Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 review
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Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 review

Commuter and gravel companion for big days out – whatever the surface

Our rating

3.5

1749.00
1499.00

Steve Sayers / Our Media

Published: February 10, 2024 at 5:00 pm

Pros:

Versatility; good range of gears; quality groupset; mudguard-friendly

Cons:

Heavy-feeling; noticeably firm ride; tyres not tubeless-ready

Ridley has positioned its Kanzo A as a bike designed for all sorts of riding, from day-to-day commuting to gravel escapades, and it certainly looks the part.

While you can go for more road-flavoured bikes such as the Cube Attain SLX and Cannondale Synapse 1 if you want to fit mudguards or fenders, the Kanzo has bags of clearance. This enables you to run even wider tyres with mudguards, backed up by Shimano's solid gravel-specific GRX 400 groupset.

The Kanzo A's price was £1,799 when we started testing, but dropped to £1,499.99 during testing, which is both welcome and surprising during these inflationary times.

Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 frame details

Toptube of the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The Kanzo sports a triple-butted aluminium frame. Steve Sayers / Our Media

The frame is made from triple-butted aluminium, with hydroformed tubes.

The carbon-bladed fork is paired with an aluminium steerer, which contributes a little to the 10.74kg overall weight.

It has triple bosses on each blade for carrying luggage or water bottles, and this is a theme that's continued on the frame, with the usual down tube and seat tube bosses joined by a pair beneath the down tube.

There are no bento box top tube bosses, though, which you might expect on the best gravel bikes.

The Kanzo A frame does have some very neat-looking and distinctive features.

There's an arch-shaped plate where the seatstays join the seat tube and top tube, and the fronts of the chainstays have chunky plates that help to achieve a clearance of 42mm for 700c tyres (or 55mm if you're running 650b wheels).

However, both of those features, along with a generally burly-looking frame and the fact the seatstays aren't dropped (for clearance), suggest the toughness that's required for off-road riding blended with stiffness.

There's plenty of clearance for gravel mudguards. Ridley makes its own Kanzo A-specific mudguards, weighing a claimed 393g.

You can't order them directly from Ridley, but if you're buying your bike from a Ridley dealer you should be able to get them there.

Part of frame of the Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 Steve Sayers / Our Media

There isn't a seatstay bridge and the bridge between the chainstays is not drilled for a mudguard, which will restrict the use of some third-party options. Ridley's own one screws into the rear of the seat tube.

You could use options such as the SKS Speedrocker, which offer near full-length coverage and are designed for up to 42mm-wide tyres. They clip to the bottom and top of the seatstays, and the seat tube, so should prove pretty stable too.

SKS's adaptable Veloflexx mudguards are also designed to work on bikes without a seatstay bridge, and would be another possibility that should offer very extensive coverage and protection.

Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 geometry

Headtube of the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
Cables are routed internallly through the down tube. Steve Sayers / Our Media

It'll be no surprise that the Ridley's geometry is a bit more laid back than that of the Cube and Cannondale road bikes I tested alongside it.

The head tube angle is 71 degrees in my size 56cm frame, but the 73-degree seat angle is road-bike steep.

The biggest difference is the wheelbase, which at 1,034mm should provide enough stability for off-road and distance riding.

A lot of that is down to chainstays that are 430mm long (rather than around 415mm).

The reach is only a fraction longer than the Cannondale's and the stack 14mm higher, so it's not that extreme. While the handling will be slower, this should translate to more predictable behaviour off-road.


 XXS XS S M L XL
Seat tube angle (degrees) 75 74.7 74 73 72.5 72.5
Head tube angle (degrees) 70 70.5 70.5 71 71 71.5
Chainstay (mm) 430 430 430 430 430 430
Seat tube (mm) 450 480 510 540 570 600
Top tube (mm) 515 525 540 565 585 600
Head tube (mm) 100 113 133 158 188 213
Bottom bracket drop (mm) 74 74 72 72 70 70
Wheelbase (mm) 1,016 1,019 1,029 1,034 1,056 1,066
Standover (mm) 754 776 801 829 860 888
Stack (mm) 528 542 559 584 611 636
Reach (mm) 374 377 380 386 392 399

Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 specifications

Shimano GRX drivetrain on the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
A GRX 600 crankset is added to an otherwise GRX 400 groupset. Steve Sayers / Our Media

It's a familiar story for the Ridley Kanzo's kit, which pairs cockpit components from Forza with wheels and drivetrain from Shimano.

While some brands opt for 1x setups for their gravel machines, Ridley has gone for a 2x approach, based around Shimano GRX. It's a complete Shimano GRX 400 groupset, aside from the GRX 600 crankset.

Shimano GRX rear mech on the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
Shifting was faultless, whatever the weather. Steve Sayers / Our Media

The Kanzo A has a sub-compact 46/30T chainset and 11-36t cassette. This gives you a pleasingly low and knee-friendly 23in bottom gear, but without compromising at the other end of the gear range; you're unlikely to spin out very often on the 115in biggest gear.

While the GRX drivetrain only has 10 sprockets, I didn’t notice any ride-ruining jumps across the cassette no matter how challenging the conditions.

