carlbiker
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This is the wife? ?I'm more the "SL" of lenses kinda guy ... Track, follow quietly .. think you're at least 15 meters away .. then a head pops up only 4 meters away ... She was pretty though ..
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This is the wife? ?I'm more the "SL" of lenses kinda guy ... Track, follow quietly .. think you're at least 15 meters away .. then a head pops up only 4 meters away ... She was pretty though ..
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Great stuff.....old geezers ROCK if only a bit slower !I think it helps to get some saddle time in. I t also helps if you're older. I started with ebikes when I was 73. 75 now and I ride an S-Works Turbo Levo SL that I enjoy because it doesn't feel that different from a regular (non-assist) trail bike. Yeah, I'm fortunate that money is not an issue and I have an Orbea Rise M-LTD and a Mondraker Crafty Carbon RR SL on order. I figure I'll decide which one I like best and sell the other two. That is, if I ever get the other two. That said, the S-Works is great with one or two gripes. First it's pretty expensive. Whether it's overpriced, IDK. The main gripe is the brakes. The Maguras are great but 180mm rotors are pretty anemic. Add that to an old geezer careening toward a broken hip and I get my thrill regularly.
You picked the wrong retiree man.....I dunno man, one of my most recent rides was with a 60 year old retiree and I had to push to keep up...
Yeah, when I was 60, and still a roadie, I didn't think I'd ever get old. But it creeps up on you. You just keep moving.I dunno man, one of my most recent rides was with a 60 year old retiree and I had to push to keep up...
When I was 63, I felt like superman. I was fit and flexible, never ailed a thing. Because I was riding 3-5 times per week I was also bike fit. Most importantly I did not have a single ache in my body, apart from the occasional back spasm. I can clearly remember being told by a guy in his early 20's that he couldn't keep up with me, and that was on my analogue bike. Around that time, two guys in the early 30's asked me where "so and so" was on the trail. I offered to show them and set off at my usual speed expecting guys 30 years or more younger than me to keep up. They didn't and I had to keep stopping for them. That was my last good year. Then my knees started to ache, my fingers and thumbs started to bend, and the progress towards an emtb began! It took four years!I dunno man, one of my most recent rides was with a 60 year old retiree and I had to push to keep up...
And welcome! My younger riding buddies, who keep me around as "the canary in the coal mine" watch me carefully so they'll know what's in store. Yesterday the first one, 56, ordered a Santa Cruz Bullit. More to come, I think.When I was 63, I felt like superman. I was fit and flexible, never ailed a thing. Because I was riding 3-5 times per week I was also bike fit. Most importantly I did not have a single ache in my body, apart from the occasional back spasm. I can clearly remember being told by a guy in his early 20's that he couldn't keep up with me, and that was on my analogue bike. Around that time, two guys in the early 30's asked me where "so and so" was on the trail. I offered to show them and set off at my usual speed expecting guys 30 years or more younger than me to keep up. They didn't and I had to keep stopping for them. That was my last good year. Then my knees started to ache, my fingers and thumbs started to bend, and the progress towards an emtb began! It took four years!
For jumping (or learning to jump) Fit faster rolling tyres and inflate them harder.
Most Eebs roll/accelerate shit. whereas jump bikes and bikes set-up to jump generally run faster rolling tyres.
also if easy to do, stiffen and speed up your suspension from trail settings
overdamped suspension kills pop. especially on big heavy draggy bikes. just back it off a little (not so much as to buck you) tho
well, I certainly run DH tires at absurdly low pressures. And suspension is soft and damped. too much, I’ve been tightening it up. 40lb spring in the fork and 400lb progressive spring in the rear now. every ride sees less damping also.
next order of business is to pump up the tires and try again, thanks for the tips! And back off damping just under the bucking point.
14psi. It’s a wonder they stop on the rim, or the sidewalks are not like a colander with ? bites. ????.I pumped my tires up from 14 or less psi to 26 front, 28 back. I went from F/R spring rate of 35/400-prog to 40/450, and I went three clicks less rebound damping both front and rear.
Well, THAT was a mistake! Like riding a pogostick! I'm going to keep the higher spring rates but everything else goes back, or else this thing is just not rideable!
But still worth trying and I do appreciate the feedback and advice.
I run e-wilds myself, but only just gone over to them from minions. So still experimenting. ? Tubeless F+R. So far so good. Not as good as I expected them to be on semi compact trials. Think the minions were better. ?Would you believe me if I told you I have a tube in the back wheel? Never burped the front or flatted the back
I weigh 145 lb, so that might have something to do with it (and the 35lb vorsprung spring, the 400 lb progressive rear spring...)
I'm surprised though. This forum is full of Michelin fanboys, so I would expect the folks here to be very well versed in the sidewall stiffness and strength of the DH22 and DH34 tires, which are doing all the heavy lifting here to prevent pinch flats.
Heck, I've gone as low as 12 psi, no issues on rough rocks.
Funny to read this is im just about to role those same dice...a nice new 2020 panigale v4..never rode a ducati,I just really like the look and sound of them...lol
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