Gyre
Well-known member
You state that as fact and your experience is what it is, but it doesn't jive with my lived experience. If I'm being very smooth with my inputs, then in that case the difference is negligible as long as I can keep things slow and smooth. But when I'm not so smooth and need to make quick adjustments, I've always found FS bikes to be easier to fall behind on and more difficult to stabilize. I originally learned on a road bike, but having done both for many years, I'm glad I didn't have FS when I was picking it up for the first time.No it's not.
Whatever bike you practice on most will yeild the same results whether FS, front sus or fully rigid.
I'll admit I haven't deliberately tried preloading to recover and will give that a whirl.On an FS bike you can actually use the suspension to save the bike from flopping to one side. Simply preloading the bike's suspension to reset the balance.