That pricing for the slash 9 doesnt seem right. 7k euros for that. Ridiculous, if that is correct and if the cost in New Zealand for it is similar. Thats 14,000 nzd for that, like yes its got transmission and the new vivid but they aren’t even the top of the line versions of those products. Spec on that looks like, alloy frame, gx transmission, code bronze brakes, zeb select, vivid select plus, bontrager dropper, presumably a bontrager line elite 30 wheelset aswell.
With the state of the market I wouldn’t be too surprised if brands tack an extra 10 percent on today and sell for 35 percent off instead of 25 percent off in 10 months. Sure during the pandemic it made sense for brands to compete with each other on price with new bikes but with a huge amount of discounted builds out there why not maximize revenue from those willing to spend on the newest stuff.
plus I wouldn’t be surprised if rockshox/sram is being a little less competitive on their oem pricing at the moment since they got the “hot” products with fox’s qc issues and shimano likely to run its current groups for a few more years.
With the state of the market I wouldn’t be too surprised if brands tack an extra 10 percent on today and sell for 35 percent off...
With the state of the market I wouldn’t be too surprised if brands tack an extra 10 percent on today and sell for 35 percent off instead of 25 percent off in 10 months. Sure during the pandemic it made sense for brands to compete with each other on price with new bikes but with a huge amount of discounted builds out there why not maximize revenue from those willing to spend on the newest stuff.
plus I wouldn’t be surprised if rockshox/sram is being a little less competitive on their oem pricing at the moment since they got the “hot” products with fox’s qc issues and shimano likely to run its current groups for a few more years.
Worked for a guy that would add an extra couple % on to quoted jobs for some people so when they no doubt asked for a discount, he would happily off that % off and seem like they were getting a great deal. Maby Trek is taking that approach?
The advantage of the Vivid would be clear on a more linear leverage bike frame, where coils just don't work well. Anything under 15% progression should...
The advantage of the Vivid would be clear on a more linear leverage bike frame, where coils just don't work well. Anything under 15% progression should be on air unless it also has 200mm of travel.
You are correct, assuming a budget compression tune, or just a bad compression tune. The beauty of the twin tube design is that all adjustments are...
You are correct, assuming a budget compression tune, or just a bad compression tune. The beauty of the twin tube design is that all adjustments are external and a cane creek can be dialed in to whatever rider weight or frame kinematics without a factory tune. My current frame is a single pivot that has about 4% progression, but I prefer my cane creek coil over the air, and I prefer the EXT Storia over them both (a coil). The downside of the Storia is that it does require an internal adjustment per frame, but the USA distributor factors that into the sale price. It also has that hydraulic bottom out.
But don't take my word for it- look at all the people (joes and pros) running coils on the Starling Murmur, another single pivot but with a slightly regressive curve!
Unfortunately, many in MTBing, are often confused on the roles played by first the spring rate and how it's used primarily to manage chassis attitude, balance and support and is mostly specific to rider/ bike combined weight & weight distribution; vs. second the role of damping which is utilized to control the rate of the movement of the suspension and is much more specific to the rider and their aggression level and terrain.
To put it in the most basic terms, a linear rear suspension with a coil would either a) bottom excessively, or b) have to utilize too much compression damping to prevent bottoming therefore rendering the rear suspension to be harsh on chatter and other hits. This is because inherently a spring and damping reacts very differently to a force input. A too stiff spring for instance, can still be a pogo stick going through all of it's travel easily without appropriate damping. The spring doesn't really serve to slow down the rate of shock movement outside of extremes. Stiff damping, when combined with not enough spring rate can still not have enough support and end up riding low, while simultaneously being too stiff to react quickly to bumps. You could of course go the other way with too stiff of a spring and lighter damping to prevent bottom outs, but then the rear suspension doesn't work correctly off the top and skips along with excessive initial spring rate.
I'm happy, that your happy with your set-ups. But really, the bikes work better when the rear shock is selected mostly to fit the leverage ratio of the bicycle.
You'll also notice on that very page where Craig shows the set up recommendations for a customer's E29 in the directions it says" If the fork bottoms, turn the compression in 2 clicks, etc. He never says to change the spring rate.
Unfortunately, many in MTBing, are often confused on the roles played by first the spring rate and how it's used primarily to manage chassis attitude, balance...
Unfortunately, many in MTBing, are often confused on the roles played by first the spring rate and how it's used primarily to manage chassis attitude, balance and support and is mostly specific to rider/ bike combined weight & weight distribution; vs. second the role of damping which is utilized to control the rate of the movement of the suspension and is much more specific to the rider and their aggression level and terrain.
