tomA
New Member
Hi my name is Tom, I live in Spokane WA, well actually Liberty Lake Washington, which is 20 minutes east of Spokane on the Idaho border, but who's every heard of Liberty Lake (and yes we do have a lake!) whereas you may have heard of Spokane. That said, Liberty Lake is WAY nicer than Spokane, believe me, and I feel lucky to live there (well at least 8 months out of the year - not counting winter). But dont' tell anyone! Its getting crowded!
I've been riding mountain bikes for around 20 years, I started late in life and I'm over 60 now. I ride an Ibis Ripley V4. I also still have my ibis Ripley V3. Before that I had an ibis ripley original. before that an ibis mojo. What I realized as I aged on the ibis mojo is that pedalling a 26 inch wheel bike was harder. Once I went to 29 inch wheels and discovered tires with lower rolling resistance, I never looked back. It re-invigorated my riding, at least for a time, because 29ers were faster and easier to peda, and therefore funner. But now the problem is back, the hills seem harder and I keep getting slower with each passing year. I was just riding in Phoenix area. A great area to ride, but there are plenty of techy, sustained and steep climbs in the area and they were kicking my butt. I dont' remember them being quite that hard two years ago when I was there. But there are no new wheel sizes to make my life easier anymore. So....
I was in this bike shop and told them I was considering e-bikes, as age is really getting to me. They said: "hey come out with on our wednesday eMTB ride. We'll provide a shop bike for you to ride". How could I pass that up! So there I was on the next Wednesday, riding a full power turbo levo with a fast group of riders. I was now going faster than ever, climbing steep hills I might not even attempt on my pedal bike and climbing at amazing paces instead of grunting up if I had been pedalling. It was super invigorating!
Well that then led to a two day rental. I started with the turbo levo, but being by myself, I wasn't flying at crazy fast paces, I was just pedaling like I normally do. Yes I could do all the climbs now that I used to stop twice on pedalling, but... the bike just felt like a tank to me compared to my ibis Ripley. Especially when I got to techy trails I had to walk over big boulders (National trail on South Mountain). So on my second day I swapped my rental to a turbo levo SL. I really loved this bike because it felt more like my pedal bike. It wasn't a huge tank. But it also had 160mm front and 150mm reaer travel and it just soaked up the techy trails like crazy. I never had that much suspension before because a) I didn't think I needed it on our trails, and b) they are typically much hader to pedal. But this was amazing! with e-assist, you can have all the suspension you ever could want, the beefiest tires you want without worring about pedalling efficiencty, and it doesn't matter because the battery/motor takes up the slack! This bike felt like the perfect mix for someone who just needs a little boost (kind of like going from 26 in wheels to 29). I was hooked!
Now here I am an eMTB convert with one problem. My riding buddies back home (well all but one) look down on eMTBers. So I will be shunned from the group if I mention I want to ride eMTB, let along actually show up on a ride with one. So I'm here to ask questions and I embark on my eMTB journey.
I'm looking forward to chatting with you all!
I've been riding mountain bikes for around 20 years, I started late in life and I'm over 60 now. I ride an Ibis Ripley V4. I also still have my ibis Ripley V3. Before that I had an ibis ripley original. before that an ibis mojo. What I realized as I aged on the ibis mojo is that pedalling a 26 inch wheel bike was harder. Once I went to 29 inch wheels and discovered tires with lower rolling resistance, I never looked back. It re-invigorated my riding, at least for a time, because 29ers were faster and easier to peda, and therefore funner. But now the problem is back, the hills seem harder and I keep getting slower with each passing year. I was just riding in Phoenix area. A great area to ride, but there are plenty of techy, sustained and steep climbs in the area and they were kicking my butt. I dont' remember them being quite that hard two years ago when I was there. But there are no new wheel sizes to make my life easier anymore. So....
I was in this bike shop and told them I was considering e-bikes, as age is really getting to me. They said: "hey come out with on our wednesday eMTB ride. We'll provide a shop bike for you to ride". How could I pass that up! So there I was on the next Wednesday, riding a full power turbo levo with a fast group of riders. I was now going faster than ever, climbing steep hills I might not even attempt on my pedal bike and climbing at amazing paces instead of grunting up if I had been pedalling. It was super invigorating!
Well that then led to a two day rental. I started with the turbo levo, but being by myself, I wasn't flying at crazy fast paces, I was just pedaling like I normally do. Yes I could do all the climbs now that I used to stop twice on pedalling, but... the bike just felt like a tank to me compared to my ibis Ripley. Especially when I got to techy trails I had to walk over big boulders (National trail on South Mountain). So on my second day I swapped my rental to a turbo levo SL. I really loved this bike because it felt more like my pedal bike. It wasn't a huge tank. But it also had 160mm front and 150mm reaer travel and it just soaked up the techy trails like crazy. I never had that much suspension before because a) I didn't think I needed it on our trails, and b) they are typically much hader to pedal. But this was amazing! with e-assist, you can have all the suspension you ever could want, the beefiest tires you want without worring about pedalling efficiencty, and it doesn't matter because the battery/motor takes up the slack! This bike felt like the perfect mix for someone who just needs a little boost (kind of like going from 26 in wheels to 29). I was hooked!
Now here I am an eMTB convert with one problem. My riding buddies back home (well all but one) look down on eMTBers. So I will be shunned from the group if I mention I want to ride eMTB, let along actually show up on a ride with one. So I'm here to ask questions and I embark on my eMTB journey.
I'm looking forward to chatting with you all!