Why short travel bikes are more fun! - My new Revel Ranger
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
- I needed a new bike like a hole in my head, but these things happen. Cross country bikes are designed for efficient pedaling and climbing, and not so much descending and jumping. However, many brands now have XC builds with wider bars, dropper seatposts, and slightly slacker head tube angles that allow you to get into more trouble. Some call these "downcountry" bikes, and today I'm going to explain what they're all about!
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The special relativity comment followed by "well that's only true from the observer's point of view" was absolutely top notch
I came here just to like your comment sir
I think it’s important to realize that big drops like this are easily rideable on a hardtail and suspension is not necessary just for big smooth jumps, it’s for extremely rough terrain.
Exactly. The primary purpose of suspension is to maintain traction through rough terrain. Sculpted drops and jumps don't need much squish, otherwise DJs and slopestyle bikes wouldn't have less travel than this downcountry bike.
very true but a FS gives alot of room for error. Everyone should start on a hardtail and everyone should always own one cause itll still work while your sorting bearings and shock rebuilds on the squish.
Drop the hammer is way bigger in person. From lip to landing you’re looking at a 12-15 foot drop. Did it ONCE on my Cannondale Cujo hardtail, would not recommend without a better front fork.
@@ChrisTrunekso true😅😅
@@ChrisTrunek when friends visit, I give them my cross country bike which is usually an easy transition and I ride my hardtail. It is a blast to see them so comfortable with the nice suspension and I'm really happy working a little more to keep up. I can imagine the same could be done with them riding my enduro bike and me riding the cross country bike. Basically, the more skilled rider and underbike and give the more forgiving bike to friends. My only worry is that someone could get overconfident with the more forgiving bikes and carry too much speed into tricky situations, but that could happen no matter how much you try to avoid it. Part of life!
Love the cinematography in this episode! Don't know if anything changed I just noticed its really good here.. and as always you make everything immensely entertaining, even as someone who never went on a trail. thanks for what you do
I think being in Bentonville might give a bit more 'suitable' shooting locations we might not have seen as often on Seth's channel.
Definitely looks like a beautiful place from the videos@@MarvinWestmaas
If I am in a position to visit someday I'll certainly do so. Being a filthy European with no actual plans to visit the states at all, chances are very low. But I can enjoy it through UA-cam ;)
And yes, it does look somewhat like a fairy tale, a very specific, mtb oriented fairy tale, but a fairy tale non the less. @@D_The_Crafter
Nice one Seth. I am an old broken DH rider and have a love for XC trails over here in Australia. I recently bought a Polygon D7 with 120mm both ends and it is a great ride. Loving your content and Brentonville looks awesome :)
Nice car :)
How does the d7 climb?
@@fcmtb301 Not as well as a full blown xc bike but pretty good and the downs are more fun. And for the price point it is brilliant.
@@johnbrooks5903 Thanks mate :)
Siskiu D7? Which year? I have the 2017 one.
Which has become a spare bike after I got my Collosus T8.
Hey Seth,
As a junior cross country racer this bike is definitely not a cross country race setup but there cross country racing has been changing with more gnarly descents, steeper terrain, and higher speeds. You will rarely see anyone racing without a dropper post these days and it’s not uncommon to see a 120 mm 120mm bike as World Cup race bikes. I really like where the sport is going because cross country racing should be about going as fast as possible up the hill and down the hill not only focusing on climbing.
yeah the new XC tracks are looking better and better. Way more relatable to regular riding
As a race myself I have my bike set up similary to seth except the stem is a tad longer, narroer bars, and a lowered stack, and clipless. But my bike is 120 120 and can handle anything
I've committed to being a hardtail rider after going to Northstar a couple of times. I'm going just as fast as most people there on full suspensions and I swear I'm having more fun. Plus not having a big travel bike prevents me from trying anything that will likely hinder my ability to get up and sell drugs in the morning. Just put a new Lyrik Ultimate on it today. Can't wait to take it for a ride tomorrow, these videos get me more excited.
I just got a Revel Ranger V1 in green! SRAM GX Eagle build. Fox Factory fork and shock, Fox dropper post (all in their Kashima coating… the green with the bronze looks amazing), Wolf Tooth dropper lever, carbon fiber handlebars… I love how the bike handles. So smooth and nimble. Great climber too.
This video kinda sums up well why I really love my updated old school Specialized stumpjumper!
