-Post Remotes from Crankbrothers, PRO, ENVE, Easton, and Wolf Tooth

MicroSHIFT, SRAM, and now Shimano all offer gravel brake levers with built-in dropper post remotes. And there are ways to hack most left shifters to work great as dropper remotes. But if you aren’t currently in the market for a new drivetrain, or if you run a front derailleur, there aren’t many good plug-and-play options that work comfortably from both the hoods and the drops. Travis Engel found just five of them, from ENVE, Crankbrothers, PRO, Easton/Fox, and Wolf Tooth. It turns out they’re all very special in their own little ways.

Too Much of a Good Thing: A Long-Term Review of the 240mm OneUp V2 Dropper Post

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Too Much of a Good Thing: A Long-Term Review of the 240mm OneUp V2 Dropper Post

The target audience for a 240mm dropper post is small. Or, rather, it’s tall. Like, 95th-percentile-North-American-male tall. That may be why it took nearly two decades for one to hit the mainstream market. The world of long droppers is still pretty new, which also means it’s still pretty misunderstood. And Travis Engel learned that he had misunderstood some things until he tested OneUp’s longest post.

Green or Red? Wolf Tooth Goes Full-Blown Holidaze with Limited Edition Dropper Lever

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Green or Red? Wolf Tooth Goes Full-Blown Holidaze with Limited Edition Dropper Lever

There’s a question you’ll inevitably hear while in Santa Fe: “Green or red?” and while this is referring to our chile color, it applies to the holidaze as well. Wolf Tooth just released two limited edition anodizing colors for its ReMote dropper levers just in time for the holidays. These are in stock and shipping today from Wolf Tooth, so act fast!

… oh and the answer to the above question is “x-mas”.

Big in All the Right Ways: a Review of the Kona Sutra LTD 29er Touring Bike

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Big in All the Right Ways: a Review of the Kona Sutra LTD 29er Touring Bike

I’m going to nerd out here. Fair warning. When I see a bike like the Kona Sutra LTD hit the internet, I feel mixed emotions. Part of that has to do with my love of the now-dead “adventure” category Specialized launched a few years back, beginning with the AWOL. I had some good memories on that bike and it feels like eons ago. If you remember, this was around the time people started calling bicycle touring “bikepacking”.

The AWOL was a touring bike in the sense that it had rack mounts, clearances for, at the time, big tires and it came specced in both its Poler and Trans-Continental limited-edition build kits with racks and panniers. Sounds like a touring bike to me! While this isn’t an article about the AWOL, I can’t help but see the face-value similarities between it and the Sutra Unlimited, or LTD for short.

Now, the AWOL came out in 2014, and in these past six years, a lot has changed in the touring or bikepacking world for me but one thing remains constant: I love fat tire tourers, and the Sutra LTD really impressed me. It pulled at all the heartstrings…

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Easton’s EA70 AX Dropper Post for Gravel Bikes

When riding singletrack on your gravel bike, a dropper post can certainly aid in the shredability factor of your ride. The problem is, there aren’t a lot of gravel-oriented droppers on the market. Easton has thrown their cap in the ring, announcing the EA70 AX dropper this morning. Its retail is $184.99 and the dropper offers 50mm of drop in both 350mm and 400mm lengths in a 27.2mm clamp diameter.

Note: buying this dropper will not guarantee skills like Jesse Melamed of the Rocky Mountain Race Face Enduro Team