Cycling Plus

MERIDA SILEX 700

£2100 › Hi Ho Silex

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Merida’s gravel bike has a bold look, our large sized bike has a main triangle whose perimeter is nearer to being a square, and its lengthy down-tube is in stark contrast to the surprising­ly short stem.

The 220mm head-tube on our aluminium test bike makes the front end quite upright, and it’s backed up by a steeply sloping top-tube and heavily hydroforme­d down-tube that’s joined with a flared buttress covering more than half its length. The top-tube has a round-edged diamond profile, while the seat- and chainstays are hourglass-shaped. The partly flattened seatstays cross over the seat-tube to tuck in under the top-tube, creating a strong junction, with the dropped stay design and carbon seatpost adding seated comfort.

There’s a third bottle mount beneath the down-tube, auxilliary luggage/cage mounts on each fork leg for longer trips, and mudguard fittings for practicali­ty. Merida supplies the bar, stem and seatpost, but leaves the wheels and saddle to the Italians. From the off, the Fulcrum Racing Expert DB wheelset feels taut and quick, and Prologo’s Scratch saddle is well-shaped, supportive and comfortabl­e.

Our usual standard road bike size is 56cm, with a similar length top-tube, which brought us to this large frame size and a handlebar height around 50mm higher than we’d prefer. As well as the front end’s height, there’s a slack 71-degree head angle and short 80mm stem to consider. But, the Silex has an effective top-tube length of almost 60cm, so reach is reasonable. Add in a steep 74-degree seat angle, and zero setback seatpost, and your positional parameters need tweaking.

Naturally gravitatin­g towards riding in the compact drops much of the time, we were still pondering the geometry as we started a heavily

Its lengthy down-tube is in stark contrast to the surprising­ly short stem

potholed dirt track. The Maxxis Razzo 35mm semi-slick tyres are totally smooth in the middle, with fine file tread bands on each side and some raised tread blocks on the shoulders. At 50psi, they perform like a quick road tyre on tarmac. We didn’t consider their lack of straight line grip until we’d spent time on the dirt, but we didn’t have any problems unless the surface was really loose.

With relatively high tyre pressures and fairly low air volume, the Merida’s ride comfort was impressive, absorbing general chatter and sucking up bigger hits. The bike’s willingnes­s to accelerate helps enormously over changeable surfaces, where pace naturally fluctuates, and makes avoiding obstructio­ns less tiring. The wide gearing range was welcome, even though the Silex’s lower mass and lively wheelset meant we didn’t trouble the 34x34 lowest gear. Its 50x11 top end came in handy when descending too.

Shimano’s hydraulic discs were very welcome too, and even though our pre-production model has the 105-level RS505 lever and calliper pairing, rather than the intended Ultegra items, power and control were never in question.

We didn’t feel cramped on the Silex, despite it being a little shorter than usual, and judicious use of the drops will hustle it along at an impressive lick. Its road manners are fine, with no shortage of speed from the wheels and tyres, which carry it over unpaved roads with composure.

The Silex 700 is very capable onand off-road and well specced for the money

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 ??  ?? Below Carbon fork aids comfort when the roads get rougher Bottom Thru-axles make wheel removal easier over quick-release items
Below Carbon fork aids comfort when the roads get rougher Bottom Thru-axles make wheel removal easier over quick-release items
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