The ENVE Fray is an All-Road, All Things to All Riders Machine

ENVE launched the new color lineup for the Fray today. It’s a bike we haven’t covered yet so I thought that it’s a good time for us to do so and give you all some details in addition to some photos.

If you haven’t noticed, ENVE is now in the bike business. They have slowly started to add beyond their 100% custom bike program, the appropriately named Custom Road, which rolled out in 2021. ENVE added the Melee in the summer of 2022, and in 2023 brought out the MOG — Mother of All Gravel. The Fray was the latest add-on to the line-up. Still, even with the four frames ENVE now makes, ENVE is still mostly a composite and wheel manufacturer based in the USA. It is estimated that frames only make up between 5 and 10 percent of their total SKUs.

Back to the Fray: this is ENVE’s approach to the “all road” category in the bike space which makes sense as to why they added it last. In my opinion, the designed purpose for this (and bikes like it) is to hit all of the specific needs of a given category at a rate of 70-80%. For example, let’s say you wanted to rate the Fray as a fast road bike for crits, it would probably be a 7 out of 10. If you wanted to rate it as a gravel bike with big tire clearance, it would also probably be a 7 out of 10. But if you wanted to give it an all around rating, though, it would probably be a 8 out 10. Because the Fray can do almost anything you need with just a couple of limitations.

New Colorways

Color Option Available
Perfect Purple New
Clear Smoke New
British Racing Green New
Agave Blue Limited will phase out
Toffee Brown Limited will phase out
GT Silver Limited will phase out
Ash Limited will phase out

Included with Frame

Component Details
Frame ENVE M.O.D. Carbon, 12x142mm thru-axle, flat-mount disc, T47 threaded BB
Fork ENVE M.O.D. Carbon, 12x100mm thru-axle, flat-mount disc
Headset ENVE Integrated IS52/IS52 internal drop-in headset
Stem ENVE IN-Route Aero Stem (your choice of length)
Handlebar Your choice of ENVE handlebar model and width
Seatpost ENVE Aero Seatpost with Kamm tail design (your choice of offset)
Thru-Axles Front and rear included
Cargo Bags 2 neoprene storage bags for the Cargo Bay
Finishing Kit ENVE anti-rattle kit for internal cable routing
Torque Wrench Included
Small Parts Various assembly hardware

Frame & Fork

Specification Details
Frame Material Full carbon fiber
Fork ENVE IN-Route carbon fork
Sizes Available 47cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm (7 sizes)
Fork Rakes 4 different fork rakes to optimize handling across all sizes
Cable Routing IN-Route System (fully integrated internal routing through bar, stem, and headset)

With seven size choices, the fitting range is pretty standard but ENVE did an impressive job at keeping the ride quality the same for each type of rider by offering four different fork rakes. Usually you will see a maximum of two to three options. Rake is measured in mm from the steering axis. Generally speaking, smaller frames typically have steeper head tube angles (measured in degrees—usually around 71-73°). A steeper angle naturally creates less trail and quicker steering. Adding more rake (55mm) counteracts this, preventing the small bike from feeling too twitchy. Larger frames usually have slacker head tube angles. Less rake (43mm) on those frames prevents the steering from feeling different from those of smaller bikes.

Frame Size Fork Rake
47cm 55mm
50cm 55mm
52cm 51mm
54cm 51mm
56cm 47mm
58cm 47mm
60cm 43mm

You can really see that in the geometry chart.

Tire Clearance

Maximum Clearance 36-40mm
Geometry Optimized For 31-35mm

It’s all about that “8 out of 10” mentality here. Can you do a lot of different riding on this bike? Definitely, but I while I might enjoy this for some of the BWR events, I would never want to use this bike for Unbound. I’m also pretty sure this would be a really solid cross bike option.

Storage & Mounting

The Fray has the same frame storage as the MOG. That means your jersey pockets are free from things you should carry but hope you don’t need.

