"are there still benefits to the more traditional setups?"
Absolutely. A Riv setup is brilliant, simple, and easily adjusted/fixed in 
field if needed. More importantly, they ride fantastically, and that 
matters for every distance. I haven't ridden the bikes you have, but the 
non-rive bikes I've ridden don't even compare to the "invisible" wonder of 
my Riv. bikes (Hunqapillar and Quickbeam). The ride, for me, is far more 
fun, no matter the distance.

"If I pick either one, what might I later miss the other may have provided?"
Grant's bikes have an inherently wide window of usability, which is utterly 
counter to the niche purposing of most modern bikes. That said, the Rodeo 
likely has the smallest window. I've heard it said the Quickbeam fits 
somewhere between the Rodeo and AHH. Presuming that is true, the window I 
ride the QB on ranges from smooth fast paved roads to remote and medium 
rough forest service roads/trails. I've taken it on more technical trails 
and it is definitely under biking, and fun in its own way as a "hone my 
skills" adventure. For myself, I'd choose the AHH.

"Are there likely to be any weather related or other wear issues leaving a 
Riv locked to the RV park cabana like I do my AWOL?"
I live in dry (as in not humid often) Colorado mountains. However, my 
Hunqapillar lives outside without cover on all bikepacking trips, a 
stunning number of which are half rain (enough that the tent fly is always 
wet). So far so good. Use frame saver, cover as you can, and enjoy!

"I'm doubtful of that, but don't want to mistreat it either."
It's a bike. Enjoy it. Use it. It will age wonderfully based on how you do. 
The only way to mistreat it is to not use it! Grin.

"Any thing else I should consider?"
Indubitably. Ultimately, however, the answer is to get the best match you 
can and ride and learn from there. The experience will teach you more than 
the mind-spinning fretting beforehand. And all the mind-spinning fretting I 
did would have been far easier if I'd just spoken to Grant and Co. once and 
let them run with it and ridden what they sent me. Grin.

With abandon,
Patrick

On Wednesday, May 25, 2016 at 8:38:33 PM UTC-6, Tim Butterfield wrote:
>
>
> My questions to the group are these:  As I am not yet doing longer 
> distances, are there still benefits to the more traditional setups?  If I 
> pick either one, what might I later miss the other may have provided?  Are 
> there likely to be any weather related or other wear issues leaving a Riv 
> locked to the RV park cabana like I do my AWOL?  I'm doubtful of that, but 
> don't want to mistreat it either.  Any thing else I should consider?
>
> Thanks for any advice you have.
>
> Tim
>

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