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Cycling News

Rocky Mountain elevates Solo gravel bike with full carbon fibre frame

Rocky Mountain elevates Solo gravel bike with full carbon fibre frame

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The Solo has, in various and very different forms, held a place in the line-up of Rocky Mountain bikes for decades now. Recently, it morphed into the North Vancouver brand’s gravel bike. Now, after several years as an alloy gravel rig, the Solo is graduating to a full carbon fibre frame.

2023 Rocky Mountain Solo. Photo: Margus Riga

Meet the new Solo

Where most mountain bike brands dipping a toe in drop bars tend to make a very mountain bike-esque gravel bike (think Evil’s Chamois Hagar or YT’s Szepter), Rocky Mountain takes a much more balanced approach. Sure, there’s plenty of tire clearance and room to run a full-length dropper post. But the new Solo is also 2x compatible, so you can run a realistically adventure-ready drivetrain. It also has mounting hardware for all kinds of gear. So you can carry everything you need for a weekend in the woods (or longer) and have the gearing to get it up proper hills.

For those stoked on metal, the Solo still comes in an alloy frame as well.

With only one gravel bike in Rocky’s line, the Solo aims to cover everything from more adventurous gravel racing and weekly rides to occasional singletrack segments and even big bikepack adventures. Retired Canadian road pro, Ryan Anderson, has over a year on the new Solo and has used his time to test all those angles. The Rocky athlete’s bikepacked across his prairies home and well into the Rocky Mountains and raced the solo at Gravel events all over.

“The Solo gives me the freedom to explore from the prairies to the mountains and it’s handled everything I have thrown its way,” Anderson says. “It’s an extremely well-balanced bike whether it’s loaded down with gear or not. It’s definitely a Rocky Mountain- it rides best when things get wild!” 

Clearance for tires and fenders

Based in North Van, Rocky Mountian knows being comfortable when the rain starts to fall is important. The Solo has clearance for 700c x 40mm tires with fenders (650b x 2.2″). Max tire clearance is better than your 90s mountain bike at a hefty 29″ x 2.0″ or 650b x 2.2″.

Frame details inside and out

Rocky Mountain’s made the Solo ready for any set up. It has fully-enclosed internal cable routing. That includes Shimano Di2 electronic shifting, complete with a downtube panel/battery holder.

12 mounting points on the frame and another eight on…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Canadian Cycling Magazine…

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