Sounds like the Conquest is it.
Bummer about the Stronglight crankset, I thought those were good. I am surprised how non-concentric it went. I would definitely contact Stronglight, or the dealer, or both with photos on how bad their product is. If it was defective, they may offer to make it right.
I did a 43 mile (~60 km) ride yesterday on my light touring bike with the Redshift seatpost. At the same time I installed it, I installed a Kinekt suspension stem that I had bought used on Ebay.
Very happy with both. The stem is about 3 years old, there is a bit of play in it, I assume that is wear from the previous owner, but that does not bother me. Initially one of the pins was not held in tightly and it started to slide out, I had to disassemble part of it to find the loose setscrew. Used some removable threadlocker on all four set screws that hold the pivot pins in to make sure that does not happen again. That is one downside of buying used.
Most of my miles were on a rail-trail, former railroad grade converted to a gravel bicycle path, only difference between that and a tow path is the converted railroad grade trails often have a shallow slope.
I found I was less careful about hitting the bumps than I normally would be, which suggests that my bike now will be subjected to more shocks on bumpy trails than before. And I suspect that when I get on one of my other bikes that there will be a steep learning curve to avoid bumps.
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I like the Conquest for the springs, but I find that the springs do not really help much on bigger bumps, I think they take the buzz out of rough roads and nothing more. The suspension seatpost has much more travel, thus the bigger bumps are less noticeable with it.
I have toured with and without fenders (mudguards) and the fenders are definitely the way to go. Their downside is that I can't fit them into my luggage when I fly somewhere, which is why I have toured without them sometimes.