To put it in the most basic terms, a linear rear suspension with a coil would either a) bottom excessively, or b) have to utilize too much compression damping to prevent bottoming therefore rendering the rear suspension to be harsh on chatter and other hits. This is because inherently a spring and damping reacts very differently to a force input. A too stiff spring for instance, can still be a pogo stick going through all of it's travel easily without appropriate damping. The spring doesn't really serve to slow down the rate of shock movement outside of extremes. Stiff damping, when combined with not enough spring rate can still not have enough support and end up riding low, while simultaneously being too stiff to react quickly to bumps. You could of course go the other way with too stiff of a spring and lighter damping to prevent bottom outs, but then the rear suspension doesn't work correctly off the top and skips along with excessive initial spring rate.
I'm happy, that your happy with your set-ups. But really, the bikes work better when the rear shock is selected mostly to fit the leverage ratio of the bicycle.
You'll also notice on that very page where Craig shows the set up recommendations for a customer's E29 in the directions it says" If the fork bottoms, turn the compression in 2 clicks, etc. He never says to change the spring rate.
GL
This was true of last-gen shocks from 10 years ago. Back then compression damping was too primitive and few people put coils on frames with less than 170mm of travel anyways. Now they perform excellent. We can go back and forth on the hows and the whys, but ultimately it comes down to inductive vs deductive reasoning: go out and ride a 150mm enduro bike with a coil and a flat leverage curve. If the coil is of decent quality and tuned properly, it will ride very well, and better for most enthusiast/expert riders than an air.
This was true of last-gen shocks from 10 years ago. Back then compression damping was too primitive and few people put coils on frames with less...
This was true of last-gen shocks from 10 years ago. Back then compression damping was too primitive and few people put coils on frames with less than 170mm of travel anyways. Now they perform excellent. We can go back and forth on the hows and the whys, but ultimately it comes down to inductive vs deductive reasoning: go out and ride a 150mm enduro bike with a coil and a flat leverage curve. If the coil is of decent quality and tuned properly, it will ride very well, and better for most enthusiast/expert riders than an air.
I disagree. I've owned 2 enduro bikes with low to moderate progressivity and ran them with good coil shocks, and they either bottom out easily on even small jumps, or if you increase spring rate and damping to the point where they don't do that, then they feel terrible over brake bumps and small chunk. The bikes were a Sentinel v1 (~10% progression) with a Push 11-6, and a GG Megatrail (~20% progression) with an EXT Storia.
LOL... "Also interesting is the fact that the handlebars of the team bikes did not have a typical Scott trigger with 492 different levers, but only a single lever for the seat post."
I've ridden alot of scotts thanks to the demo's being available.... is their any of their bikes that dont suck other than the latest gambler?
Their Ransom Ebike is Probably the best non downhill scott bike ive ridden, but its still weird, Poor QC with the pivot linkage, frame flexes so much in the rear, its got 2 spots on a 180mm travel bike for a kick stand????
They are also yeti/botique pricing here but even worse value. kinda like Transition here, heavily overpriced without any quality.
I disagree. I've owned 2 enduro bikes with low to moderate progressivity and ran them with good coil shocks, and they either bottom out easily on...
I disagree. I've owned 2 enduro bikes with low to moderate progressivity and ran them with good coil shocks, and they either bottom out easily on even small jumps, or if you increase spring rate and damping to the point where they don't do that, then they feel terrible over brake bumps and small chunk. The bikes were a Sentinel v1 (~10% progression) with a Push 11-6, and a GG Megatrail (~20% progression) with an EXT Storia.
Was your Storia tuned by EXT USA? Are you sure you ran an appropriate coil weight?
Its not a looker is it?
and makes yeti look like good value it seems
At over 7000euros, I'm expecting a motor to be in there somewhere!
That pricing for the slash 9 doesnt seem right. 7k euros for that. Ridiculous, if that is correct and if the cost in New Zealand for it is similar. Thats 14,000 nzd for that, like yes its got transmission and the new vivid but they aren’t even the top of the line versions of those products. Spec on that looks like, alloy frame, gx transmission, code bronze brakes, zeb select, vivid select plus, bontrager dropper, presumably a bontrager line elite 30 wheelset aswell.
With the state of the market I wouldn’t be too surprised if brands tack an extra 10 percent on today and sell for 35 percent off instead of 25 percent off in 10 months. Sure during the pandemic it made sense for brands to compete with each other on price with new bikes but with a huge amount of discounted builds out there why not maximize revenue from those willing to spend on the newest stuff.
plus I wouldn’t be surprised if rockshox/sram is being a little less competitive on their oem pricing at the moment since they got the “hot” products with fox’s qc issues and shimano likely to run its current groups for a few more years.
