Dahon Folding Gravel Bike GB-2
#1
Dahon Folding Gravel Bike GB-2
I have been looking for a folding gravel bike and was excited to see the Dahon GB-2 during a business trip to Germany. When I got back to the US I found an e-mail contact montier@dahon.comand reached out. The word from Dahon USA is that the GB-2 goes into production in June of 2023 and they are expecting a US bound shipment shortly thereafter. I am planning on checking back around the end of March. I would suggest that anyone else that is interested please drop an e-mail to Monte and let him know. I think feedback from we the consumer is always important.
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#2
Senior Member
This is an ad
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#3
Yes I'm looking for a one folding bike do it all kind of bike. This would fits the bill. Thx for sharing, will send email per reco.
I have been looking for a folding gravel bike and was excited to see the Dahon GB-2 during a business trip to Germany. When I got back to the US I found an e-mail contact montier@dahon.comand reached out. The word from Dahon USA is that the GB-2 goes into production in June of 2023 and they are expecting a US bound shipment shortly thereafter. I am planning on checking back around the end of March. I would suggest that anyone else that is interested please drop an e-mail to Monte and let him know. I think feedback from we the consumer is always important.
#4
Senior Member
Its an interesting concept for those who want a big wheel folding bike, different from the Changebike and Montague!
12kg is not bad seen the relatively low end components mounted by Dahon. It should be possible the shave some weight by replacing parts of the components.
12kg is not bad seen the relatively low end components mounted by Dahon. It should be possible the shave some weight by replacing parts of the components.
#5
Senior Member
Looks pretty good using Lock-jaw.
1. Does it roll after fold?
2. The devil is in the folded width to see what size it is after fold, but it does look a tighter fold compared to the Montague and ChangeBike
1. Does it roll after fold?
2. The devil is in the folded width to see what size it is after fold, but it does look a tighter fold compared to the Montague and ChangeBike
#6
iti biking
For a gravel bike, it looks a bit sparse for braze-ons for racks and bags and all that dangling stuff bikepackers like. Only one standard bottle mount and nothing on the front fork? A bit poor.
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#7
Senior Member
#10
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: UK
Posts: 781
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The bigger issue is the range; 327% is a little restricted. gravel bikes with sora groupset tend to be 2x9 with such cassette and usually a compact front (50-34) (sometime 44/28). In 1x9 with this long cage, they could have specced at least a sunrace 11-40.
Ultimately, without a clutched derailleur, it won't be great a the chain will pop out. I run a similar setup on my hill climb mini velo and I had to fit a "braze-on" chain guide and a narrow wide chain ring as on rough English roads, the chain kept dropping.
An Apex mechanical groupset would be more suitable.
#11
Senior Member
Here is a video on it.
Slightly different variant with non-folding stem but a removable stem.
Available in Hong Kong (and not air ware since I can't seem to find it elsewhere )
Its in Cantonese though, but basically the video explains itself mostly.
The gist of it...
1. It can roll when folded
2. Fold width is more narrow than Montague and Change
3. Can take an FD clamp
4. Can use 700c with space for wider tires
5. 40T chainring; 11-34t cassette (Sora groupset)
Really interesting option, but I'd rather they sell the frame only or with an absolute cheap groupset, so that I can buy it for cheaper and swap it to something better with wider range.
Slightly different variant with non-folding stem but a removable stem.
Available in Hong Kong (and not air ware since I can't seem to find it elsewhere )
Its in Cantonese though, but basically the video explains itself mostly.
The gist of it...
1. It can roll when folded
2. Fold width is more narrow than Montague and Change
3. Can take an FD clamp
4. Can use 700c with space for wider tires
5. 40T chainring; 11-34t cassette (Sora groupset)
Really interesting option, but I'd rather they sell the frame only or with an absolute cheap groupset, so that I can buy it for cheaper and swap it to something better with wider range.
#13
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: UK
Posts: 781
Bikes: Dahon Jetstream p8 (sold), customized Dahon Helios x10, customzed Dahon Smooth Hound x11,customized Dahon Hammerhead 8.0 d7, Planet X Free Ranger (mullet setup 1x11), Planet X Giovanissimi 20 (1x9), Frog 52 (1x9) and Frog 48 1s
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#15
Senior Member
Oh yes, nowadays, any bike able to ride both on road and off road is called gravel because this is what is hot and sells well, there are gravel with flat bar, with suspension, with 20" wheels, Moulton gravel, Brompton gravel, e-gravel, cargo gravel... anything gravel!
