Ouroboros CR/DL

The Kona Ouroboros is a drop-bar adventure bike that leans heavily into mountain bike territory. Rather than modifying a road-oriented gravel frame for dirt, Kona built a platform around suspension-corrected geometry, wide tires, and heavy-duty components. It is designed for riders who want to push past maintained dirt roads into rough doubletrack, light singletrack, and multi-day bikepacking routes. The frame features a reinforced front triangle, a heavy-duty 31.6mm seatpost diameter, and standard 180mm brake rotors, signaling its intent for aggressive riding and loaded descents. While it shares the drop-bar silhouette of a traditional gravel bike, its DNA is rooted in cross-country mountain biking. This makes it an ideal tool for cyclists who prioritize stability, comfort, and capability over outright speed, particularly those who frequently mix technical off-road sections into their long-distance rides.

$3,799
Kona Ouroboros CR/DL
Build
Size

Inventory

Stack598mm
Reach382mm
Top tube559mm
Headtube length148mm
Standover height769mm
Seat tube length455mm

Fit and geometry

The Ouroboros geometry borrows heavily from modern cross-country mountain bikes, resulting in a distinctly upright and stable riding posture. Across all sizes, the frame utilizes a slack 69.5-degree head tube angle paired with long 445mm chainstays. This creates a stretched wheelbase that prioritizes straight-line stability over quick, reactive steering.

To balance the long front center, Kona specifies very short stems ranging from 40mm to 60mm, depending on the frame size. These are mated to exceptionally wide, flared handlebars that measure up to 520mm at the hoods and even wider at the drops. This cockpit setup provides immense leverage for wrestling the bike through technical trail sections.

The most defining fit characteristic is the unusually high stack. Riders sit much taller than they would on a standard gravel bike, which reduces lower back strain during long efforts but shifts weight slightly rearward. This geometry encourages riders to spend more time descending in the drops, offering a secure, neutral position that feels integrated into the frame rather than perched on top of it.

Full specs

Frameset

Frame

Kona Carbon

Fork

Kona Ouroboros Carbon, 420 axle to crown, tapered 1.5 (28.6 - 38.1), 100 x 12mm, internal brake and dynamo routing, native 160 flat mount front, 3-pack bosses + fender mounts

Groupset

Shift levers

SRAM Rival eTap AXS

Front derailleur

SRAM Rival eTap AXS Wide

Rear derailleur

SRAM Rival eTap AXS

Cassette

SRAM Rival XG-1250, 12-speed, 10-36T (XDR)

Chain

SRAM Rival 12-speed

Crankset

SRAM Rival DUB Wide crankarms with SRAM Rival 43/30 Wide chainrings

Bottom bracket

SRAM Press-Fit 86.5 DUB Wide

Front brake

SRAM Rival Flat Mount Hydraulic

Rear brake

SRAM Rival Flat Mount Hydraulic

Front rotor

SRAM Centerline 6-bolt 180mm

Rear rotor

SRAM Centerline 6-bolt 180mm

Wheelset

Front wheel

WTB KOM i27 6069 alloy, 32h, TCS 2.0, with tubeless tape; KT-Taiwan QL-S3GR, 100 x 12mm, 32h, 6-bolt; Double-butted stainless

Rear wheel

WTB KOM i27 6069 alloy, 32h, TCS 2.0, with tubeless tape; KT-Taiwan QL-DD4DR, 142 x 12mm, 32h, 6-bolt, XDR freehub, STAR ratchet; Double-butted stainless

Front tire

Maxxis Rambler 700 x 45 TR EXO

Rear tire

Maxxis Rambler 700 x 45 TR EXO

Cockpit

Stem

Ritchey Trail Comp, 0-degree (48-52: 45mm; 54-58: 60mm)

Handlebars

Ritchey Venturemax Comp/Venturemax XL Comp, 24° flare, 4.6° backsweep (48-50: 460mm; 52-54: 480mm; 56: 500mm; 58: 520mm)

Saddle

WTB Volt Medium Steel SL

Seatpost

Ritchey Link 20 WCS, 31.6mm, 20mm setback (48-52: 350mm; 54-58: 400mm)

Grips

Velo bar tape

Builds

The Ouroboros lineup spans four distinct builds, including three carbon models and one aluminum option. The entry-level Base model utilizes an alloy frame paired with a microSHIFT Sword 10-speed drivetrain and a Suntour suspension fork, offering an accessible starting point for the platform.

Moving to the carbon frames, the CR build represents the core value of the range. It features a mechanical SRAM Apex 12-speed drivetrain, a Fox TC32 suspension fork, and a mechanical dropper post. The mid-tier CR/DL takes a different approach, swapping the suspension for a rigid carbon fork with additional cargo mounts. It also utilizes a SRAM Rival AXS 2x drivetrain and a rigid seatpost. Reviewers frequently critique this 2x setup, noting that the front derailleur limits tire clearance and is prone to chain drops in muddy conditions.

The flagship Supreme build maximizes the frame's off-road potential with a RockShox Rudy Ultimate fork, a SRAM Force and X0 Eagle Transmission mullet drivetrain, and Zipp 101 XPLR carbon wheels. Most builds include a dropper post, though testers note the mechanical dropper levers are awkwardly placed near the stem, making them difficult to actuate quickly from the drops.

Reviews

Reviewers consistently note that the Ouroboros excels on rough, technical terrain where traditional gravel bikes struggle. The suspension fork and wide tires absorb significant chatter, keeping the front wheel tracking over steep, loose climbs and rocky descents. Testers found the bike highly capable on singletrack, noting that the front suspension "acted as a wider front tire and did a decent job over washboard" (Bikepacking). The carbon frame is praised for its efficient power transfer, ensuring the bike maintains momentum despite its heavier build.

However, this off-road bias introduces distinct tradeoffs on smoother surfaces. The long wheelbase and slack front end require deliberate steering input on pavement and fast, sweeping gravel corners. One tester observed that the bike "requires steering correction that uses physical and mental effort" (Cxmagazine) to navigate tight road chicanes. Another reviewer mentioned a "lack of confidence in gravel descents, mostly while I was cornering" (Bikepacking), highlighting that the upright stance can feel unusual at high speeds.

Despite these handling quirks, the consensus points to a highly comfortable, durable machine for long days in the saddle. When loaded with gear, the frame's stiffness mellows out, and the bike "really shone once I’d swapped the stock 45mm tyres out for wider 50mm rubber and loaded the bike up" (BikeRadar).

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