Which is your dream bike?
Endurance Vs Gravel Bike? Endurance samurai or gravel hero, what are the differences between the notorious bike types, and which suits you best?
Endurance Vs Gravel Bike
1. What is an Endurance bike anyway? And what is a Gravel?
An endurance bike is designed for longer rides due to its more relaxed geometry. A gravel bike is also a drop-bar bike, but allows riding on a variety of surfaces, with an emphasis on off-road terrain.
2. Tire clearance
One of the most important and noticeable differences between the two bikes is tire clearance. Since an endurance bike is built for comfort on longer rides, you can use wider tires than on aero- and speed-oriented road bikes. Most enduro bikes have a tire clearance of 32/35 mm, but some bikes like the Trek Domane have even 38 mm. That's wide enough to fit gravel tires and handle light/well-maintained gravel.
Gravel bikes have greater tire clearance. Most gravel bikes can accommodate 40-45mm wide tires in 700c, and some, like the Canyon Grizl, even 50mm wide tires in 700c. Then there is usually the option to mount smaller 650B wheels and use slightly wider tires. With these wide tires, you can handle extreme terrain and comfortably handle light mountain bike terrain.
3. Mounting options
Another difference between an enduro and a gravel bike is the mounting options. These can vary from brand to brand. However, a gravel bike usually has more mounting options than an endurance bike. Most Endurance bikes have only the standard two bottle mounts, though some brands add versatility with top tube mounts and rack and fender mounts.
A gravel bike usually has all the previously mentioned mounts, a third bottle mount on the down tube, and fork mounts. This makes the gravel bike more suitable for packing bikes and longer tours. However, there are also race- and speed-oriented gravel bikes like the Cervélo Aspero that do not have fork, rack, and mudguard mounts. - Alice Huot @ buycycle
4. Geometry
Although the two types are pretty similar in geometry, a few differences make for a different riding experience and can thus be an important decision criterion. All in all, endurance and gravel bikes put you in a more upright position than pure aero road bikes. This provides more comfort on longer rides, but also more stability.
However, the Gravel bike has a longer wheelbase, longer chainstays and a flatter head tube angle. This provides even more comfort, control and stability when riding over rough terrain and minimizes toe overlap. On the other hand, the shorter wheelbase, shorter chainstays and narrower head tube angle of the Endurance bike make for a more agile, aggressive and faster feel.
5. Components
Gravel bikes usually have 1x gravel-specific groups like Shimano GRX with a low gear ratio similar to a mountain bike to tackle technical trails and climbs easily. For example, a 42 chainring is mixed with a wide range 11-42 cassette. Most prefer the 1x gears for their simplicity and ability to hold the chain better on rough terrain. However, there are also gravel bikes with 2x drivetrains and slightly higher gearing for more versatility.
An Endurance, on the other hand, has a typical 2x drivetrain with a higher road gear ratio. For example, a mid-compact 52/36 chainring with a narrow 11-34 cassette. With this gear ratio, you'll reach higher top speeds than with the Gravelbike gear ratio and be able to tackle steep climbs, but you'll struggle in slow technical situations. Finally, the handlebars of the gravel bike are usually more flared. This increases stability, comfort and control when riding off-road. Endurance bikes have less pronounced handlebars to make you more aerodynamic.
6. So, which bike is better for you?
The simple answer would be if you only ride on asphalt, then go with the Endurance bike, and if you only ride off-road, then go with the Gravelbike. But it's best to do some soul-searching. Think: What surface do you want to ride more on? What will you have to ride more on in your area? And how much are you riding your bike at all? If you want to spend more time on pavement, occasionally ride light gravel, and have a more maneuverable/faster bike, you should get the Endurance. If you want a versatile bike, you know you'll be spending a lot of time off-road, and you want to do longer bike rides or bikepacking then take the Gravel-bike.
If you already feel better about your bike decision, or even want to make it now, look at our website! If you have any questions, we are from buycycle or want to sell your bike, we are always there for you and wish you, for now: Happy browsing, happy cycling!
Gravel bike buying guide
- How to choose a gravel bike?
- What is better: buying or leasing a bike?
- 1x or 2x circuit for gravel bikes?
- Best steel gravel bikes 2024: why your next gravel bike might be steel
- Best titanium gravel bikes: See which titanium gravel bikes you should consider in 2024
- How to choose a gravel bike?
- Hybrid vs gravel bikes: which is right for you?
- What to look for when buying a used bike?
- The Gravel Bike Test
- Should I buy a new or used bike?
- How much does a bike cost?
Which bike is for you
Gravel bike brands
- Best gravel bike brands: What are the best gravel bike brands to consider in 2024?
- What are the best bike brands in the USA?
- Scott vs. Cube: What makes these top bike brands unique?
- Trek vs. Specialized: which brand really suits your style?
- Cannondale vs Trek: battle of the biggest
Gravel bike reviews
- Cannondale Topstone Carbon Review
- Canyon Grizl Review
- Nakamura Allroad 250 Review: Is this gravel bike a budget-friendly find?
- Ridley Kanzo Fast Review
- Rose Backroad FF review: what is behind the new Backroad?
- Rose Backroad Review
- 2024 Specialized Crux review
Bike vs Bike
- Cube Cross Race VS Cube Nuroad
- Cyclocross vs gravel bike: What's different?
- Endurance Vs Gravel Bike
- Specialized Crux vs. Diverge: which adventure bike suits you best?
Where to buy a bike?
- What are the best bike outlets in the US?
- How to buy a bike at Rose Outlet
- Buy a bike at Canyon Outlet
- How to buy a bike at the Cube factory outlet?
- Bicycle blue book: the right choice for evaluating, selling, or buying a bike?
- Buy a bike on Ebay
- Craigslist bikes vs buycycle: what is the best place to sell or buy a used bike in 2024?
- Facebook marketplace vs buycycle: where to buy or sell your bike?
- Pinkbike: The best place to buy and sell a used bike?
Components
Sizing guide
- Everything about the tire size of your bike
- Bike helmet size chart and how to measure for a bike helmet
- Bike size chart: What size bike do I need?
- Bike wheel size chart: what wheel size bike do I need?
- How to make sure you buy the right-sized second-hand bike
- All about frame height for a road bike
- All about frame height on a mountain bike
- Road bike size chart: Your guide to the perfect fit
- used bikes Portland
- used bikes Denver
- used bikes Chicago
- used bikes Seattle
- used bikes New York
- used bikes Austin
- used bikes Philadelphia
- used bikes Houston
- used bikes Boston
- used bikes Portland
- used bikes Denver
- used bikes Chicago
- used bikes Seattle
- used bikes New York
- used bikes Austin
- used bikes Philadelphia
- used bikes Houston
- used bikes Boston