jonathan horticulturist
Member
Please delete, thanks
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I think you might have missed my point. No offence but there's not a UK trail centre red or black trail that can't be ridden fast on a basic 100mm hardtail.
As Kris mentioned. Every ride teaches you something. Uprgrading to a long travel more DH orientated bike is not necessarily going to teach you as much as learning how to handle a less capable bike properly. I'd actually suggest holding off on the Vitus for a year or so and buying a decent regular hardtail to learn basic skills on.
A lighter simpler bike is definitely better to learn weight placement and good basic technique on than a 170mm travel DH monster that will disguise all your poor technique.
You mentioning twitchy bikes is very much on topic.
Unless you've set them up strangely neither of the bikes in your sig should be particularly twitchy. Would you not be interested in finding out why you feel those two bikes are twitchy? It may actually be nothing to do with the bikes.
Well that's complete nonsense but it is your choice. Hardtails are awesome and personally I'd never be without one but that's me. What I meant was in order to learn basic skills (Most of which simply involve learning to co-ordinate timing and weight shift while using upper body/hip strength) a 25lb lighter bike would help a lot more than buying a longer travel Ebike when you already have two. Simple stuff the motor doesn't help with like bunnyhop repetition will be massively more tiring for a beginner on a long travel 50lb bike.Since I’ve tried full squish I can’t go back to hardtail.
What on earth are you talking about? I didn't mean an E-Hardtail I meant a regular hardtail. £500 is enough for a decent beginner to intermediate hardtail for someone like yourself getting back into mtb.I want to ride an Ebike all the time. I have the bug. A less capable bike therefore would be a Voodoo Zobop Ebike. Guess what? They are 3k same as the Vitus.
And that's absolutely fair enough. Just realise though once you get away from the safety of nicely built graded trail centre routes naural riding can be a lot more challenging. Even some basic XC routes are above any trail centre black in difficulty in certain weather conditions. A slack 170mm travel bike won't help you with this unless you improve your basic handling skills (starting with the above tips I gave you)I think the principle of riding is to have as much fun as possible. Currently that means doing reds. I don’t want to do blacks at the moment. If I’m honest I struggle with confidence and since starting up riding again I am sheepish.
So massively irrelevant! You should probably stop worrying about twitchy bikes.Different bike, on an acoustic. Long time ago. Was a medium, since then I have gone large.
As above. it's time to stop worrying about "twitchiness" which you still haven''t actually explained TBHI don’t find my Ebikes twitchy.
More now than everAnd never beat yourself up over a bad days ride we all have them where we’re not feeling it
More now than ever
Ps I also had an ATX 990 at one point. I stuck Judy DHOs on mine. Possibly the worst dual crown fork ever made. a whole 100mm of elastomer sprung goodness and a plastic damping cartridge that spat it's lid every bottom out. £1049 retail. Thank fuck mine were free.
Stuck speed springs and an afermarket cart in it and the bike was well ahead of it's time for razzing about on on non DH days. I eventually gave the ATX frame to an up and coming kid who'd been a (fearless and good) BMXer but wanted to get into mtb but didn't have the money. 2 weeks later he'd snapped it in half coming up short on a ridiculous sized double. We'd hired a digger to build a set of trails with but got carried away and spent the whole week building one take off and landing.
I was riding little unbranded kinesis (Taiwanese factory) alu XC hardtails bought for pennies through the shop I managed with 100mm forks back then and moved onto dirt jump frames when BSX and mtb DJ became a thing. I must've been riding little 100mm hardtails for over 25 years now. Still love them. Have and regularly ride a Dartmoor 4X and a giant STP. and probably still have an old 16" Alu GT hardtail (not far off a Zaskar) with 100m rockshox as well. Well.. I know it's in my Ex's shed. I gave it to her son to use for his paper round but he's grown up and left home now so considering how well he took care of it it's probably mine or landfill's.
Those judys were dangerous! The amount of flex was terrifying.
how did you have your DH3 set up that a hardtail was faster down an actual dh track than it? You didn't actually use that awful DNM shock they came with did you? Those frames were actually ridiculously good if you knew how to configure the frame to your preference (They had 150 different geometry/linkage/leverage configurations). and ran a good aftermarket shock.I remember swapping my coyote dh3 for a 120mm hard tail jump bike, was faster down my local dh trails and massively improved my riding.
I wrote itI used a setup guide from southern downhill,
Yeah i got the point about th hardtail making you smoother.The point was riding a hard tail forced me to stop relying on 8" of suspension and learn how to ride properly, plus it was a lot easier to throw around on the tight twisty trails in the south West. On a real dh trail, you're right, but back then we didn't know what proper dh was, until we went to inners.
You shoud see the E-sommet thread. it's like reading "The secret diary of Adrian mole aged 13¾"And the winner of most OT thread of the day goes to...
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