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I am thinking about either a Stumpjumper FSR Comp 29 or or the 26 version. I do some all mountain riding, and I'm not exactly sure if I'll get the fine control I like with 29" wheels. I've only ridden one 29" bike (SC Tallboy LT) and I preferred the Blunt LT when taking tight turns, especially when combined with downhill sections. My gut tells me there was a geometry mismatch with the Tallboy though.Anyone have any thoughts? I noticed that most pure all mountain bikes are 26"I'm annoyed to have missed a Specialized demo day Really happy to see a prospering mountain biking thread, the other hifi forum I hang out on is all roadies!
I like those Toronto trails because they are all dirt and grass. In Colorado, there are too many rocks off the trail and I manage to find them when I crash. My favorite biking was the downhill trails at KEystone Colorado. Fast strip hills with lots of switchbacks.
To give you an idea of one of the trails we did, called Dr. Quads (for the serious pain in the quads from the climbs, or dr. quadripeligite if you fail) here is a youtube vid. Unfortunately most all the stunts get modified often, so they are a bit different now then then. For instance, the section around the 4 minute mark is way gnarlier now (didn't ride those, cause the price of failure was huge). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xo1JYn3YWjAHere is the one that I probably wouldn't have done if I had thought about it first, but I was carrying some speed because I was going the other direction. All these vids are in the wrong direction. The right way requires you to climb a 140' of steep switchbacks and then you come down a narrow twisty trail into this section.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhEwOskyZhE Actually this one has the best demonstration of the section I rode today, same as I rode it in the right direction.... Otherwise boring, but the section for sec 40-130 has it.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lrxj2x5wCSk
I ordered a dropper seat today.
My preference for an AM bike is a coil shock (CCDB or Vivid Air would be ok), about 160mm travel, and a Fox 36/Lyric. A bike like the NomadC can be built under 30 lbs and there isn't too much difference in efficiency vs a Blur LT, but a bike with a coil shock and 36 fork is much, much more capable on the downhill. 3 of my friends got a NomadC/36 this year and they are all much faster both up and down the hill vs. what they were riding previously. 2 were on Intense Tracer VPs and one on a Transition girls' FR bike, forget which model. The 29er thing is a personal preference, I like 26ers for AM but would love to have a light 29er for max efficiency and buff trails. However, I ride DH and expect my AM bike to be able to navigate the same kind of terrain and be able to jump well. This pretty much rules out 29ers and air shocks.