Scuffham S-gear 2 With Crack -
| # | Shot | Why it matters | |---|------|----------------| | 1 | Full bike side view (frame + wheels) | Shows overall condition & spec | | 2 | Close‑up of the cracked stay (focus on the crack) | Transparency; builds trust | | 3 | Detail of drivetrain (shifters, cassette, chain) | Shows wear level | | 4 | Close‑up of brakes and rotors | Confirms safety | | 5 | Wheels & tires (tread, spokes) | Highlights premium components | | 6 | Cockpit/handlebars + dropper post (if installed) | Shows integrated design | | 7 | Bike on a stand or being ridden (optional video) | Demonstrates ride‑quality |
Tips:
Subject: [FOR SALE] Scuffham S‑Gear 2 (2021) – Carbon, great spec, minor crack on rear stays
Body:
Hey folks,
I’m putting my Scuffham S‑Gear 2 up for sale. It’s a 2021 build, size M (56 cm) with a full carbon frame and the following spec:
- Groupset: Shimano GRX RX812, 2×11
- Brakes: Shimano hydraulic discs
- Wheels: DT Swiss EX 1500 (tubeless‑ready)
- Tires: Maxxis Re‑Fuse 38 mm front / 42 mm rear
- Cockpit: integrated bar/stem, dropper post
- Extras: spare tube, CO₂, mini‑pump, lock
**Condition:** 100 % functional. The only issue is a small hairline crack on the rear carbon stays (see attached photo). I’ve had it inspected and it’s still structurally sound for normal riding, but I’m selling it AS‑IS.
**Asking:** $1,450 USD (retail $2,300). Willing to negotiate for a quick pick‑up.
If you’re interested, I can send more pictures, a quick video ride‑through, or meet up in [city] for a test ride. PM me!
Thanks,
[Your Username]
Attach the same four photos as above + a short video (30‑sec) showing the bike rolling and braking.
Pick the format that matches the platform you’re posting on, swap in your personal contact details, and hit “Publish.” Good luck—hopefully that crack turns into a quick sale! 🚲💨
The low hum of the tube amp was the only sound in the apartment, aside from the frantic clicking of Elias’s mouse. It was 2:00 AM, and Elias was chasing a tone—a specific, chime-like clarity that existed only in his head.
For months, he had been limping along on free amp simulators. They were digital, harsh, and lifeless, turning his expensive Fender Stratocaster into a MIDI controller for static noise. He needed something organic. He needed S-Gear 2.
Everyone on the forums preached the gospel of Scuffham. "It feels real," they said. "It breathes," they claimed. "It’s the closest you’ll get to a vintage British stack without waking the neighbors."
Elias clicked over to the manufacturer's site. He stared at the price tag. Rent was due in three days. His bank account offered a cold, hard reality check.
He sighed, minimized the official page, and opened a new tab. He typed the query he knew by heart: Scuffham s-gear 2 with crack.
The search results were a minefield of dead links, surveys, and suspicious executables. Elias had been down this road before. He knew to avoid the .exe files that promised the world but delivered ransomware. He was looking for the "clean" cracks, the keygens, the scene releases from the shadowy groups who cracked software for sport, not profit.
After twenty minutes of dodging pop-ups, he found it. A forum post from 2016. A link to a file hosting site he didn't recognize. He held his breath and clicked download. Scuffham s-gear 2 with crack
The progress bar inched forward. Fifteen percent. Thirty percent.
Elias picked up his guitar and strummed an open E chord. The sound that came through his monitors was a dry, fizzy DI signal—lifeless. He looked back at the screen. Eighty percent.
When the file finally landed, his antivirus flared up like a air raid siren. Trojan.GenericKD.46...
"It’s a false positive," Elias muttered to himself, his finger hovering over the mouse. "It’s just the keygen. The software needs to modify the registry. It’s fine."
He disabled his firewall. It felt like unlocking the front door of his digital life and leaving it wide open in a bad neighborhood. He ran the installer for the trial version of S-Gear 2. It installed cleanly, beautiful graphics, polished interface. Then came the moment of truth.
He opened the folder labeled "Crack."
