Favorite Ride: Columbia IL Bluff Rd. Bike Setup: Stock setup: 51 cm 7005 aero frame ("orange peel"), Cosmic Elite wheelset, Ultegra group w/double and 11-23, Profile BRC carbon fork, Profile Stiffy stem and handlebar, Thompson Set-Back seatpost, SGD USA Satellite saddle (lightest padded saddle on the market), Speedplay X-3 pedals, Flight Deck computer. Summary: To start things off, the Comet is Jamis's "speed oritented" platform while the Eclipse is the "climbing oriented" platform, BUT the Comet is excellent at climbing also! Ultra-stiff and responsive, but the ride doesn't kill you at all. I'm a little dude at 5'4 and 112#, and I have no problems with the ridgidness of the frame, I love it. Around where I live in Missouri, it's nothing but hills, hills everywhere and you cannot escape them. So most of your riding is on rolling terrain and climbing. For flats, I go to Columbia IL or slightly north of here. This bike handles excellently in any situation, it flies right up hills. Hit flats, and it flies even more, and almost effortlessly. All operation is quiet and smooth, but you may want to fix the typical Ultegra rattling shifter problem of course. The bike is not the lightest, but definitely pretty light at (for my frame size) under 19 lbs complete with pedals. I seriously do not understand how it rides as smoothly as it does, since it is a rigid aluminum aero frame; you would expect it to wallop the snot out of you, but it rides just as supple as any other steel bike I've tried, and loads better than traditionally designed aluminum bikes that rattle and skip around as if you were riding on the moon. I guess it's something with the frame design in combination with the carbon fork, but the '99 Comet had the same frame with a Kinesis bladed AL fork and its riding characteristics were just as impressive; so I gotta say it's just an innovative frame design.
It's a wonderful all purpose racing machine, equally as great for speed as it is for climbing, and easily convertable to a more than adequate poor-man's triathalon or TT setup with the addition of an aero bar and turn-around of the bent seatpost, an option not found in most road bikes. Strengths: Excellent grouping of all top-shelf components, there are NO cheap "replace later" items to be found. Quality is superb, what I've come to expect from Jamis from my experience with them. They coax such a sweet ride from a frame that would typically be stiff and unforgiving; I don't know how they do it. Oh yeah, and this thing is faster than @&$#! Not just fast, but it feels fast and handles fast. Weaknesses: The design and components are all aero; not a weakness unless you're in a strong crosswind, but it's part of the design and it's that way for a purpose. Similar Products Used: Complete 2000 road bike lines from Fuji, Raleigh, GT, and Jamis.
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