They fixed the seat tube angle though. I considered a Gen 5 Slash but my legs, they're just too long!
Worked for a guy that would add an extra couple % on to quoted jobs for some people so when they no doubt asked for a discount, he would happily off that % off and seem like they were getting a great deal. Maby Trek is taking that approach?
Frameworks (Neko's brand) getting ready to sell frames!
Email sign-up here: https://rideframeworks.com/
Should have slapped the remedy name on the gen 5 slash. Boom two new models.
Unfortunately, many in MTBing, are often confused on the roles played by first the spring rate and how it's used primarily to manage chassis attitude, balance and support and is mostly specific to rider/ bike combined weight & weight distribution; vs. second the role of damping which is utilized to control the rate of the movement of the suspension and is much more specific to the rider and their aggression level and terrain.
To put it in the most basic terms, a linear rear suspension with a coil would either a) bottom excessively, or b) have to utilize too much compression damping to prevent bottoming therefore rendering the rear suspension to be harsh on chatter and other hits. This is because inherently a spring and damping reacts very differently to a force input. A too stiff spring for instance, can still be a pogo stick going through all of it's travel easily without appropriate damping. The spring doesn't really serve to slow down the rate of shock movement outside of extremes. Stiff damping, when combined with not enough spring rate can still not have enough support and end up riding low, while simultaneously being too stiff to react quickly to bumps. You could of course go the other way with too stiff of a spring and lighter damping to prevent bottom outs, but then the rear suspension doesn't work correctly off the top and skips along with excessive initial spring rate.
I'm happy, that your happy with your set-ups. But really, the bikes work better when the rear shock is selected mostly to fit the leverage ratio of the bicycle.
For some guidance, look here:
Leverage Curves (avalanchedownhillracing.com)
You'll also notice on that very page where Craig shows the set up recommendations for a customer's E29 in the directions it says" If the fork bottoms, turn the compression in 2 clicks, etc. He never says to change the spring rate.
GL
privateers, prototypes and toolbox drool. good stuff from loudenvielle pits today
This was true of last-gen shocks from 10 years ago. Back then compression damping was too primitive and few people put coils on frames with less than 170mm of travel anyways. Now they perform excellent. We can go back and forth on the hows and the whys, but ultimately it comes down to inductive vs deductive reasoning: go out and ride a 150mm enduro bike with a coil and a flat leverage curve. If the coil is of decent quality and tuned properly, it will ride very well, and better for most enthusiast/expert riders than an air.
Retail price for a Slash 9 Alloy in Germany will be 5500€. Really good deal.
I disagree. I've owned 2 enduro bikes with low to moderate progressivity and ran them with good coil shocks, and they either bottom out easily on even small jumps, or if you increase spring rate and damping to the point where they don't do that, then they feel terrible over brake bumps and small chunk. The bikes were a Sentinel v1 (~10% progression) with a Push 11-6, and a GG Megatrail (~20% progression) with an EXT Storia.
There should be a rule that once a rumour expands into facts talk, it should get its own thread.
intrigued.... looks good and i love what they did with the writing for the fun of it all. gonna see a lot of pics of that.
Kade's paint job is amazing! Hopefully we get to see a lot of that back on Sunday.
Heres more images
https://www.mtb-news.de/news/scott-ransom-prototyp/
LOL... "Also interesting is the fact that the handlebars of the team bikes did not have a typical Scott trigger with 492 different levers, but only a single lever for the seat post."
maybe it has been posted already ?!
wireless e-shock from Fox it looks like.
loudenvielle DH pit bits (photos)
https://www.vitalmtb.com/photos/features/pit-bits-2-loudenvielle-world-…
Funny, but still a shit Scott with all the things nobody should even consider
hidden shock, stupid remotes, cable tourism
It's like they saw you coming
The only thing they were missing was a cartoon of Silky Johnson.
I've ridden alot of scotts thanks to the demo's being available.... is their any of their bikes that dont suck other than the latest gambler?
Their Ransom Ebike is Probably the best non downhill scott bike ive ridden, but its still weird, Poor QC with the pivot linkage, frame flexes so much in the rear, its got 2 spots on a 180mm travel bike for a kick stand????
They are also yeti/botique pricing here but even worse value. kinda like Transition here, heavily overpriced without any quality.
EDR pit bits from loudenvielle
https://www.vitalmtb.com/pit-bits-loudenvielle-enduro-world-cup-0
Was your Storia tuned by EXT USA? Are you sure you ran an appropriate coil weight?
If so, I guess we will just have to disagree.
So bottom loading pads on the new SRAM caliper.
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