Cycling Plus

OXFORD BIKE WORKS MODEL 1E

£1440 Handmade, light steel tourer with all-round aspiration­s

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Oxford Bike Works’ Model 1E is the company’s least-expensive model and one of two steel bikes in this test. And while Spa’s frame is made in Far East, Oxford proudly claims that its chromoly steel frames are made in the UK, by Coventry’s wellrespec­ted Lee Cooper Cycles. This ups the cost of the bike, but the frame is lovely, foregoing the usual TIG-welding for a super-smooth filletbraz­ed constructi­on. The frame and fork have fittings for racks and mudguards and there’s also a kickstand plate.

Steel, that most venerable of frame materials, is paired with a mix of components that spans the last few years. There’s a modern 1x chainset with a choice of chainring sizes, but gear changes come courtesy of an old-school bar-end shifter and braking is taken care of by the now rarely seen V-brakes. I set off on my first ride with a sense of trepidatio­n. But then I remembered that even within my lifetime, V-brakes were once seen as a genuine upgrade, and the Oxford’s braking was actually very good, with excellent power and control and no squealing, in both the £1299 flat- and dropbar configurat­ions the bike is offered in.

Richard from Oxford Bike Works says he uses V-brakes because it means you don’t have to overbuild the fork and lose the springines­s and comfort of steel. If you’re set on disc brakes, these are available for an extra £200.

Don’t worry about the length of our bike’s steerer. Oxford doesn’t have a huge fleet so we didn’t cut the steerer, but if you were to buy one, it would be cut to length after a bikefittin­g session that is included in the cost. Being such a small company – Richard tells us it has ‘one and a half’ staff – means Oxford can’t offer some of the

SPECIFICAT­IONS WEIGHT 13.28 kg

FRAME Fillet-brazed chromoly steel FORK Steel

BRAKES Shim a no

B R-T 4000 V-brakes GEAR SS him a no De ore 36, 11-42 WHEELS Zac 2000 front rim, Ex al L X 17 rear, S himano RS -300 front, Deore LX rear FINISHING KIT Cinelli bar, Race Face stem, Ergotecsea­tpost, Terry Fisio Gelsaddle, 700x32c Panaracer Pasela

Pro Ti te tyres

services that multinatio­nal manufactur­ers can, but it can provide a few personal touches.

In addition to the bike fitting, you get some limited kit choices on the 1E, with much more customisat­ion possible on Oxford’s more expensive bikes. But you do get a year-long ‘comfort guarantee’, so if you don’t get on with the saddle, stem or bar, you can swap them. And while Oxford can’t offer a Bike2Work tax break, it does offer its own high-interest savings scheme.

But what of the ride? Well, it’s everything you’d expect of a chromoly steel bike with supple 32mm-wide tyres and slack, touringfri­endly geometry. It’s smooth, comfortabl­e and shock absorbing with an upright riding position that put no strain on our back. This regal position is great for both seeing and being seen, with the slightly ovalised handlebar tops comfy for long commutes and big days out. I thought the Terry men’s saddle would feel overly padded, but actually I got on with it very well.

I’d say the tyres are just about the right width for light touring, commuting and general riding, offering comfort on smooth and unsurfaced routes and decent grip on towpaths, light gravel and broken country lanes. The single chainring will always offer a limited gear range and our 36-tooth chainring and 11-42 cassette offer a 23-88in range; for flatter, faster riding I’d go for a larger chainring, for loaded touring I’d go smaller still. But for the great majority of my testing, the gearing was fine, just occasional­ly spinning out on descents.

The components are well chosen throughout, with little sign of cost-cutting. In addition to the brakes, chainring and Deore rear derailleur, both hubs are also from Shimano and, with the cabling all externally routed, even the vaguely competent home mechanic should be able to cope with most of the spannering. And rounding out a well-considered package are a kickstand – very handy for loaded touring – full-length mudguards and a beautifuls­ounding brass bell. One of my very few criticisms is that, while the head tube sports a proper metal badge, the frame decals are just clear sticky plastic, but that’s aesthetic rather than practical.

 ?? ?? TOP The saddle is more padded than many, but wasn’t a problem
ABOVE The head tube has a metal badge, but it’s stickers for the frame
TOP The saddle is more padded than many, but wasn’t a problem ABOVE The head tube has a metal badge, but it’s stickers for the frame
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? WE SAY... The1Eisiig­htweight andcomfort­able withanupri­ght ridingposi­tion
WE SAY... The1Eisiig­htweight andcomfort­able withanupri­ght ridingposi­tion
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