Hello there, I got exactly the same bike and I am loving it so far :). I got a question, if you do not mind. I have a bike park pretty close to my house that looks very, very similar to this one in terms of those jumps that you were hitting (nice job on those btw). My questions is, how long did it take you to get to this level?
How’s the bike holding up? I’ve got too much money into mine now. Here’s the list. Pnw stem and handlebars, Rockshox pike select+ fork, one up dropper with wolf tooth remote, race face bottom bracket and atlas crank arms, wolf tooth chainring, SRAM gx derailleur and cassette, sram code rsc brakes, I9 enduro s wheels with qr end caps and maxxis tires 2.5 with assegai and aggressor.
nice set up! mine is holding up pretty good no complaints only thing that’s been changed is the Crankset (Shimano Deore XT) & the Bottom Bracket & PNW lock on grips
@@earthcoaster6 good shit! The crank and bb is necessary on these bikes. Check out the Marin 35mm stem on their site. It’s sick. If I didn’t have the pnw I would have got that one
@@MyMillennialDadd yeah I have the 2023 sq1. All parts are swapped out. If you’re riding more flow trails and jumps 2023 is cool but if you’re going to ride more tech trails get an older model because the bottom bracket is higher. If you’re not looking to spend some money into parts for a while. really consider sq2.
hey what’s up! it depends on the type of riding you’re going to be doing but i’d say start on a hardtail to develop skill & learn the basics then move to a dual suspension later down the line. check out the video “This is why hardtail are so important” by Matt Jones
@@earthcoaster6 thanks man, I also know that if you buy a hardtail and a full suspension at the same price point the hardtail will have better parts than the the full suspension
@@dailylifevlogs6395 it can vary from the different brands! but yea you'll have a good time with either! there isn't really a wrong choice, you will learn either way 😎🤙
Bad ass bro! Great seeing you out there a couple days ago. My buddy and I ran Gravy Train back on Saturday just to progress our skills.
Hello there, I got exactly the same bike and I am loving it so far :). I got a question, if you do not mind. I have a bike park pretty close to my house that looks very, very similar to this one in terms of those jumps that you were hitting (nice job on those btw). My questions is, how long did it take you to get to this level?
Hey! Thanks for watching! I grew up BMXing so when I got into MTB last year I’d say it took me a few months to hit these jumps
What camera are you using?
For this video I was using the GoPro hero 11. My more recent videos are shot on the Insta360 X3
How’s the bike holding up? I’ve got too much money into mine now. Here’s the list. Pnw stem and handlebars, Rockshox pike select+ fork, one up dropper with wolf tooth remote, race face bottom bracket and atlas crank arms, wolf tooth chainring, SRAM gx derailleur and cassette, sram code rsc brakes, I9 enduro s wheels with qr end caps and maxxis tires 2.5 with assegai and aggressor.
nice set up!
mine is holding up pretty good no complaints only thing that’s been changed is the Crankset (Shimano Deore XT) & the Bottom Bracket & PNW lock on grips
@@earthcoaster6 good shit! The crank and bb is necessary on these bikes. Check out the Marin 35mm stem on their site. It’s sick. If I didn’t have the pnw I would have got that one
@@seth_867 hell yea i’ll check it out thank you! 🤙🏼
Do you also have the Marin sq1? I’m thinking of buying it. It’s $820 USD here in Australia.
@@MyMillennialDadd yeah I have the 2023 sq1. All parts are swapped out. If you’re riding more flow trails and jumps 2023 is cool but if you’re going to ride more tech trails get an older model because the bottom bracket is higher. If you’re not looking to spend some money into parts for a while. really consider sq2.
Hey i'm having a hard time choosing between 2 bikes the marin sanquentin 1 2023 and that polygon siskiu d5, which would be better (i'm a begginer)
hey what’s up! it depends on the type of riding you’re going to be doing but i’d say start on a hardtail to develop skill & learn the basics then move to a dual suspension later down the line. check out the video “This is why hardtail are so important” by Matt Jones
@@earthcoaster6 thanks man, I also know that if you buy a hardtail and a full suspension at the same price point the hardtail will have better parts than the the full suspension
@@dailylifevlogs6395 it can vary from the different brands! but yea you'll have a good time with either! there isn't really a wrong choice, you will learn either way 😎🤙
Balls clap @ 0:17