Surly Pacer vs. Cross-Check
I'm sure some of you ladies have/have had a Surly Pacer or Cross-Check in your stable(?). My 2009 Dolce Elite is the designated "road bike" in mine, but I'm finding that I tend to prefer the ride steel provides.
I also have a Jamis Coda Sport (hybrid) and a Jamis Aurora (touring)-both steel. The lovely Dolce seems to be left behind often-partly due to the craggy roads where I live. She seems delicate by comparison, so I take pains to navigate around broken pavement. This is the same reasoning I use for avoiding bone china and choosing a hefty coffee mug. :rolleyes:
On the other hand, I enjoy the Dolce on paved bike paths and roads that haven't been ravaged by season changes and heavy vehicle traffic. It's a sweet bike under good conditions, but tends to be squirrelly over cracks and bumps. (My other bikes-aside from being steel-have wider tires, too. Would switching from 23cm to 25 cm tires on the Dolce offer much improvement?)
I'm a recreational cyclist and ride alone most of the time; I don't compete or do group rides and am not concerned what each component weighs, so the steel frame weight is not a significant issue. I've ridden a Cross-Check and came *this* close to buying one-but ultimately chose the Jamis Aurora because of my good experience with the Coda Sport-and also couldn't wrap my head around the "beef gravy brown" color of the '10 Surly CC.
I think the CC may be a better all-'rounder for me-but maybe is not that much different than the Aurora (?)-which I definitely plan to keep. (If another bike does follow me home, I'll have to sell the Coda or the Dolce due to space constraints.)
Would you share your experiences with the Pacer as a road bike? Regarding customizing: I know it can accommodate fenders-but what about a rear rack? I did look at the frame specs but am not familiar enough with the terminology to figure that out.
I'd appreciate any feedback on either the Pacer or the Cross-Check that might help bring me closer to a focus point.