120mm travel, lightweight, relatively short wheelbase, responsive handling, but add 26" wheels! It's an absolute blast at any speed!
(With updated I mean modern bars & stem, 1x11 drivetrain etc)
I just have to give credit for how good the script in this section 5:35 - 6:20 is 👏)
Sometimes underbiking, or taking a bit less travel can be really fun!
I ride a 120/110 bike as my regular and I feel as though I've gotten much more technically competent than when I was on 150/130. It sort of forces you to think about your line as opposed to plowing through things. Riding thoughtfully is really enjoyable. As an added bonus, it carries speed on flowy downhill like nobody's business
@@GlizzyGoblin6969same, went from full squish to hardtail for the same reason.
Yep, it can be. Not crashing can be fun too, which is where overbiking can help. As I've gotten older, I tend to lean towards the latter.
@@GlizzyGoblin6969 Feels weird to say that I've been realizing the same but it's a hardtail that's the 'overbike' for me. Went from a 26" to a 29" and suddenly it feels like there's a ton of stuff I can just... roll over instead of having to think about my line :P
Definitely happy to continue learning on a hardtail though, I had been aiming for a full sus and I'm kinda glad I decided to ease into that! Don't know how many bad habits I'd be picking up right now if I had even more to work with, the hardtail has been teaching me plenty about what not to do when tackling just moderately rocky climbs and lower-speed descents.
@@JiorujiDerako Same here (26-29) and it's just...amazing! Consider I used to MTB on a Shimano 4000 bmx and was loving that. Until the alloy seat post sheared...
I’ve really gotten in to bikes from this channel and I recently bought my first dual suspension bike last week, it’s a brand new red Norco Fluid Fs4 and it is a lot of fun
How much do they run im still stuck on hard tails?? Cause i grew up on huffies and loove jumping big air lol 😂😂😂
I've had a Santa Cruz Tallboy (120/130) since January 2021. It is my do everything mtb.
I'm just north of you up in Pittsburgh, but your videos have been incredible motivation to get on my bike every day (no matter the conditions). It took some time getting used to the hills and weather during the cold months, but I honestly feel like I had a coach the entire way. Appreciate all your recommendations and tips, it's helped a lot. Hopefully I can ride some WV trails next year!
As I edge ever closer to middle age, I find myself on lower and lower consequence trails. 120mm travel is all I need these days.
I started mountain biking 10 years ago at age 55, and I prefer a XC bike set up just as you have. It helps me keep up with the 40 year olds on the climbs ... and I will never be comfortable at enduro speeds. I think a few bike companies are starting to catch on that there is a segment of non-racers who just like a light snappy bike. It's getting a tiny bit easier to find one to demo.
I love the “downcountry” style of bikes. Any XC frame that has a little more travel, a little slacker geometry really gives you the freedom to have fun doing most things. They’re fast, poppy, and efficient. Planning for a race? Throw some race tires on it and lower the stack. Want to do something more technical? Throw some real knobby tires on and go for it. You can’t monster truck it as much, but it’s still plenty capable.
I think I would consider that a short travel trail bike rather than a cross country bike. The geometry and the way you have it set up makes it look more trail
so...this always confused me. What's the difference between these two? I have a Diamondback Release 3 and I always read that was a "trail bike", which I figured was due to its mid level travel. Am I on the right path?
@@mychaelhouck2404 Yeah the releases are trail bikes, I assume they have 130/150 travel, which in the video is 115mm which isnt much as much as a entry level bike, so it means its a cross country but more specifially "down country" which isnt anything specifc just a bridge between two extremes :D
It's a downcountry bike
@@mychaelhouck2404 an actual XC bike prioritizes weight and efficiency and handling finesse over durability, big hit performance, and stable geometry.
@@mychaelhouck2404 Travel ist only one factor of many that in the end merge together to the ride feel of the bike.
When you hear Trailbike or XC bike you have a idea what the bike is made for and how it would feel riding it.
The confusing thing is that you find 120mm bikes that ride like a Trailbike, a Ripley for example, and you find XC bikes like a scott spark. Although they have the same amount of travel they ride completly different.
So in order to find out if you could consider a Bike a Trailbike you have to factor in travel, geometry, parts, weight, tires ect.
Take a look at the Banshee Phantom. its a 115mm rear travel bike but noone would call that XC i guess.