Brake levers of the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The measurement between the lever tops is 36cm, with the bar flaring out to 50mm. Steve Sayers / Our Media

The tops of the GRX levers are comfortable and the braking is great, with strong stopping power and good modulation.

Shimano also supplies the wheels in the form of its tubeless-ready RS171 DBs. These have Shimano's usual qualities – well-sealed hubs and a tough build – but they're not that light and contribute to the Kanzo's overall weight of 10.74kg.

The tyres are the clincher Vittoria Terreno Drys, exhibiting the same positive qualities as the tubeless version.

Forza Oryx Disc fork on the Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The carbon Forza Oryx Disc fork is paired with an aluminium steerer. Steve Sayers / Our Media

I would have preferred the tubeless-ready model, opening the possibility of going tubeless without buying another set, but these worked really well on a variety of surfaces.

The near-slick central tread has a honeycomb pattern that runs smoothly on tarmac, with more aggressively treaded shoulders.

While nominally 38mm wide, these measured 40mm when mounted on the Shimano rims.

Cockpit of the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The laid-back geometry sees a head tube angle of 71 degrees. Steve Sayers / Our Media

The handlebar helps with offering control when you're riding off-road.

The centre-to-centre measurement across the tops of the levers is 36cm, but the bar flares out to 50cm from drop to drop.

It means you can get into a nice little tuck when you're riding on the road, with great control off-road in the drops.

Selle Italia Model X saddle on the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The Selle Italia saddle didn't impress on test. Steve Sayers / Our Media

Ridley has one final trick up its sleeve for the Kanzo A in that it offers you a degree of customisation.

You can buy it as a frameset alone, or with a choice of SRAM and Shimano groupsets. You can also choose from a range of different colours – 'Inspired' colours cost you no more, while 'Spectrum' options incur a charge.

Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 ride impressions

Male cyclist in orange top riding the Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
It's comfortable for big days in the saddle. Steve Sayers / Our Media

The Kanzo A tackled numerous surfaces well, with the geometry providing a comfortable riding position for long-distance commuting and very good control when tackling tougher surfaces.

The frame carried loads well too, so you could easily employ it for big days out, bikepacking trips and more.

But what stood out most about the Kanzo A’s ride is just how firm it is, even with tyres that measure 40mm wide.

Rear frame of the Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The non-dropped seatstays and plate across their top contribute to a very firm ride. Steve Sayers / Our Media

I'd put some of that down to factors mentioned earlier: non-dropped seatstays, the plates across the seatstays and chainstays, and the stiff frame.

This is the first time I've used the Vittoria Terreno Dry tyres and was surprised by their overall performance.

Shimano front disc brakes on the Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
There's ample stopping power and modulation from the Shimano brakes. Steve Sayers / Our Media

They ran smoothly on tarmac and while not quite as quick as the narrower, slicker tyres on the Cube Attain SLX and Cannondale Synapse 1, I never had the sensation they were stealing much of my speed or wasting my effort.

They excelled on unsurfaced routes and trails, and were surprisingly decent on my local wet and boggy canal towpath, as well as dry grit and gravel.

Throw in an aluminium steerer and weighty wheels with the clincher tyres – having a lower-pressure tubeless setup could have helped here – and the ride became more wearing than some after a few hours in the saddle.

I wasn't a fan of the saddle either, which could have done with a touch more padding at the front.

This wasn't so noticeable when I was wearing bib tights with a plusher chamois pad. However, I feel it only added to the overall feel of firmness from the Kanzo A.

Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 bottom line

Male cyclist in orange top riding the Ridley Kanzo A GRX 400 gravel bike
The Kanzo excels as a commuter bike with wider ambitions. Steve Sayers / Our Media

A practical, versatile bike that should survive whatever you throw at it, the Ridley Kanzo A in this GRX 400 build would work well as a weekday commuter bike and weekend adventure machine.

However, it is quite heavy and the ride is on the firm side, even with the 700x38c tyres fitted. If Ridley had specified tubeless tyres (set up as such), this might have taken the edge off things.

My other gripe is with the saddle. I'd have preferred a plusher nose, which might have further softened the ride.

Product

Brand ridley_bikes
Price 1749.00 EUR,1499.00 GBP
Weight 10.7400, KILOGRAM (56cm) -

Features

Fork Forza Oryx Disc, 100x12mm thru-axle, hidden fender mounts
br_stem Forza Stratos 100mm
br_chain KMC X-11
br_frame Kanzo Aluminium, triple-butted hydroformed 6061 aluminium, 142x12mm thru-axle
Tyres Vittoria Terreno Dry 700x38c
br_brakes Shimano
br_cranks Shimano GRX 600 172.5mm 46-30
br_saddle Selle Italia Model X
br_wheels Shimano RS171 DB 11-speed
br_shifter Shimano GRX
br_cassette Shimano HG50 10-speed 11-36
br_seatpost Forza Stratos 15mm offset, 350mm, 27.2mm
br_gripsTape Forza cork tape
br_handlebar 4ZA Stratos Gravel
br_bottomBracket BSA 68mm
br_availableSizes XXS, XS, S, M, L, XL
br_rearDerailleur Shimano GRX 400
br_frontDerailleur Shimano GRX 400