I use my Surly Cross Check as my touring bike. I saw you were comparing with a Jamis Quest on another thread, and it doesn't seem as aggressive to me as the Jamis. I had a 94 Quest, so maybe the geometry of the Quest has changed, but it was too aggressive for me at the time. Anyway, my lbs left the fork on the Surly uncut so I could get it where I wanted it. You have to be careful because the size is deceiving. Because it is a cross bike, the seat tube is shorter because it's higher off the ground. My 46cm Cross check has the same top tube and standover as my 53cm Burley did. The effective tt is what you want to look at. It's the one parallel to the ground, whereas the actual one may slant.
Lots of women here have the Cross Check and love them. I highly recommend it as a do everything bike. It has braze-ons for racks, takes large and small tires (my lbs has 4oisih cm ones on a demo one, I use two wheel sets, one with 32s and one with 25s) The thing goes anywhere! Oh, and it takes fenders too if you are so inclined. Great for commuting, or for tours of many miles. It's very comfortable. Here is a pic of mine. (I love this pic and have used it before) I have an acorn bag on it and a Brooks saddle. As you can see the bars are about even with the seat, which is what I wanted. Looks like I've got the 32cm tires on it. This was a 25 mile ride, and I'm not sure why these tires were on it, but they weren't a problem and I was comfortable the whole time. I like to hop off and take pics as you can see. Let me know if I can answer any questions. I'm not an expert by any means, but I went through a lot of bikes before I finally figured out that this one is the ticket! (Including a Jamis Quest!) Oh, and one more thing about the Quest, it was my first drop bar bike, but there was not room for large tires, fenders, etc. Unless they've changed it.
Edit: I ordered this bike based on the top tube measurement. Probably not the best idea to base it on that, but I had nowhere to ride one of these bikes. I used the Colorado Cyclist site and what I did and didn't like on my old bikes to figure out what my best fit was, and went from there. I totally ignored seat tube length, and put the emphasis on top tube. My lbs ordered the frame and moved my components over. (moved from the Quest to the Burley to the Surly). I have Shimano 105 components which Dan said were great components, and definitely worth keeping. Maybe I just got lucky but it's a great fit. I wish I was closer and you could try it out! Good luck and let us know how the search goes.



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It sounds like I'll be developing a good relationship with a bike shop! Luckily, I have met alot of really nice dudes in some really nice shops, so I just need to decide where to start!