I think that if you have the $$$ and can afford a quiver of bikes model selections/ travel etc is wide open. However for those of us that own one bike the best advice is to buy a model that suits the type of terrain that we ride most frequently..I believe that many people get wrapped up in the dream of riding an Enduro bike as their only bike when they really ride lots of XC/Trail and would be better served my Downcountry or Trail bike models.
Yes, a lot of people imagine that they are going 40 mph over the roughest terrain, when in truth they could ride a 140mm bike on all of it and have more fun. A 115mm bike may not be ideal for all terrain and all styles of riding, but if you can only buy one bike, there’s no need to to FULL ENDURO!!!!
But trail = enduro😜
@@BermPeakExpress I bough a 200mm downhill bike as my main bike. Brazilian DH tracks are BRUTAL, and I don't have money to buy a bike for trail riding and for downhill, so i spent it all on a DH bike. I put a 11-36 drivetrain, so I can also do trail riding.
Honestly, it suits me well. I can ride on downhill tracks with no issues at all, and I can also ride the normal trails and have fun, just like on a trail bike. Since it's a lightweight bike, and a smaller geometry, I can have lots of fun on it.
Here, high travel bikes are way more common than enduro bikes. Enduro and trail bikes are kind of a rarity here. Everyone prefers DH bikes, and it's honestly pretty nice.
Same thing with cars. So many people in the US buy full size trucks when they do full size truck things once maybe twice a year but regular commuting the rest of the time
@@rafael_13caraio 200mm?! E vc usa ela p subir e p distancia tbm? Q doidera
Evan’s Mtb saga viewers got a sneak-peek already
Yep!
Saw that last night lol. Was looking forward to this video. 😅
Not a fan of his anymore. Completely changed from why I watched him in the first place.
I think it is hard to keep up the do it cheap and dirty in this industry
Yeah
Love this! I went to a Specialized EVO Epic 120/110 for the same reasons! Great in Singletrack and easy to maneuver! Perfect for the Bella Vista Trail systems. BTW - Great to meet you this weekend - You were with your daughter at the start of the bike trails! Thanks for all the content! Enjoy your time in Bentonville!
Spot on assessment. I ride a 115/130 Giant Trance and love it. I even take it to bike parks.
I've had my trek top fuel for a little less than a year now and it's my everything bike. XC races, gravel races, trail riding, pump track... Etc. It does it all. It fits my riding perfectly.
Just got meself one as well. Now I have nowhere to store it because I live in an apartament...
@@DaroZuo I hope you enjoy it as much as I'm enjoying mine! what about wall mounts? If you use the 3 point mount you can get it high enough where the handlebars will be overhead and out of the way and they cause little damage. Easy fix with putty when you move out.
I had a short-travel bike like that when I lived in the Midwest. It was perfect for that part of the country, and I love those bikes for all the reasons Seth called out here.
When I moved to the Pisgah area, I bought an enduro bike. I am certain that a better rider could have ridden the same blues and blacks here on that shorter bike. I could not.
I don’t go relativistic speeds downhill. But the slacker geometry, longer wheelbase, and bigger travel are way more confidence inspiring. For me. Your mileage may vary.
Well it is confidence inspiring because it is more forgiving. As I get older, I find that is pretty appealing. Crashing is not fun.
I have a 2010 Ellsworth evolve full suspension cross country that I’ve been slowly customizing and I absolutely love it. The oldies are still amazing
Trail bike for me. I have 1 bike with 4 sets of tires, and I change my suspension pressures to match the terrain. I do long 75+ mile endurance races, local trail riding, bike park days and some dirt jumps. If I’m honest, it does a good job at them all!
Seth. I concur. I had all trail bike with 140/140 previously and it was much playful and cheerful than my current 160/150 rig, which is great at drops and high speed chatter but once you low on speed feels like a behemoth… I miss my trail bike tbh.
Youve made me feel so much better on getting my new stumpy comp trail/xc bike! So stoked!
Ive been riding my XC ORBREA OIZ for uears now on jumps. Its really a ton of fun...ya just gotta use more over more chuncky stuff
I’ve had a Revel Ranger for 3 years. Love the bike! Great job on the videos. Love the content!!!
Another thing worth considering. XC bikes are often not rated for the same kind of forces than an enduro bike.