#16
Senior Member
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#18
Spotted a new video recently after I also couldn't get any input from any regional dahon entity about availability back when it launched.
Reached out to dahon again full of hope, but nope, all pretty vague and uncertain:
Too bad. Already thinking of one could get a hold of one in Asia and import it to Europe, though haven't found a true trustworthy, reliable source - which would have to ship overseas as well on top of that...
Reached out to dahon again full of hope, but nope, all pretty vague and uncertain:
GB-2 currently is not in sale and we'are working on putting it to market ASAP. The estimated time should be the second half of the next year
It may come to the Europe market, if not, other road bikes from DAHON may be considered. Plans are still undecided, so please stay tuned!
It may come to the Europe market, if not, other road bikes from DAHON may be considered. Plans are still undecided, so please stay tuned!
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#19
And now, Gravel. I just looked, it hasn't made the dictionaries as an adjective for bikes. And if you ask me, "gravel" is the size of peas, hence the term Pea Gravel, aka "fine gravel", and try to bike through a layer of that more than a couple inches deep on anything less than large diameter, 4" tires or more at low pressure, it's like trying to bike through deep sand. Technically, gravel can mean much larger stones and rocks, but to me, next up is pebbles (rounded) and crushed stone (sharp), then on to rip-rap.
Some bike trails are finely crushed stone, packed down well, "macadam" (pioneered by engineer John Louden McAdam (I kid you not)), where even narrow tires don't sink in. Adding tar to macadem produces tarred macadem, also known as "tarmac" (interesting, no?), an alternative to concrete for roads and runways.
For bike routes that are mostly dirt, I would call that an "unpaved trail".
#20
The new version of "tactical", added to any product that is black. Also, EDC (Every Day Carry), for what used to be called a pocketknife or small sheath knife.
And now, Gravel. I just looked, it hasn't made the dictionaries as an adjective for bikes. And if you ask me, "gravel" is the size of peas, hence the term Pea Gravel, aka "fine gravel", and try to bike through a layer of that more than a couple inches deep on anything less than large diameter, 4" tires or more at low pressure, it's like trying to bike through deep sand. Technically, gravel can mean much larger stones and rocks, but to me, next up is pebbles (rounded) and crushed stone (sharp), then on to rip-rap.
Some bike trails are finely crushed stone, packed down well, "macadam" (pioneered by engineer John Louden McAdam (I kid you not)), where even narrow tires don't sink in. Adding tar to macadem produces tarred macadem, also known as "tarmac" (interesting, no?), an alternative to concrete for roads and runways.
For bike routes that are mostly dirt, I would call that an "unpaved trail".
And now, Gravel. I just looked, it hasn't made the dictionaries as an adjective for bikes. And if you ask me, "gravel" is the size of peas, hence the term Pea Gravel, aka "fine gravel", and try to bike through a layer of that more than a couple inches deep on anything less than large diameter, 4" tires or more at low pressure, it's like trying to bike through deep sand. Technically, gravel can mean much larger stones and rocks, but to me, next up is pebbles (rounded) and crushed stone (sharp), then on to rip-rap.
Some bike trails are finely crushed stone, packed down well, "macadam" (pioneered by engineer John Louden McAdam (I kid you not)), where even narrow tires don't sink in. Adding tar to macadem produces tarred macadem, also known as "tarmac" (interesting, no?), an alternative to concrete for roads and runways.
For bike routes that are mostly dirt, I would call that an "unpaved trail".
#21
Senior Member
Originally, gravel bikes were derivatives of cyclocross bikes with a dropbar but less sporty than cyclocross, with a more comfortable position and wider tires (cyclocross tire width is limited by the cyclocross race rules)..
#22
The stages may vary from flat asphalt and mountain passes to rough forest tracks, from ice and snow to desert sand, each chosen to provide a challenge for the crew and a test of the car's performance and reliability.
#23
Senior Member
I'm not into the whole gravel bike idea. Always seemed gimmicky, but my solution is to just not buy one.
Saw some guy on a gravel-ish bike on my normal trail.
The trail was kicking the living crap out of him with the rocks and roots, but he seemed to be having a good time.
Whatever makes you happy.
Saw some guy on a gravel-ish bike on my normal trail.
The trail was kicking the living crap out of him with the rocks and roots, but he seemed to be having a good time.
Whatever makes you happy.
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#24
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#25
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I own an inexpensive mountain bike. If I want a gravel bike, I can just swap out parts. I've already put different tires on it, I'm contemplating removing the crap spring shock, might go bladed, then use it for a gravel bike. A gravel bike is a multipurpose hybrid IMO. It's all about the branding...
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