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I guess I don't get the appeal for the fatbike other than floatation on snow, or perhaps cheaper to buy due to no suspension. That's a lot more rubber and weight to spin around. Looks tiresome. I remember when I thought it would be a cool idea to fatten up my tires on my Yamaha RZ350 2 stroke street bike. Went up to the largest tire size front and rear, a size or two. What a mistake, it killed the bike in handling and acceleration. The extra weight of the rubber made the tires feel like giant giroscopes that did not want to move in any other direction than what they were spinning. Rocket_Ronny
I'm still riding my 12-year old Yeti and remain a fan of the brand, but I'll echo Dave's enthusiasm for the DW Link suspensions, and would thus mention Pivot Cycles as a result. The Mach 5.7 model, in either carbon or alloy depending on your preference, is worth a look. I've upgraded my Yeti enough that I can't justify replacing it without de-funding another hobby, but when I dream about it, Yeti and Pivot top my wish list...(I'm amazed as the sea-change toward 650b wheels... I got really nice 26" wheels from Speed Dream a few years ago assuming that I'd be able to move them to my next bike. Oops.)
It's worth demoing some new bikes, they have made amazing improvements in the last decade, the last few years in particular. My '14 Trek Slash is better downhill than many 5+ yr old DH bikes, it pedals uphill better than any 5 yr old 5" trail/xc bike and weighs under 29 lbs. It's capable of fairly ridiculous speeds while maintaining stability and control.
Yes, it's a single 30t front ring with a SRAM 10-42t 11-sp cassette. The drivetrain is a mix of XX1, XO1 and X1 parts. Tires are 2.4 front and 2.3 rear but they are on Light Bicycle 38mm carbon rims which does increase width and volume quite a bit, allowing much lower air pressures and making the wheels much stiffer vs aluminum rims. The '15 version of the Trek Slash in carbon is the same bike but drops 1 full pound off the frame. The bike will cover a lot of ground fast on xc type terrain and still be able to handle the kind of trail you'd typically want a DH bike for.
Do you run those tubeless?Nice bike.
I inherited a Transition Trans Am from my son a couple of years ago. Does anybody know about that model? It rolls easily and the shifting is smooth. Otherwise I'm not to sure what's special or not. For whatever reason they don't seem to be very common around my part of Colorado.
yes, and thanks! I use Gorilla tape and truckerco (on ebay) valve stems and latex sealant. Transition designs nice bikes, the Trans Am is a hardtail mt bike made for general trail riding. It would be perfect at the 18rd trails in Fruita but is less forgiving on rocky trails vs a full suspension bike. I'd ride it around 18rd until you get comfortable then move on to the trails off the Loma exit, starting with the easier ones. 18rd is much easier than most riding in the area and the Trans Am is perfect for it.
Careful, Dave... one of the upcoming purchases that I might unfund to get that new bike would the 5 pairs of balanced ICs that I need, and I literally just yesterday day had someone email me about checking out your cables! And I know you're right... my brother flies out every year to join me for a few days of mountain biking, and has typically rented a really nice bike (Golden Bike Shop is great), which I've then borrowed for a few miles to see what I'm missing. To overstate things a bit, I still have to pick a line while he would just point and shoot! Too many hobbies, too little time and money...
Dave - My butt already told me it's a hardtail. That same son moved on to a PBR Bottle Rocket which I have ridden. The difference is pronounced. I probably should have a full suspension recumbent with air conditioning and a stereo. A sofa on wheels sounds nice but I haven't seen any trails that will accommodate the width. Let me know next time you're out here. I'm sure I can't keep up with you but I'll buy you a slice and a beer at Hot Tomato.