True, and now I might have a creaky CSU 😅. Not from this video, I was jumping off retaining walls on the greenway and forgot that’s an XC fork. I may reduce the travel on a burlier fork in the future.
for the bike noobs here you may want to explain what a CSU is. I mean...obviously I know how to rebuild a CSU from scratch but some others might be confused....uh...yeah@@BermPeakExpress
@BermPeakExpress the SID's have had issues with developing bushing play. Perhaps that could be your issue.
I know it's all about the technique which I don't have but this video made my day
2 months ago I pulled the trigger and upgraded from my old XC hardtail to a second hand Specialized Epic Alloy. I'm having great fun but some friends took me to the trails a week ago and I feel like I could use more travel but watching this video I guess it's still possible to ride it like a light trail bike.
thanks Seth!
I just got a Trek Top Fuel for the same reason. Riding the Santa Cruz Megatower all the time gets brutal
Great video! I’ve been riding my Ranger Revel for a little over a year and absolutely love it. Perfect for aggressive XC trails, including technical, fast descents. Climbs great too. Running Maxxis Minions (killer tires, IMO) front and back. Yes, not monster travel, but I spent the previous 6 years riding a hardtail with 100mm up front. So the Ranger feels like I’m on a cloud. (All that being said, the Rascal is on my wish list too.) Have fun be safe!
I rode berm park with my new 120mm polygon last weekend and I have to say. It felt worlds better than my hard tail
I do agree 100% The bike I've kept through the years is my 2016 SC Tallboy 120/100 so much fun to ride, it's fast uphill, snapy and as I'm hopless at high speed downhill...It's ideal😅
I ride a "cross country" trail bike with 140mm front and rear. Always wanted a bigger travel bike to send shit cuz I do feel its limits sometimes, but riding the trails around here it seems to be perfect.. Doesnt just soak up the feel of the trail and I can still bomb it thanks to the slacker head tube from Ride 9. ( RockyMountain thunderbolt)
Love the videos seth keep em coming
Super helpful video on the distinctions, honestly. Thank you for putting this together (and in my town to boot)!
I have been using a burly XC or down country bike (115/130mm) as my main trail bike for the past few seasons. I really like it over-all. Sometimes the lack of suspension is a bit scary. But having the lighter more nimble bike is worth it for me.
The new bike looks great. I’ve always like Revel. Enjoy it and Bentonville!
Yes I did learn about cross country bikes , it’s amazing I can see how a person could end up with multiple of mountain bikes, each has its own use.
Totally agree. I added a short travel bike to the quiver in June and I’ve put almost 900 miles on it since. It’s good to have options available… and N+1!
Thank you for this awesome and informative video, Seth! I recently purchased an Ibis Ripley AF 130/120 and love it. In the back of my head I have been second-guessing my purchase at times thinking I should've gotten a longer travel bike, but this video and just riding the Ripley have really proven to me just how capable it is :)
Great video once again! Love your style of editing and video production too. Keep up the incredible work!
The Cinematography of this Film is elegant than ever, Huge Improvement
Love visiting Bentonville! Only a few hours away and I have friends that live in town. Kids love riding Coler!
I put a 130mmj Pike on my v1 Ranger, and it’s a really fun Pisgah and Dupont bike.
Ranger V2 is a climbing cheat code. Love mine to bits.
My current MTB quiver is a super enduro for the bike park/spicy trail features and a shorter travel trail bike for everything else. I love it and it covers pretty much all grounds. I really want to build up a hardtail but am spoiled by the squish with how chunky my local trails are.
eh hardtails on super jank trails arent that fun. They are fun on smoother stuff where the handling can shine if your trails are all rock/root that probably makes the most sense. (its fun as hell to bomb through rock gardens and stuff but I wouldnt want to ride that stuff all day on a hardtail)
I've been riding the V1 Ranger for a year now. I have tried it with Fox 34 Stepcast, and the DPS as well as the push coil shock and a pike ultimate. The ranger is incredibly versatile for what travel it has and changing the 34 SC and DPS for the meatier coil shock and pike ultimate does change the feel quite a bit.
the timing of this video is perfect for me. I just got a 120mm hard tail trail bike, form a big enduro bike, and discovered how fun a "small" bike is on trails. Its made me excited to go out and explore, instead of just doing laps at a trail center.
I'm still rockin on my 2004 GT Ruckus hardtail.. It's set up the same as yours. I can go anywhere and do everything the boys can do.. Which surprises them considering they're on 2020-2023 full suspension bikes.
