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I was just teasing....I have no issues with spending money on a healthy hobby.
Pro2 hubs are ultra loud. I sold mine because they are LOUD! I like DT hubs, if your 350 has the plate-type engagement DT sells 36 pt plates as an upgrade for the stock 18 pt plates.
N.P. Josh. I totally agree for investing for your health.
Yep, I agree weight makes a difference, but maybe not as much as most people assume. The article used a significant decrease in weight, 4 lbs and a huge hill of 20% grade to illustrate the difference. Most rides around here at not climbing those types of hills and the difference in speed would be unnoticeable on flats and less on typical hills like he ones around here. Maybe dropping bike weight makes more sense for people in steep hilly areas. Lastly, I believe handling has more to do with design and geometry than it does with weight. I'm not sure lighter bikes are necessarily better handling. Some lightweight designs or components can be less durable or have weight limits. Doesn't this potentially negatively affect handling?
The trade-off is that extra mass might carry you down a little smoother.
My burly "AM" bike is 32 lbs even and I can feel a few ounces difference in the bike... weight is a really big deal IMO.
That's a myth, world cup dh bikes are getting to be under 35 lbs. There's no advantage to a heavier bike assuming the components perform identically.
I was referring to rotational mass and not just weight in general. And also smoothness and not speed. It's not a myth - it's physics - gyroscopic forces and all that. Whether or not one can actually feel the difference, I don't know.Just keep on ridin'
My light AM bike is ~27lbs (think the latest wheels shaved weight but haven't weighed it yet, 27.5lbs before). My 29'er is 29lbs. The light AM bike is a lot of fun to ride, more agile, more confidence inspiring, but the 29er feel faster on the same trails (the lesser side, as I don't ride the 29'er on the techy stuff). I find I ride the Trance X (26 fully) much more, as it is more fun to ride. Then I take out the 29er and I feel the speed and I decide that the speed to addictive. It's good to have both.
I'd love to have a light-ish 29er, I rode an Intense Spider 29er and a Turner Sultan 29er, both were really fun bikes. The Intense still sticks in my mind as the best climbing bike I've ever been on, it's abilities to clear technical obstacles was amazing. It's hard to say if a 29er is naturally more efficient from point A to B... I think sometimes they can be, they roll over bumpy terrain really well, but on average I think it's too close to call. If I were to go out and buy a light trail bike today I have no idea if I'd end up with 29" wheels. Luckily I don't have the cash to worry about it.