Dawes Giro 300 24" Opinions Please
paulintheforest
Posts: 84
I've just been asked about this bike for an 8 year old to use for triathlons
http://www.evanscycles.com/products/daw ... l#features
I can't find any reviews anywhere, does anyone have any views on this bike? particularly against the Islabike Luath 24 which is what I have in mind for my children.
thanks
http://www.evanscycles.com/products/daw ... l#features
I can't find any reviews anywhere, does anyone have any views on this bike? particularly against the Islabike Luath 24 which is what I have in mind for my children.
thanks
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Comments
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paulintheforest wrote:I've just been asked about this bike for an 8 year old to use for triathlons
http://www.evanscycles.com/products/daw ... l#features
I can't find any reviews anywhere, does anyone have any views on this bike? particularly against the Islabike Luath 24 which is what I have in mind for my children.
thanks
It is really heavy, especially when compared to bikes like the Luath. Very low spec components, steel fork etc. Personally I would avoid it, as it won't be that much fun to ride. Better to spend the extra on an Isla. If going for the Moda, go for the CX version. Plenty of kids triathlons have their bike part on tracks or fields, where you want the CX version.Blogging about junior road bikes http://junior-road-bikes.tumblr.com0 -
The Dawes is heavier, lower spec and the resale value will be poorer than the Islabike. I know someone who bought the Espoir 24 for his daughter. Handling was so-so and it was compromised by similarly cheap parts. I'd only buy one if it was secondhand, so a lot less than new (provided my child was not going to use it for racing). Islabikes are always worth the extra IME.
The CTC mag compared the 24" Dawes Espoir and Islabike Luath a couple of years ago - http://www.ctc.org.uk/file/member/201109056.pdf
@oxoman - kids' bikes are rarely lighter than modern adult bikes.Aspire not to have more, but to be more.0 -
Thanks for the comments, I have passed them all back to the person who asked me the question. I'm biased towards islabikes so wanted another opinion.0
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At the other end of the scale in price, equipment and weight is the Culprit Junior 1 bike with 24" wheels.
These bikes are the lightest and best equipped triathlon bikes money can buy. The designer is a triathlete himself.
http://www.culpritbicycles.com/junior1m2.php
UK distributor is Cyclelynx: http://cyclelynx.co.uk/culprit-junior-1 ... cing-bike/Bald is Beautiful0 -
othello wrote:paulintheforest wrote:I've just been asked about this bike for an 8 year old to use for triathlons
http://www.evanscycles.com/products/daw ... l#features
I can't find any reviews anywhere, does anyone have any views on this bike? particularly against the Islabike Luath 24 which is what I have in mind for my children.
thanks
It is really heavy, especially when compared to bikes like the Luath. Very low spec components, steel fork etc. Personally I would avoid it, as it won't be that much fun to ride. Better to spend the extra on an Isla. If going for the Moda, go for the CX version. Plenty of kids triathlons have their bike part on tracks or fields, where you want the CX version.
Agreed, I wouldn't even consider a road bike at that age, they'll do more miles on tracks and parks so a crosser is ideal if they are going for drop bars.[Castle Donington Ladies FC - going up in '22]0 -
Thanks for the comments. He has been measured up and it looks like he'll be getting an Islabike Luath 26. That will be good for the grass as well with a set of cross tyres.0
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saw the Dawes 300 24" at the weekend at lbs. Down from £400 to £200. I'm tempted at that price for my 9 yr old. It won't have the resale value or weight advantage of the Islabike, but less than half the priceCommute: Langster -Singlecross - Brompton S2-LX
Road: 95 Trek 5500 -Look 695 Aerolight eTap - Boardman TTe eTap
Offroad: Pace RC200 - Dawes Kickback 2 tandem - Tricross - Boardman CXR9.8 - Ridley x-fire0