Show us your Whyte bits

MrSpoon

Member
May 20, 2020
29
19
UK
great shot. I was suggesting a walk around Uley fort to my wife only a couple of days ago. I can imagine it does get pretty muddy in them there hills.

The fort is really stunning. Cycling around the top of it was probably the highlight of my ride (it's beautiful plus a lot of places to play!). I would suggest picking your route their carefully though. The "bridleway" that starts near Crawley Hill/Lane is probably best avoided with the bike. It was a long slog pushing 25kg up that!
 
Last edited:

nosuchuser

Member
Jun 10, 2020
91
75
London
@Kilham5 Wickes Multi Purpose Tarpaulin - 2 x 3m | Wickes.co.uk

And is that some sort of storage in the bottle cage? I do need some storage bag or otherwise on the bike, want to lose my backpack.

Surrey hills yesterday, absolute slop fest, need some trews with a waterproof arse, 1 hr back in the car with a cold wet liner not that much fun.

2020-11-01 12.00.22.jpg
 

Mr President

Active member
Sep 20, 2020
278
206
monmouth,wales
@Kilham5 Wickes Multi Purpose Tarpaulin - 2 x 3m | Wickes.co.uk

And is that some sort of storage in the bottle cage? I do need some storage bag or otherwise on the bike, want to lose my backpack.

Surrey hills yesterday, absolute slop fest, need some trews with a waterproof arse, 1 hr back in the car with a cold wet liner not that much fun.

View attachment 43508
i use a lezyne side loading bottle cage and a lezyne tool caddy to carry small stuff, if i have a water back pack on for longer remote rides. Or a 500ml wiggle prime water bottle if I am not too far from home/car and I can ditch the back pack.
 

nosuchuser

Member
Jun 10, 2020
91
75
London
i use a lezyne side loading bottle cage and a lezyne tool caddy to carry small stuff, if i have a water back pack on for longer remote rides. Or a 500ml wiggle prime water bottle if I am not too far from home/car and I can ditch the back pack.

Cheers. Have a side load cage from Whyte, will look into the caddy. Think I would like to have a water bottle though so I don't need a hydration pack.
 

Mr President

Active member
Sep 20, 2020
278
206
monmouth,wales
Cheers. Have a side load cage from Whyte, will look into the caddy. Think I would like to have a water bottle though so I don't need a hydration pack.
i found the normal sized bottles don't comfortable fit below the shock on the E160 at least - they foul the lock out level. The prime bottle is shorter than any other I found and still holds a fair amount of water. it is also gratifyingly cheap!
 


Sam E180

Active member
Aug 20, 2019
96
107
Barnsley
Little jaunt out to pines to get a feel for it in the air. Feels so planted

View attachment 44132
Nice! I did 3 laps of the pines yesterday. Was great fun in the slop. I’ve still not bumped into a other 180rs yet...
Pines is really good fun on an eeb. I did it to death on a hardtail and began to hate the place, now it’s just a flat out smash fest ?
 

Rahr85

E*POWAH Master
Sep 6, 2020
495
1,058
nottingham
I find pines a bit lacking in elevation but it's local so its still fun with the right people. We sometimes do night rides which changes the place dramatically.
 

nosuchuser

Member
Jun 10, 2020
91
75
London
Another take on the rear mudguard. MuckyNuts shorty repurposed for the rear.

5 mins in before I'd even got to the trailhead...
2020-11-14 09.30.56.jpg
2020-11-14 09.30.56 (2).jpg

After trails:
2020-11-14 11.04.08.jpg

Doesn't protect the arse so much but linkage fairly clean.

Minon DHF/DHR rubbish at clearing thick, sticky Kent clay, no grip in the corners, thinking about Conti Mud King or Maxxis Shorty as a mid way house because it's not always thick mud, there are the odd spots of hard pack still to be found.

I love this bike, it's so good :D
 

Jamze

Well-known member
Jun 30, 2020
391
720
Oxfordshire
Doesn't protect the arse so much but linkage fairly clean.

Minon DHF/DHR rubbish at clearing thick, sticky Kent clay, no grip in the corners, thinking about Conti Mud King or Maxxis Shorty as a mid way house because it's not always thick mud, there are the odd spots of hard pack still to be found.
I've given up with rear guards as they are worse for clogging up in clay/chalk than having nothing at all. The ones that mount on the seat post high up would work I guess.
 

The EMF

🔱 Aquaman 🔱
Subscriber
Nov 4, 2020
1,258
2,376
South East Northumberland
I've given up with rear guards as they are worse for clogging up in clay/chalk than having nothing at all. The ones that mount on the seat post high up would work I guess.
Where I ride (North Northumberland) there’s no clay but more peat and gloopy mud so tyres nd guards tend to clear well but I hate the sheep shit that sticks to the frame like No Nails!
Great riding though....
 

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