Hi. I'm just getting back into cycling after a number of years of not doing much riding. It's time to upgrade my road bike. I think I've narrowed it down to the Kuota Kharma (C$2450) vs. the Rocky Mountain Prestige 30 CR (C$2000).
I'm about 6'4, with shorter legs and a longer torso for my height, and extraordinarily long arms. Therefore I need a bike with a longer top tube. I'm 36 and while I used to be fast and competitive, now I just ride for fun. I do want a bike that I can be comfortable on for 2+ hour rides, as well as maybe race for fun if I feel like it. I had two vertebrae in my neck fused together a few years ago so I don't want a punishingly stiff bike.
Kuota Kharma thoughts:
The bike shop has been very helpful. They are knowledgeable and do a good job of fitting a bike to the person. After measuring me up, this was his recommendation from what he sells. He spent probably an hour with me, no pressure. The shop also has weekly group rides, free tuning for the lifetime of the bike, etc. I hadn't even considered a Kuota before talking to hiim.
Rocky Mountain thoughts:
It's a Canadian Company and I like to support Canadian companies (I'm in Canada). However, I bought a Rocky Mountain Vertex back in '95 and had huge hassle getting warranty work done on a cracked frame. That was a long time ago though. The Rocky Mountain is $450 cheaper which is a significant chunk of change. The Rocky Mountain dealer is fine and I have bought from them before, but they're more of a "family" store and less of a "performance" store.
Unfortunately I can't ride either one as neither one is in stock and since I need the largest size isn't something bike stores usually have sitting around. I just have to buy a bike and hope for the best.
By far, the most important aspect for me is fit. More so than even price, although I am price conscious.
The Kuota has a 73 degree seat tube and is 590mm in top tube length. The RMB has a 72.5 degree seat tube angle and 600mm top tube, which is nice.
Anyway, if anyone has any thoughts for a tall cyclist, or experience with either bike, I'd appreciate. I've read the reviews, now it's time to plunk down the money.
Thanks,
- Andrew.
I'm about 6'4, with shorter legs and a longer torso for my height, and extraordinarily long arms. Therefore I need a bike with a longer top tube. I'm 36 and while I used to be fast and competitive, now I just ride for fun. I do want a bike that I can be comfortable on for 2+ hour rides, as well as maybe race for fun if I feel like it. I had two vertebrae in my neck fused together a few years ago so I don't want a punishingly stiff bike.
Kuota Kharma thoughts:
The bike shop has been very helpful. They are knowledgeable and do a good job of fitting a bike to the person. After measuring me up, this was his recommendation from what he sells. He spent probably an hour with me, no pressure. The shop also has weekly group rides, free tuning for the lifetime of the bike, etc. I hadn't even considered a Kuota before talking to hiim.
Rocky Mountain thoughts:
It's a Canadian Company and I like to support Canadian companies (I'm in Canada). However, I bought a Rocky Mountain Vertex back in '95 and had huge hassle getting warranty work done on a cracked frame. That was a long time ago though. The Rocky Mountain is $450 cheaper which is a significant chunk of change. The Rocky Mountain dealer is fine and I have bought from them before, but they're more of a "family" store and less of a "performance" store.
Unfortunately I can't ride either one as neither one is in stock and since I need the largest size isn't something bike stores usually have sitting around. I just have to buy a bike and hope for the best.
By far, the most important aspect for me is fit. More so than even price, although I am price conscious.
The Kuota has a 73 degree seat tube and is 590mm in top tube length. The RMB has a 72.5 degree seat tube angle and 600mm top tube, which is nice.
Anyway, if anyone has any thoughts for a tall cyclist, or experience with either bike, I'd appreciate. I've read the reviews, now it's time to plunk down the money.
Thanks,
- Andrew.