josephk86 wrote:Hi, Shpox
Thanks for the reply. At the moment, I am riding 60km+, 2-3 times a week on a Giant Hybrid and was looking to get into a road bike (all of my riding to date has been on a road so seems like a logical progression). I am looking to spend $2.5k with pedals/shoes. My area is a outer suburb of Sydney so very built up, road conditions all good.
I'm assuming you already have a helmet/bibs/sunnies/pumps/saddle bag stuff so I'd reserve $300 for pedals/shoes/cages/lights etc... or any additional accessories. Definetly don't overlook accessories as you will replace them quickly if they're not quality.
For this price range, I'd highly reccomend the CAAD10. It's the best alu frame on offer and it beats entry level carbon IMO.
If you're more concerned about value and don't mind its looks, the Azzuri is pretty close to the best value package out there with Di2 and a decent wheelset. Plenty of reviews here on it too.
It seems to me you're after something comfortable if you're doing long rides. I'd stay away from race geometries unless you're riding for fitness and not commuting. 60km can easily turn into 100km.
tl;dr:
Test ride the CAAD10, check out Di2 and see if it's something you like, test ride the Giant Defy. Most of all, make sure it's comfortable, the geometry fits and they have your size.Most bike stores will sell you what they have in stock obviously. This doesn't necessarily mean it's the best frame for you.
I bought a bike with ultegra 6 months ago on sale. It's alu and it's a bit harsher to what I'd prefer for the type of riding I ended up doing, but it's super value. If I was to sell it, for double the money of the original cost, I'd pretty much get nothing but a more compliant frame and maybe a little bit of a weight advantage.
The sensible choice for you first roady is to ride the showtime out of it and save up for a 4-5k+ frame when you know it's definetly a sport you'd like to get into and you'd like a bike/wheelset to match. For a first road bike, 2.2k is a pretty high amount depending on your demographic, but you most likely won't need to upgrade anytime soon. Frames don't really change
too much upwards from here in terms of value alone, so you're in the most popular price point for most intermediate riders, meaning you have heaps of offerings.