I bought a Ibis Ripley AF a fee months ago and final build weight is sub 30lbs with 4 piston brakes. I had a Ripmo AF. I like the Ripley more because it suits more of my riding. I am faster on my big rides overall and can cover more distance faster. Like how playful and poppy it feels. Love how it climbs. I have a couple 4,500 ft days on it and it is perfect for that. The Ripmo was only faster on the most technical parts of trail. On a 25 mile day of mixed riding blues and single diamonds the the Ripley is way faster for 90% of the ride. Yes on true winch up or shuttling bigger bike wins. I bought a EMTB for winching up and bombing the really rough stuff. Love the Ripley great short travel trail bike.
I love the Ranger it rips on 90% of the trails in NM, the other 10% I just have slow down and be careful - it can get tricky in continuous rough DH - like I said 10%
Downcountry & short travel trail bikes are the BEST bikes for all-around mountain biking. It's the most fun you can have because you are doing the driving & not just on it for the drive like with the bigger bikes where IT does all the work. It makes you more engaged & reminds you of why you started mountain biking in the first place. To me, the Pivot Trail 429 is the goldilocks unicorn of these bikes. Climbs great, descends great, and has Porsche like maneuvering in the flowy, windy trails.
Spot on description. Sold my Enduro bike as I wasn't man enough to ride it at relativistic speed. My cross country full Susser retired all my other bikes period
Having recently ridden my Spot Ryve 115 at Bentonville, I agree with Seth. While I was only there for one day and was only able to sample a small fraction of the trails there, there were only a few times I would have preferred my 160/160 enduro bike.
Thanks for breaking it all down for me. I still have my old gt lts and always wondered what I should get next.
My wife recently decided she wanted to start doing some mountain biking with me so I got her a Polygon Siskiu D7(D for down country), 120-120 with flat pedal and a dropper, it’s the perfect setup for someone that wants to do some trail riding.
90% of riders should be on downcountry bikes like the Ranger. It's so capable for day to day riding.
I really like this style of bike right now as well; I built up an Ibis Ripley AF earlier this year and I _really_ love the short(er) travel setup. It's 120 in the rear with a 130 fork and it's a ton of fun.
Love it. Been eyeballing this and the Transition Spur for my next bike.
I bought a Diamonback catch, because of you! I was worried it wasn't enough bike with 130 front 120 rear. but I only have like 250ft of elevation where I live. so trails are constantly up and down and man did I buy the right bike! swapped to 29er wheels and its basically a down country bike made 4-5 years before that became all the rage!
fabulous video! I'm excited to visit Bentonville! that trail park looks amazing. Maybe you can do a more detailed coverage of that trail systems in the area so visitors have a better idea of which trails would be best for their skills and bikes!
My favorite bike is a Giant Anthem that I added a dropper post, shorter stem, aggressive front tire and more comfortable saddle to. It went from being a straight up race bike to a pretty capable trail bike on most places that I ride.
Yay! Some pov footage mixed in! Also, it was awesome to talk with you in Bentonville a few weeks ago, your daughter was going hard!
Good to see you're embracing the Crossduro movement.
It's great to hear Seth's perspective on trail bikes, especially for those of us on the East Coast. From your average Pinkbike or MBUK review, you'd think that an average trail rider should be on a 150 bike with a 64 degree head angle. That may be great for riding fast at a Western bike park, but it doesn't make any sense for most average riders tooling around their local trail center.
Are there more riders on the east coast? The percentage of people who mtb in mountainous regions is really high
Always entertaining and always informative. Keep em coming Seth. Always a pleasure to watch.
I am really digging my top fuel & 120/120. So much fun in my trails ( which are mostly x/c type trails). Highly recommend.😊
Awesome Video!!!! Sick that you got a new XC bike for the flat Bentonville Area!!
Great video. I just got myself a downcountry bike and I love this thing!! Also switched from a hardtail (which I still have - and will always keep) to a 120mm front and rear dual suspension. It just feels easier to ride. Thank for the video.
I love my older, steeper, 26 HT "XC" bike for really tight techy trails.
I too have much knobbier tires, wider bars, and more travel than typically found on XC bikes. I still like it, dare i say .....more than my more modern geo 29 HT.
