Cycling Weekly

Ribble Gravel SL

Despite the breadth of Ribble’s drop-bar off-road range, the Gravel SL still finds itself balancing a couple of different purposes.

On the one hand, it is a lightweight carbon gravel bike built for speed. The Gravel SL boasts aero flourishes,

from kammtail tube shapes to its dropped seatstays and one-piece cockpit. It’s lightweight, responsive to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly1 min read
Acts Of Cycling Stupidity
A bike retailer I know recently told me about a single order he’d received for six different models of power meter. He was a bit unsure about whether someone had, perhaps, managed to do this by accident – maybe adding them all to the basket with the
Cycling Weekly6 min read
Can Narrow Handlebars Make You Significantly Faster?
Why is it that, despite the trend for narrow handlebars in the pro peloton, if you buy a race bike from one of the major brands it will likely be equipped with 40cm to 44cm bars? By commissioning our own wind-tunnel tests, we’ve discovered that by sw
Cycling Weekly1 min read
Tour de France 25 July, 1934
René Vietto (centre) relaxes with fellow competitors outside a Pau cafe, as they prepare for stage 19 of the 1934 Tour de France to Bordeaux. In the modern era Bordeaux is a famous destination for the sprinters to ply their trade, and it was no diffe

Related Books & Audiobooks