EMBN click bait at it's finest. So as with all the versus/tests the Bike Network guys do you have to take any findings with a family sized portion of table salt.
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Entertaining, but really not informative. The whole thing is clearly staged to make for better viewing.(and let's face it to sell E-bikes) Much like a TopGear versus feature it is story scripted.
for example. Neil finishes a DH run and the van he supposedly got a lift in was waiting for him each (different) run? Erm... Unless the driver is the spirit of Colin McCRae there's very few DH tracks with an uplift road where your driver'd be at the bottom before you (even for an old boy like me with a decent sized crash thrown in for good measure). Also over the years I've shared uplifts with both Steve and Neil. So know for a fact Steve is talking out his arse saying things like "I wouldn't want to sit in a van for that long". But ignoring the BS for a minute it does bring up some interesting discussion.
Last weekend I rode a full days DH for the first time in a while. Pure uplifted DH. ie. Zero pushing. pick up in the car park/drop off at the top on a dedicated DH bike. No matter what the media will have you believe. There is no substitute for having the right tool for the job. And a DH bike was that tool.
Now. here are some stats from the day:
Total time: 6 hours (9am-3pm) - this included down time for drinks/lunch/blethering with mates
Runs: 12
Riding time: 40mins
Time sat in uplift bus: 2hrs30
Distance driven: 55miles
Distance ridden 14miles
total Elevation 13000ft+
As you can see the vehicle drove almost 4 times the distance the bike was ridden. Both descended at similar speeds.
Now what Steve and Neil also failed to tell you was that 40minutes and 13000ft of descending at race speed is high intensity excercise (My Max HR on my Enduro bike every ride is recorded while decending NOT climbing). Plus after 12 DH runs your entire body has taken a quite beating. Not too many non DHers actually manage double figures before fatigue begins to limit their ability to ride safely. At Ft William (one of the roughest DH race tracks in the world) for example I have seen many only manage ONE run and be too beaten up/tired to contemplate another. It's very different from normal mtb riding.
Looking at the bikes. An E-bike on Turbo could nowhere near match the uplift vehicles speed to the top but if de-restricted to get close at a guestimate would require a new battery every what? 2 runs? On Eco you *might* manage to complete the 12 runs on 2 batteries but it would take you twice the time and that's a hell of a lot of uphill to pedal. Something else that keeps being touted is that E-bikes are as fast as DH bikes. They're really not. Not on proper DH tracks anyway. If an E-bike were spec'd to be ridden purely on DH tracks at DH race speed it would need to weigh closer to 60lb than the current benchmark 48/50lb bikes we're seeing today just to last a season and as such would handle like a pig. (just for comparisson my DH bikes weigh 35 and 36lb with full DH componentry and tyres)
Anyway. My point here is that an E-bike is no replacement for a DH bike and an uplift day but it can definitely be a damn good addition and also one of the reasons I've finally taken the plunge myself.
.
Entertaining, but really not informative. The whole thing is clearly staged to make for better viewing.(and let's face it to sell E-bikes) Much like a TopGear versus feature it is story scripted.
for example. Neil finishes a DH run and the van he supposedly got a lift in was waiting for him each (different) run? Erm... Unless the driver is the spirit of Colin McCRae there's very few DH tracks with an uplift road where your driver'd be at the bottom before you (even for an old boy like me with a decent sized crash thrown in for good measure). Also over the years I've shared uplifts with both Steve and Neil. So know for a fact Steve is talking out his arse saying things like "I wouldn't want to sit in a van for that long". But ignoring the BS for a minute it does bring up some interesting discussion.
Last weekend I rode a full days DH for the first time in a while. Pure uplifted DH. ie. Zero pushing. pick up in the car park/drop off at the top on a dedicated DH bike. No matter what the media will have you believe. There is no substitute for having the right tool for the job. And a DH bike was that tool.
Now. here are some stats from the day:
Total time: 6 hours (9am-3pm) - this included down time for drinks/lunch/blethering with mates
Runs: 12
Riding time: 40mins
Time sat in uplift bus: 2hrs30
Distance driven: 55miles
Distance ridden 14miles
total Elevation 13000ft+
As you can see the vehicle drove almost 4 times the distance the bike was ridden. Both descended at similar speeds.
Now what Steve and Neil also failed to tell you was that 40minutes and 13000ft of descending at race speed is high intensity excercise (My Max HR on my Enduro bike every ride is recorded while decending NOT climbing). Plus after 12 DH runs your entire body has taken a quite beating. Not too many non DHers actually manage double figures before fatigue begins to limit their ability to ride safely. At Ft William (one of the roughest DH race tracks in the world) for example I have seen many only manage ONE run and be too beaten up/tired to contemplate another. It's very different from normal mtb riding.
Looking at the bikes. An E-bike on Turbo could nowhere near match the uplift vehicles speed to the top but if de-restricted to get close at a guestimate would require a new battery every what? 2 runs? On Eco you *might* manage to complete the 12 runs on 2 batteries but it would take you twice the time and that's a hell of a lot of uphill to pedal. Something else that keeps being touted is that E-bikes are as fast as DH bikes. They're really not. Not on proper DH tracks anyway. If an E-bike were spec'd to be ridden purely on DH tracks at DH race speed it would need to weigh closer to 60lb than the current benchmark 48/50lb bikes we're seeing today just to last a season and as such would handle like a pig. (just for comparisson my DH bikes weigh 35 and 36lb with full DH componentry and tyres)
Anyway. My point here is that an E-bike is no replacement for a DH bike and an uplift day but it can definitely be a damn good addition and also one of the reasons I've finally taken the plunge myself.