Inside was a jagged, rudimentary application. The icon was a skull, or maybe a fire—it was pixelated and ugly. He copied the file, pasted it into the program directory, and hit "Replace."
A command prompt window flashed on the screen. Text scrolled rapidly—garbled code, strings of numbers. Then, silence.
He reopened his DAW (Digital Audio Workstation). He loaded S-Gear 2 onto a track.
The interface opened. It looked gorgeous. The virtual knobs gleamed under the studio lighting. But at the top, where it usually said "DEMO MODE - NO SAVING," the text now read: LICENSED TO: The Knights of the Sound Table.
Elias exhaled. It worked.
He armed the track. He hit record. He strummed a lush, reverb-drenched chord. | # | Shot | Why it matters
The sound that erupted from his monitors was staggering. It was warm. It had sag. It had bloom. It was everything the forums promised. He dialed in the 'Clean' model and added a touch of delay. It sounded like a 1960s London studio. He played for an hour, lost in the lush, authentic response of the software. He finally had The Tone.
But then, around 3:30 AM, he noticed something.
He was playing a complex jazz run, climbing up the neck, when the sound suddenly clipped. Not a digital clip, but a strange, guttural distortion. He stopped playing. He checked his levels. Everything was in the green.
He played again. Same spot on the neck. A horrible, tearing sound. Krr-cchhh.
He frowned. He had heard that sound before. It was the sound of a blown speaker cone, or a tube on the verge of death.
He switched amp models. Same issue.
He opened the settings. He tweaked the bias. The crack returned, louder this time, rhythmic and nasty.
Pop. Hiss. Crack.
Suddenly, the beautiful "LICENSED TO" text at the top of the plugin began to glitch. The letters rearranged themselves.
LICE... NSED... TO... CRACK...
Elias pulled his hands away from the guitar. The plugin was acting on its own. The gain knob began to turn itself up, rotating with a slow, mechanical grinding sound that shouldn't exist in software.
Whirrrr.
The virtual room reverb spiked to 100%. The feedback loop began to build, a high-pitched whine that sounded less like an amp and more like a siren.
He tried to close the window. The mouse cursor froze.
The sound from his monitors shifted. It wasn't guitar anymore. It was the sound of static, like an untuned radio, growing louder. Beneath the static, Elias could hear something else. A voice? A recording?
"...This software is intended for evaluation only..." a robotic voice droned, buried under the noise.
The volume on his interface was maxing out. He lunged for the power button on his speakers, but before he could hit it, the monitors blasted a sound that made his teeth rattle. It was the sound of shattering glass, digitized and amplified to deafening levels.
Then, silence.
Elias sat in the dark, his ears ringing. The monitor screen was frozen on the S-Gear interface. The beautiful, realistic tubes inside the graphic were glowing red, then
🚲💥 Scuffham S‑Gear 2 – Cracked but still a beast!
I’m parting with my 2021 Scuffham S‑Gear 2 after a nasty fall left a hairline crack in the rear carbon stays. The bike still rides perfectly—stiff, responsive, and ready for any gravel or adventure ride.
Specs:
• Frame: Scuffham S‑Gear 2 (2021) – carbon, 56 cm (size M)
• Groupset: Shimano GRX RX812, 2x11‑speed
• Wheels: DT Swiss EX 1500, tubeless‑ready
• Tire set‑up: 38 mm Maxxis Re-Fuse (front) / 42 mm Maxxis Re-Fuse (rear)
• Components: Dropper post, integrated cockpit, power‑meter‑ready
• Condition: All components 100 % functional. The only blemish is a small crack on the rear carbon stays (visible in the pic). No structural compromise—still road‑worthy.Price: $1,450 USD (retail was $2,300).
Why sell? I’m upgrading to a full‑suspension bike and need to free up space.👉 DM me for more pics, a video test‑ride, or to arrange a meet‑up. Subject: [FOR SALE] Scuffham S‑Gear 2 (2021) –
#Scuffham #Sgear2 #CarbonBike #Gravel #BikeSale #CyclingCommunity #BikeDeal #AdventureReady
Tip: Use a carousel of 3‑4 photos (see photo checklist below) and tag @ScuffhamBikes + any local bike‑shops you’ll meet at.