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More Simple, Fun Bikes Like the Priority Sauce, Please
Iโve been working on a bike equation lately, toying with variables in my head as I zoom along single track trails, or cruise around my townโs winding little streets. Itโs something like this: fun = capability – complication x value, or f = (v)c – o. As you increase capability but remove complication and expense, the fun increases. If you increase complication and expense, capability goes up, but the fun number goes down. Call it a way to make a subjective experience slightly more objective. Basically, what Iโve realized over the years, is I have more fun with a bike if itโs simple, inexpensive, but still has a respectable level of capability, relative to what I want to ride. Thatโs not to say there isnโt a place for high-end, รผber-capable trail bikes brimming with technologyโthose are great too. But simple, pure fun? Gimme something uncomplicated and basic.ย
Thatโs the Sauce by Priority Bikes. Iโve been riding one a ton for the last six months or so. Around town, on little adventures, even swooping around flowy, non-technical singletrack. Iโve bolted on one of Old Man Mountainโs terrific racks over the rear wheel, and attached a couple bike bags from North St., and itโs replaced my big, heavy e-cargo bike as a grocery getter. I throw a Yepp kid seat on the back, and my toddler squeals with excitement. Itโs a do-anything rig that looks cool and is fun to ride.ย
It costs $799.ย
What you get is a simple aluminum frame modeled after an old-school klunker. Most interestingly, you also get a single speed Gates belt drive. This is kinda Priorityโs thing. Most, if not all, of their bikes feature a belt drive. This is my first belt drive bike and I hope itโs not my last. Itโs buttery smooth, doesnโt get squeaky if itโs wet, and requires no lubrication.ย
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The single speed helps tremendously with the simple fun. You get on, you pedal. I havenโt had a single speed in about 15 years and I forgot how much clawing back that tiny amount of brain space youโd normally devote to shifting helps with a feeling of freedom. It also keeps the weight way, way down. Iโd guess this bike weighs around 22 pounds or so? Formally weighing it would seem to defeat the purpose of the simplicity.ย
The bike ships with semi-knobby Goodyear tires on its 27.5โ wheels. Itโs also fitted with hydraulic disc brakes, by a brand Iโve never heard of called Hudson, but they work just fine. The tires are grippy enough to handle dirt and gravel, but I wouldnโt go bombing an enduro trail on it. Itโs even routed for a dropper post if you think trails will be a big part of your experience on this thing. And, if thatโs the case, you can even throw a suspension fork on there โ itโs made to handle a fork with up to 100mm of travel.ย
Now, Iโm sure things like the hubs and the bottom bracket are not exactly top shelf quality, especially if youโre used to dropping $5k on bikes. But theyโve served me just fine and I have no intention of upgrading anything on this bike. Itโs well thought out and a joy to ride.ย
Seriously – Iโve ridden it more than anything else in my fleet since it arrived. The closest bike I have to this one is a Hudski Doggler, a flat bar gravel bike thatโs far more capable but that also costs $2k. These two bikes have something in common though – theyโre like the bikes of my youth. No suspension, ready for anything, comfortable to ride just about anywhere.ย
I wish there were a whole lot more options like this out there. Fun, do-it-all machines that bring back the simple freedom of bikes, and at a price that most anyone can afford.ย
Words by Justin Housman
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