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Salsa Cycles unveils Cutthroat “ultimate Tour Divide racing machine”

New Cutthroat designed specifically for races like 2,745 mile Tour Divide

Salsa Cycles has introduced the new Cutthroat which is described as the “ultimate Tour Divide racing machine” and based around a carbon fibre mountain bike frame with 29in wheels and drop handlebars with disc brakes and thru-axles.

 

Gravel and adventure bikes are in fashion right now with Cannondale set to launch its new Slate, a new gravel bike with a short travel Lefty suspension fork, with rumours it'll roll on 650b mountain bike wheels and fat tyres. Most gravel and adventure bikes blur the traditional lines between cyclocross, road and mountain bikes, some lean more towards one category than others, the Cutthroat clearly leans more towards a 29er mountain bike. There’s some similarity to the Niner RLT here, a bike that can be built with 29er mountain bike wheels and tyres

Salsa product manager Joe Meiser and product design engineer Sean Mailen have used personal experience racing the Tour Divide as the basis for the design direction of the new Cutthroat.

“The experience of riding the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route will last a lifetime,” said Mailen. “Cutthroat is a huge step forward in terms of what a fast, efficient bikepacking bike looks like. We asked ourselves; what does the racer need to finish the Tour Divide as fast as possible?”

Salsa considered comfort, reliability, weight and efficiency as the four cornerstones of the new bike. Joe Meiser says: “The ultra-endurance off-road cyclist is constantly seeking that perfect equation of simple, light, reliable, durable, convenient, and fast because at the end of a 2,745-mile ride the right mix can mean hours saved, not just seconds.”

The new Cutthroat then is built around mountain bike 29in rims with big 2.4in Schwalbe Thunder Burt tyres. The carbon fibre frame features the company’s Class 5 VRS (Vibration Reduction System) first introduced on the Warbird. Specially shaped seatstays with a thin and tall vertically orientated profile is intended to provide compliance.

Buyer’s guide to gravel and adventure bikes plus 11 of the Best

The Cutthroat is fitted with a Firestarter Carbon fork (but a 100mm suspension fork can be fitted) with a thru-axle.A thru-axle is used at the rear end too. Gear cables are internally routed but the rear brake hose is routed along the top of the down tube and along the chainstay. The frame fits a 27.2mm seatpost and has a PressFit 92mm bottom bracket and uses post mount rear brake fittings. The rear axle is the now standard 142x12mm.

Fitting a mountain bike with a drop handlebar isn’t a new idea. Mountain bike legend John Tomac most famously raced such a setup back in the day, and some cyclists have been building “monster cross” bikes, which blur the lines between mountain, road and cyclocross, more recently. The late Steve Worland was an early advocate of monster cross and you can read about his experimentation with fitting drop bars to mountain bikes in this article 

What are the benefits? “Multiple hand positions mean multiple body positions, and those are necessary to keep the body happy,” cites Mailen. “Cutthroat is spec’d with the Salsa Woodchipper bar because it offers the widest variety of hand positions."

Key to the design of the new bike is an extremely large front triangle to provide as much space for luggage as possible. There are top tube bosses to mount new Salsa top tube bag that is currently in development and three bottle cage mounts.

 

And the name? Cutthroat comes from the Cutthroat trout, or a variation of Cutthroat trout, is the state fish for all the U.S. states that the Tour Divide passes through. There you go.

Salsa will offer the the Cutthroat in two builds and a frameset. We don’t have any UK prices at this stage, but in the US the frame will set you back $1,999, a SRAM X9 build will be $2,999 and the top-spec SRAM Rival 1 model will be $3,999. Availability is slated for late 2015.

The frame will be offered in four sizes, here’s how the geometry looks:

Salsa sponsored rider Jay Petervary is racing the Cutthroat in the 2015 Tour Divide, and here he and his laden bike is.

And they are off! Exciting morning seeing the 2015 Tour Divide Grand Depart in Banff. Salsa sponsored athlete Jay Petervary locked and loaded. -Kid

Posted by Salsa Cycles on Friday, 12 June 2015

 

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

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4 comments

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OldnSlo | 8 years ago
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Well that'll gimme summat do when i get bored!.

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LarryDavidJr | 8 years ago
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Much as I hate all this somewhat un-necessary fine-grained marketing division of bicycles into mostly pointless sub-divisions (gravel bikes being the obvious example), I have to admit that this looks both rather cool and unique.

Avatar
joules1975 replied to LarryDavidJr | 8 years ago
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LarryDavidJr wrote:

Much as I hate all this somewhat un-necessary fine-grained marketing division of bicycles into mostly pointless sub-divisions (gravel bikes being the obvious example), I have to admit that this looks both rather cool and unique.

Marketing to a certain extent ('enduro' bikes a good example), but generally these subdivisions happen because people need to describe easily what bike they have when an interested person asks. Yes ok it's more complicated than just 'road' or 'mountain', but then these 'adventure' bikes aren't either of those, and nor are gravel bikes, but gravel bikes aren't the same as adventure bikes either. You see the problem!

Avatar
joules1975 replied to LarryDavidJr | 8 years ago
0 likes
LarryDavidJr wrote:

Much as I hate all this somewhat un-necessary fine-grained marketing division of bicycles into mostly pointless sub-divisions (gravel bikes being the obvious example), I have to admit that this looks both rather cool and unique.

Marketing to a certain extent ('enduro' bikes a good example), but generally these subdivisions happen because people need to describe easily what bike they have when an interested person asks. Yes ok it's more complicated than just 'road' or 'mountain', but then these 'adventure' bikes aren't either of those, and nor are gravel bikes, but gravel bikes aren't the same as adventure bikes either. You see the problem!

The only thing we can agree on with certainty, is that they are all bikes and we should appreciate and enjoy riding them wherever we choose to or for whatever reason!

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