Crossfire
Origin
Carrera is the in-house 'value' bike brand of Halfords, Britain's largest bike and car-parts retailer, and the Crossfire has been its flagship hybrid for well over a decade. The brand name is a source of frequent confusion: this Carrera has no connection to the Italian Carrera Jeans team that backed Stephen Roche and Marco Pantani in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Halfords positions Carrera between its budget Apollo line and its premium Boardman and Voodoo brands, aiming, in its own words, to deliver 'unmatched value in terms of specification.' The Crossfire specifically is Halfords' 'multi-surface' crossover hybrid: a bike meant to handle the school run, the canal towpath and the daily commute equally well, built around a light alloy frame, a comfort-oriented suspension fork and tough puncture-protected tyres. Because Halfords sells so many of them through its high-street stores and its Cycle2Work scheme, the Crossfire is one of the most common bikes on British roads and, consequently, an extremely common find on the second-hand market across Europe.
Specifications
- Frame
- 6061 alloy (aluminium) hybrid frame with rack + mudguard mounts
- Weight
- kg
- Drivetrain
- Shimano; trim-dependent: 21-speed Tourney (CF1), 24-speed TX/Altus (CF2), 18-speed Altus 2x9 (CF3), 9-speed Altus 1x on Crossfire E
- Brakes
- Trim-dependent: Tektro V-brakes (CF1), Tektro M280 mechanical disc (CF2), Tektro M285 hydraulic disc (CF3/E)
- Wheels
- 700c (622) double-walled alloy rims
The verdict
- Genuine value for money: disc brakes, alloy frame and Shimano gearing at an entry-level price.
- Comfortable, stable, upright ride that copes with both tarmac and light off-road/towpath use.
- Practical commuter package with puncture-protected tyres and mudguard/rack mounts.
- The suspension fork is heavy and mostly lacks lockout (except CF3), making it sluggish and bouncy on road.
- Heavier than lightweight rigid hybrids; the fork and steel-forked trims add dead weight.
- Budget finishing kit (basic Suntour fork, entry Tektro/Shimano parts) shows on longer rides; aesthetics are plain.
Generations
Crossfire 1 (entry)
- Cheapest; rim brakes are the giveaway. Fine for dry commuting, weaker stopping in the wet.
- Brakes
- Tektro V-brakes (rim)
Crossfire 2 (mid)
- The value sweet spot: disc braking and more travel. Discs can squeal in the wet; no fork lockout.
- Brakes
- Tektro mechanical disc
Crossfire 3 (top)
- Best brakes and the only trim with a fork lockout, so noticeably better on road. Worth the premium if buying used.
- Brakes
- Tektro hydraulic disc
Crossfire E (electric)
- Different animal: adds a torque-sensing hub motor and 417Wh battery, but weighs ~23 kg and costs 3x the analogue.
- Brakes
- Tektro hydraulic disc
Versions & builds
Every official build side by side — differences highlighted.
| Spec | CurrentCrossfire 1 | CurrentCrossfire 2 | CurrentCrossfire 3 | CurrentCrossfire E / E 2.0 (electric) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | 2020 | 2020 | 2020 | 2021 |
| Frame | 6061 alloy | 6061 alloy | 6061 alloy | 6061 alloy |
| Drivetrain | Shimano Tourney 21-speed (48/38/28 x 14-28t) | Shimano TX/Altus 24-speed (48/38/28 x 11-34t) | Shimano Altus 18-speed (46/30 x 11-36t, 2x9) | Shimano Altus/M2000 9-speed (1x, 11-36t) |
| Brakes | Tektro 837 V-brakes (rim) | Tektro M280 mechanical disc | Tektro M285 hydraulic disc | Tektro hydraulic disc |
| MSRP | €390 | €450 | €530 | €1,500 |
| Purpose | Value | Balanced | Flagship | Flagship |
Tags
Related models
Where to buy Carrera Crossfire in Lithuania
Local shops and marketplaces in your country.
These are searches on third-party sites — URBALT is not affiliated with them and does not sell directly.
Want one?
Find this bike on the marketplace, or compare notes with riders already on one.

