The Gary Fisher name is almost synonymous with mountain bikes but the new Cronus shows off his road chops, too, with an impressively quick chassis and well sorted geometry.Chris Milliman
Unbeknownst to many, Gary Fisher has a long history of road racing and applies that knowledge to his new line of road and ‘cross bikes, highlighted by the new Cronus Ultimate flagship.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
If the down tube on the new Cronus looks big to you, that’s because it is. At roughly 76mm across, it’s the biggest down tube the Trek corporation has ever produced.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
Gary Fisher has chosen the BB90 option for its integrated bottom bracket, preferring the extra width it affords to the down tube, seat tube and chain stays relative to BB30.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The chain stays are dramatically asymmetrical with the non-drive stay measuring nearly twice the width of the driveside tube.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The Cronus’ huge chain stays pay real noticeable dividends on the road.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
Gary Fisher pushes the non-drive chain stay right up to the edge of the bottom bracket shell.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
A common design theme on the Cronus is a central rib running the length of each main tube.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The ‘Fisher Control Column’ concept uses very widely spaced fork blades for additional steering precision.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
the Gary Fisher Cronus borrows the E2 tapered head tube and steerer design from its Trek Madone cousin.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
In addition to stiffening up the steering column, the tapered head tube also provides more surface area at the top tube and down tube junctions.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The chain stays are about as big as anything else out there but the seat stays aren’t quite as spindly as some. As such, the back end is impressively stout but a little firmer-riding than some ultra-smooth competitors.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The Cronus uses a dual seat stay design instead of a wishbone layout.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
One key element to the FCC system is the front hub, which features very widely spaced and tall flanges, oversized hub end caps and a ‘heads in’ spoking configuration.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The FCC end caps are a full 25mm in diameter in comparison to a more common 19mm. Measured outside-to-outside, the hub flanges are a whopping 83mm apart.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
This side-by-side display (the conventional design is on the right) provides a good reference for how much bigger the FCC hub design is. In fact, FCC front wheels likely won’t fit in most other forks.James Huang/BikeRadar.com
The small set screws at the aluminium dropouts aren’t drain holes; they’re just plugs for the optional fender mounts.James Huang/BikeRadar.com