2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er |
I had originally considered going down to ride on the weekend with a group from the shop. But then, later in the week, I sorta settled on the idea that I might take my daughter skiing instead. In the end however, once Saturday morning finally rolled around, posting a max-temp of 19 degrees on the mountain at 8:30 AM, I opted instead to go down to Sedona and ride alone in order to work out any kinks or quirks of the sort that tend to reveal themselves on first-rides on new bikes. Every new bike needs a good shake-down ride, just to make sure everything's snug. That's what I say.
Plus, I really didn't want to slow anyone down.
Ya see, this new bike is very new. Especially to me. Not just out-of-the-box new, although it is that, and in my world that's pretty novel. But this bike is actually new to me in the sense that it's a totally-radical, turn-the-world-on-its-head, like-nothing-ever-before sort of new thing, too.
Ibis Mtn. Trials |
Retrotec |
Rock Lobster |
So I finally sold-out and bought a new bike. A real, live 21st-century bike, a 2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er. A pretty nice bike, if I do say so myself. Easily the most expensive bike I've ever owned. And also the most technologically intimidating.
Lots to learn. Lots to figure out. A ton of stuff I've never really dinked around with much, much less ridden any further than around the block downtown: disc brakes, shocks, pressure settings, rebound and compression adjusters, clicking shifters... plus a whole new kind of handling: new approaches to going up, and especially to going down.
And so today I rode alone, sans friends, sans iPod, sans GPS, sans camera. Because, I didn't want to have any distractions, and as I mentioned above: I didn't want to slow anyone down.
Brain |
- To click my rear shock rebound knob a setting or two
- To set the Brain knob a few more stops clockwise, toward firm
- To pump a few more pounds of air into the negative spring in my fork
- And once, unexpectedly, at the top of a hill, to pick myself up off the trail where I'd tumbled over the front of the bike when my fork compressed into a rock. Dur.
With that in mind, yet still thinking and writing from the perspective of a confirmed, card-carrying Luddite, I'd like to offer a few conclusions, which I drew during my shake-down ride today... a few rather surprising conclusions, I think:
- Disc brakes work great, even when they're super-new and still a bit grabby
- Suspension lets you go fast-as-ever (maybe faster) over gnarly stuff and yet your neck and shoulders don't ache at the end of the ride
- Clicky-shifters find their gears well; you've only got to remember which of four buttons to push and then push the right one.
- Bunny-hopping on a bike with full-suspension is hard, or at least very different... and maybe nearly completely unnecessary, as the suspension lets you kinda plow a line straight through the stuff you'd normally try and hop over
- When you float off a ledge you also float into your landing. The sensation is like jumping onto a waterbed.
- Bigger wheels do let you drop taller steps, but you've got to prepare for the fork compression a the bottom of the step, and fork compression seems to change the way a bike handles in these situations.
So, there it is. One new bike: thoroughly shaken-down. One grumpy old-bike rider: happily sold-out!
Update -- 30 July 2016
My Epic 29er has flown the coop and is no longer in my possession. I traded it for painting by my favorite artist and super-good pal, Lyle Motley.
It's called A Serious Man and we're absolutely stoked on it. Pretty sure I got the better end of the deal.
Update -- 30 July 2016
My Epic 29er has flown the coop and is no longer in my possession. I traded it for painting by my favorite artist and super-good pal, Lyle Motley.
It's called A Serious Man and we're absolutely stoked on it. Pretty sure I got the better end of the deal.
1 comments :
Nice write up. Bunny-hopping is still very needed for hauling ass. You'll figure out how to use the susp. to help your hop a bit, but yeah, the old method doesn't work perfectly when you've got springs in the way.
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