Giant AnyRoad 1 first ride review

Giant AnyRoad 1 first ride review

A unique looking all-road machine

1299.00

Andy Saunders

Published: September 14, 2017 at 6:00 am

Giant’s AnyRoad features a huge bow-shaped top tube flowing from head tube to rear dropouts that creates a very low-slung frame. One of the key benefits of this is that it leaves masses of Giant’s clever D-shaped carbon seatpost unsupported, which allows the post to flex fore-and-aft (while the D-shape stops it twisting), creating a compliant back end.

Giant AnyRoad 1 spec overview

  • Frame: Aluxx aluminium
  • Fork: Giant carbon composite
  • Wheels: Giant SX-2
  • Cranks: Shimano Tiagra 50/34
  • Cassette: 11-32
  • Shifters: Shimano Tiagra
  • Derailleurs: Shimano Tiagra
  • Brakes: TRP Spyre C disc brakes with 160mm rotors

Giant AnyRoad 1 kit

The rest of the bike is well thought out too. The XR bar features a subtle flare to the drops that isn’t as extreme as most, but enough to give you ample wrist clearance when settling into the shallow drops when riding fast.

For when you’re on the tops, Giant’s included the long out-of-favour cyclocross-style flat-top brake levers. The shape is a little different to your standard, with the lever blades deeper and more sculpted than most and a pronounced flat on the ends that makes them more secure when bouncing across cobbles.

TRP Spyre C disc brakes with 160mm rotors Andy Saunders

The drivetrain is Shimano’s Tiagra with a road-friendly 50/34, 11-32-gear range — plenty to hustle the bike along tarmac yet with a low enough bottom gear to send you up steep gravel climbs with plenty to spare.

At this price you can’t really expect hydraulic disc brakes, but the AnyRoad does have the next best thing: TRP’s Spyre C cable discs. These best their mechanical competition by having both pads active, meaning there’s no brake rub that you often experience on standard single-sided brakes. Large 160mm rotors also raise the power-braking stages, as well as providing good levels of controlling modulation at the lever.

Internal cable routing Andy Saunders

Giant AnyRoad 1 ride impression

For cobbles… Andy Saunders

The ride quality impresses with the carbon fork upfront taking the sting out of big hits, aided by the chevron-treaded big-volume tyres. The back-end’s compliance combined with the slightly squishy saddle can feel a bit soft when really hammering along on tarmac, but it rides so well off-road I’d happily live with it.

On dry, dusty trails the P-SLX2 tyres really impress with enough tread to bite in corners, while on the road they don’t slow things down too much over a standard road tyre.

…and tarmac Andy Saunders

Giant AnyRoad 1 early verdict

All in all, if the Giant’s unique styling is something you can live with then I’d suggest you do, because as an all-road vehicle the AnyRoad is truly impressive, and one of the finest dirt-ready machines I’ve ever tested at this price point.

Unique design and monster off-road ability mark the AnyRoad out as a go-anywhere bargain.

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