Cycling Plus

FUJI JARI 1.3 £1349

› Gravel-flavoured all-roader with SRAM 1x and cable disc brakes

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Aluminium isn’t only suitable for road bikes, such as the Cinelli. Fuji’s Jari 1.3 is designed for ‘gravel, light touring, bike-packing or pretty much whatever you can throw at it’. Hmm, that’s quite a claim from the multi-national Fuji brand.

The Jari’s geometry is a mile away from the Experience’s aggressive frame angles. Fuji’s ‘adventure’ geometry lengthens the wheelbase and slackens both the head and seattube angles for greater control. The Oval Concepts bar is a super-wide affair with a 25-degree flare and fourdegree sweep, again for better control

off road. It measures 44cm across the top before widening out to a whopping 54cm at the drops; it’s also slightly flattened on the tops. The seatstays have a pronounced swoop to them.

The frame and fork are decked out with a spectacula­r array of fittings for touring and bike-packing. The usual mudguard mounts (and acres of clearance) and two pairs of bottle bosses are joined by another pair of bosses on each fork leg, one under the down-tube and another on the toptube that Fuji call a ‘bento box’ mount. Well, you wouldn’t want to lose your noodles while gravel-ing…

The top-tube has another unusual feature, a small silicone shoulder pad underneath the top-tube, to ‘increase comfort when portaging the bike’. We think Fuji means ‘carrying’. Whatever, we found it a surprising­ly handy addition when ‘portaging’ it on our local railway station’s stairs.

The gearing is typical gravel bike, with this being the first of three test bikes with SRAM’s 1x single-ring setup. The combinatio­n of FSA’s Omega 40-tooth chainring and SRAM’s own 11-42 cassette offers a similar top gear to a 50x14 and a bottom gear lower than a 34x34.

What does this mean? Well, at the top end you could spin out, but this isn’t a bike for attacking speed records on. The flipside is that the 40x42

bottom gear is your friend, your very best friend when climbing or riding off road. This is a gravel bike, after all.

In spite of that its 38mm tubelessco­mpatible Gravel King tyres perform decently on the tarmac, the raised block tread rolling reasonably quickly thanks to Panaracer’s Zero Slip Grip compound. They coped with cobbles – Bath and Bristol have some Georgian pavé – and on pretty slippery torn-up gravel they grip diligently.

The Panaracer tyres cost a fair amount but Fuji has cut costs by pairing SRAM’s Apex levers with Tektro cable disc brakes rather than the SRAM hydraulic brakes found on two of the other bikes, though those are much more expensive. The braking is good and it’s consistent regardless of conditions, but does require more hand effort at the levers.

But that’s the only real cost-cutting we could find. Fuji’s own-brand Oval Concepts’ name is on most of the cockpit components and we got on with all of it, even the saddle.

Fuji’s Jari proved something of a dark horse. It’s not that light, neither is it that quick. But it’s a lovely ride if you’re looking for a comfortabl­e, practical, versatile bike that’ll cope with just about every surface you throw at it.

It was a joy on our long commute and even encouraged some singletrac­k forays. The low bottom gear’s a treat. Its stability makes it a confident if not super-sharp descender, and with more road-flavoured tyres it would make a great commuter-cumtrainin­g bike. Oh, and it’s a blast!

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 ??  ?? Below The 11-42 cassette is typical on 1x setups Bottom SRAM Apex 1x is joined by an FSA chainset
Below The 11-42 cassette is typical on 1x setups Bottom SRAM Apex 1x is joined by an FSA chainset
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 ??  ?? A comfortabl­e bike that’ll cope with just about every surface you throw at it
A comfortabl­e bike that’ll cope with just about every surface you throw at it

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