Hi Al!
I might be able to offer a little advice in this area, being a very happy owner of a P7 fitted with a Rohloff. I went for the P7 specifically as it could be fitted with the hub and I have another (rather ancient...) P7 that I love - so seemed like a natural choice.
I spent today riding around the North Downs on it after having not been riding off-road for a long time and all the reviews are spot on, it is incredible. Up, down, climbing, jumping - grin factor
10 11 [
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Having said that (and let's not forget this is Thorn's forum!) the Enduro gets some very good reviews too. I was truly torn between the two bikes but I went for the P7 as I'm a grease monkey in a bike shop so got a discount on the hub, forks, brakes, etc.
The P7 can also take much longer forks. I used to do a spot of downhilling and love going fast on lumpy stuff so 130mm of fork squidging is handy. Please note though - the P7 hates shorter forks! I tried my rigid Pace RC31s on it and the bike was almost unrideable. Not good if you want to tour with rigid forks.
And so to the rack mounts. The P7 does indeed have some handy upper rack bosses on the wishbone bit of the seatstays but... no lower mounts. Bit odd, but there is a lot going on around there with the sliding dropouts and disc mounts. I phoned Orange about where to fit a rack as their website does say it's great for touring. The answer from their technical dept?
"Aye, drill 'oles in t'dropouts."
[:0] Erk.
To be honest, the dropouts are very beefy and could probably take it, but I haven't got round to it (read: plucked up the courage).
Anyway, I am sometimes on the verge of selling it... Not because it's not a great bike but simply because I may have bought a size too big. I have a rather short body and long legs so be warned - they're looooong bikes.
Sorry to witter on so, I'll summarise some other and main points below:
Enduro -
For: Much easier chain tension adjustment; Better cable routing; Proper rack mounts (12kg is loads!); Ability to fit rigid forks.
Against: less fork travel (though you could just ride better...) [
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P7 -
For: It rules off-road; Potential to carry more on a rack; Can take longer travel forks if you want them.
Against: No specific cable routing, though I've managed to get mine very neatly running down the disc hose the whole way; Getting chain tension right is faff. It took me many tries to get it right and plenty of Loctite on the bolts to get it to stay right. When the chain starts to wear and go slack I think I'll just chuck on a new chain rather than go through piddling about trying to get the wheel (and flipping disc rotor!) straight.
So am I an unhappy P7 owner wishing I'd bought an Enduro? Not really, to be honest! The P7 truly flies and is lots of fun. I kinda wish I'd bought a Raven Nomad (which I might still do, or perhaps a Stirling...) - just something that could fulfill every single one of my cycling needs from touring to tearing down the singletrack.
If I were you, Al, I'd go for one of these more all-round bikes. I'm very sure they'll be A LOT of fun off-road, more than capable of making you grin while playing at the weekends and could definitely handle loaded extreme touring (well, the Nomad anyway, let's wait and see what the Stirling will be!). The Enduro, as Thorn say, is a "precisely focused... MTB". It's a proper mountain bike and great at that but perhaps a little too specific for your needs?
(Still reading?) [
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