Mr President
Active member
- Thread starter
- #31
180 miles in now with E160 S. All very good so far. I have ridden it in the local woods and mountains. Dry, wet and muddy. All good.
Thanks to the advice received here I am now in EMTB mode on anything off-road. Typically getting 1500m climbing and around 50km of distance on technical rides. Longer if there is less climbing or obstacles.
Also dropping the seatpost travel by 1cm as per above has helped comfort levels greatly.
Still adapting to logistics to some extent. I saw a question elsewhere about issues clamping the Whyte on a Thule tow bar mounted rack. I agree it is tricky since there are no easily accessible small round tubes. I use a three bike Thule if I am carrying more than one bike and need help just to manhandle the rack onto the tow bar. I have clamped onto the downtube, but it is a poor fit and definitely needs a back-up strap.
When just carrying one bike I have used a Pendle for the last 20 years. It is very easy and felxible until you have to hang the number plate on the bike. The plate damaged the invisi-wrap on the Whyte - could have been worse if I hadn't had the frame wrapped. So I bought a Pro-use Amber 1 on Ebay for 95 quid. This rack is light and easy and I especially like the attachment clamp which is actually tightened via a strap. It works a treat, but you do still need a back-up strap. The rack itself is just too narrow for the Large Whyte, so I have bolted on some extensions made from sawn up guttering downpipe. This seems to be working but I plan to make it look a bit more professional with some black half-round pipe .... one day
Thanks to the advice received here I am now in EMTB mode on anything off-road. Typically getting 1500m climbing and around 50km of distance on technical rides. Longer if there is less climbing or obstacles.
Also dropping the seatpost travel by 1cm as per above has helped comfort levels greatly.
Still adapting to logistics to some extent. I saw a question elsewhere about issues clamping the Whyte on a Thule tow bar mounted rack. I agree it is tricky since there are no easily accessible small round tubes. I use a three bike Thule if I am carrying more than one bike and need help just to manhandle the rack onto the tow bar. I have clamped onto the downtube, but it is a poor fit and definitely needs a back-up strap.
When just carrying one bike I have used a Pendle for the last 20 years. It is very easy and felxible until you have to hang the number plate on the bike. The plate damaged the invisi-wrap on the Whyte - could have been worse if I hadn't had the frame wrapped. So I bought a Pro-use Amber 1 on Ebay for 95 quid. This rack is light and easy and I especially like the attachment clamp which is actually tightened via a strap. It works a treat, but you do still need a back-up strap. The rack itself is just too narrow for the Large Whyte, so I have bolted on some extensions made from sawn up guttering downpipe. This seems to be working but I plan to make it look a bit more professional with some black half-round pipe .... one day