As the old adage goes, a gravel bike is just an old-school mountain bike, right? Well, in some cases, they quite literally are. Michael Hird, in Middlesbrough, is part of a growing number of people taking older mountain bikes and turning them into something more modern.
- Best gravel bikes 2025 — drop-bar bikes for off-road riding
-
Get your gravel bike ready for the slip and slide of winter with these handy tips
As gravel bikes become more expensive, focused, and sectioned off into race, adventure, and whatever categories, the attraction of taking a bike that’s been sitting in the shed for 20 years and making it into something rideable again is ever more appealing.

And for one man, he’s taken his passion for bikes and is doing just that. Having said he “can’t resist a bargain”, Hird takes older frames, like the Specialized Rockhopper, and converts them into gravel bikes.
Bike-flipping, or even selling them as new, has never been a particularly profitable pastime, as many bike shops can attest. But as the cost of living crisis rolls on and people’s disposable income disappears, ‘retro’ mountain bikes are being given a new lease of life as gravel bikes more and more.
And for reference, Hird sells his bikes for anything from £150 to £250. In my eyes, that’s a bargain.

“I love having my retro stuff,” added Hird. “But to be honest, I don’t ride them much. I keep a few in the garage/man cave as talking points, and that will expand as I can’t help but grab an old bargain.
“I started seeing stuff on Instagram and YouTube where people got older MTB frames and converted them for gravel use, and so I gave it a go myself.”
If you’re not racing and just want a bike to get out onto the bridleways on, you don’t need anything fancy. Contrary to what all the bike marketing in the world tells you. And don’t you think that old school bikes made relevant again is more of a talking point than a £10,000 gravel bike with tyre clearance mountain bikes had 20 years ago?

Geometry could be an issue if you’re after something slack and long, and maybe don’t want to run 26in wheels. But the beauty of gravel riding is that you’re taking a bike that is generally underprepared for the terrain and having a fun go at riding it anyway. And remember, just 20 years ago, people rode these mountain bikes at downhill tracks and survived on caliper brakes.
And in a world where everything costs a fortune, and passion seems to be fizzling out in the bike industry, it’s refreshing to see people recycling old frames and putting them to good use with more modern components.