Feature Details
Cargo Bay Integrated downtube storage compartment with door and two cargo bags
Cargo Bay Capacity 36 cubic inches / 0.6 liters
Top Tube Mount Accessory mount for nutrition/accessories
Down Tube Mount Additional bottle cage or tool kit mount

DTC or B2B?

This is where things get different: the tension between direct-to-consumer and business-to-business (AKA buying from ENVE directly or from one of their dealers). At this point, this is where I see things: ENVE is trying to control the customer experience as much as possible while at the same time supporting their loyal dealer network. While at the same time dipping their toes in what could be a DTC via a Dealer. I would imagine this is a lesson they learned when they choose to go away from a lot of OEM stuff: how can they create a premium product that people will buy with retail partners. So while they would probably want all the margin from a DTC sale, they still see the importance of the local shop. I don’t really see a issue with this. It’s a great way to keep dealers active but also keep them on their toes when it comes to customer service (which has become an issue with some shops these days).

“Spec’d for Speed” Customization

Here’s an example of how that relationship can work: you can get on ENVE website and build that perfect spec for you, with extensive customization, through their Spec’d for Speed program. Then you can take that information over to your local ENVE dealer and do the purchase and pick up from there.

Like a lot of DTC brands, the customer can really dial in exactly what they are wanting and have a MSRP price that to go with it. Here’s a few things that you can specify in that program:

  • Handlebar model and width selection
  • Wheel selection
  • Groupset options
  • Crank length
  • Stem length
  • Seatpost setback options

And here’s a sampling of the build pricing:

Build Level Groupset Price (USD)
Pro – RED SRAM RED AXS $13,750
Premium – RED SRAM RED AXS $12,000
Premium – Force SRAM Force AXS $10,500
Foundation – Force SRAM Force AXS $8,750
Frame Only Frameset only $4,800

Limitations and Takeaways

At some point, you are going to have to deal with a local bike shop and if you don’t have an ENVE dealer near you that will be a factor to consider. And ENVE does have some limitations on parts you can use on the Fray.

For example, the fork will only accept 160mm brake rotors. And there’s groupset limitations, too. If you wanted to use Campagnolo at all, you’re stuck with a Campy 1X group only; 2X mechanical or EPS is incompatible. You also can’t run a SRAM 2X mechanical drivetrain on a Fray.

The only thing I would like from this bike is a 42mm tire clearance. I feel like I personally can do just about anything I “need” with a 42mm tire at this point this bike would truly be a “one and done” purchase.

3 Likes

But the Raven still beguiling all my fancy into smiling…

That bike is incredible…ominous and sexy. Nice write up @E_DUB

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If you run a 42mm tire on the Mog instead of a 36mm on the Fray, doesn’t that give you the “one bike to do it all”? Or is the Fray better on gravel than the Mog is on the road.

That’s the question I keep asking myself as I try and decide which quiver killer bike to buy for the Spring.

If you spend even 40% of your time on dirt. I’d personally get the MOG.

nice write up and im only really learning about these new bikes and what makes them fast

just out of interest, is there much of a retro scene on here who still go for the down tube shifters, or is that more in the roadie scene and on roadie forums? i know there are still some die hards who still go for the old persimmon drivers in golf, as an example

I would say that while we have a lot of users here that appreciate the retro probably not a lot of users talking about them.

?

To echo what Eric mentioned…

I think there’s an appreciation for things like DTS, but unlike in golf where other modern elements make older equipment more playable (e.g., the ball not spinning as much means you can get away with a lot more), the fact that a lot of those DTS equipped bikes are also on very odd (for modern times) wheel sizes makes them far less frequent.

BRB now going to find a set of Hogan blades to restore…

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I’ll need one in british racing green please

In UK: £7300 (Ultegra Di2)

Colour Aval?
Agave Blue Aval
Toffee Brown Aval
GT Silver Aval