Yep - I think the Mondraker will be good downhill. It's a bit slacker than the Vitus at 65 degrees and the setup seems more DH oriented (in my limited experience of DH bikes).I actually thought the Mondraker would be a lot of fun in terms of pointing it downhill, my main take from it was how long it was (was an xl, but had a relatively low standover)
Got 2 sets of wheels for mine and theres a huge difference riding them back to back.. The 30mm rims and DD Maxxis tyres that came on it which are great AM, enduro or whatever you want to call riding rocky, baby head filled Welsh/Lakeland/Alpine trails these days. The other wheelset is much lighter with 23mm rims, XD cassette and 2.35" EXO casing Ardent Races which drop over 3lb for gravel type rides and bikepacking. Total cost of under £400 which IMO is good value for the weight saved and extra rolling efficiency.You can notice quite big differences when you ride some of these bikes back to back - the biggest difference I felt on my bike was switching out the tires and going tubeless, made the bike feel a lot more dynamic for want of a better word.
It reviews pretty poor, very limited conditions that it excels in. Had a friend ask, who likes mondrakers, should it be his first ebike. Sent the links and said it'd be the last one I'd choose.Yeah I rode one round a car park at the weekend and it was a monster truck - rob has one on test right now.
No one mentioned spending a grand@Gary My point was that IMO it wasnt worth dropping an extra grand or two to save a couple of pounds.
Was that a parts transplant not counting the cost of bits you already had in the garage?No one mentioned spending a grand
the bulk of the 4lb weight loss on my bike cost precisely £56
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.