Modern top brand short-travel trial bikes (Ibis Ripley, Pivot Trail 429, Santa Cruz Tallboy, Revel Ranger, etc.) have the geometry of what used to be all mountain or enduro bikes, with sophisticated suspension that feel plusher than XCs so more comfortable. They have steeper seats to pedal better than longer travel bikes, with lighter components, and lighter shocks but they can still do almost everything an all-mountain or enduro bike can but don't wear yourself out pedaling a pig all day. They are now the most versatile bikes and a lot more fun with having having to be more engaged to pick your lines better & not just plow down everything. They maneuver better & you can put the power down out of turns & up kip-ups.
I just bought a short travel bike a couple weeks ago and I love it
This video was absolutely amazing! I recently got a Rocky Mountain Element Alloy 50 which is xc and trail. I worried that it wouldn’t be as fun but this video has read my mind!
Seth I've been watching you're videos for a long time now and have been waiting for the day you get a downcountry bike, I knew it'd be something you'd like. I personally ride a Specialized Epic Evo Comp and I have it setup similarly to yours, basically like a trail bike with less suspension and its perfect for where I ride being that I live in mid Michigan. Hope you do more with this bike, great video.
This is awesome... Can't wait to add a hard tail to my stable (guess I'll be keeping an eye out for Seth thinning the heard)... I just want one for different feel on rides from time to time.. And for riding on flatter stuff with the little one..
i have a 2017 whyte t130crs and it sits right at that low travel end of a trail bike similar to that but with a touch more suspension out back, its an extremely capable trail bike and can handle bike parks fine just so long as you are aware your not on a big enduro rig, its also short and playful and comfortable to do big xc rides on, i think most people get so hung up on needing a big enduro bike when they really don't need it
Excellent video Seth. I ride a 150mm front RS Lyrik E-bike as a cross-country bike, however, I think a 120mm out front would be more than adequate for my needs. Love your content dude!
I absolutely adore my giant trace 29er. Really only about 95mm rear and 110mm front but it has taken me through even double black north shore tech (all be it slower than most). For most of my local Ontario trails it’s responsive enough to boost roots and maintain speed while using those big wheels to float over some of the chunkier stuff when you just have to point and shoot through it. Of course I’m looking for a new longer travel bikes because I have a mental disease but I don’t think I’ll ever part with this thing.
Before you even said it I literally thought to myself “Seth is going to love this. It’s just a Hardtail+ Pro Max”
Nice video as usual. As a pure XC rider that only has technical XC locally, the Ranger has always been an interesting bike to me. However, having two water bottles in the front triangle is a must have for me so that's a bummer. Glad you're enjoying it though.
Check out the Fezzari Signal Peak. Two water bottles in the triangle
You can have two bottles with size large and extra large.
@@skinny8019 Interesting. Good to know. Thanks.
Hey Seth! I'm really looking forward to the Bentonville staycation series, and I'd love to hear your thoughts about a community that's truly bike-able for a family.
Recently picked up the new pivot mach 4sl. Very similar geo, and identical travel to the revel ranger. Gotta say I am super impressed with how capable these new "xc" bikes are. The bike is much more fun on mellow trails, but can handle a surprising amount of chunk as long as you watch your speed and pick a good line. Also pops off of everything, and feels like a rocket ship pedaling.
Couldn’t agree more! I love my Transition Spur for jumps and prefer it over my bigger bikes. It’s a rocket of the lips of jumps and boosts to the moon!
Cool Vid Seth ur channel has grown so much since I first subscribed to your channel keep it up!
I have loved the 120mm bike on gnarly stuff but I bumped up to a 140mm trail bike and the amount of progression has been insane
Same
The Ranger is the best bike I have ever ridden.
Very good video and it is nice to Revel being represented!
Santa Cruz Tallboy- "The Downhiller's XC Bike." Rode mine in Pisgah recently and she did great...until you get in the constant chatter and bigger hits. Short travel bikes are super fun though. 🤘🏻
170mm eBike and 130 Analoge, perfect mix. Small bikes make local trails so much more fun. Not about big hits, about making all the small/medium stuff a big bike monster trucks over more fun.
Love modern xc bikes. Can climb and descend and perfect for that blend of both.
I have been saying short travel is more fun for a long time now. I love my Carbon Salsa Rustler! 130 rear/150 front and it is the perfect shredding machine!!!
So cool to see Seth wearing the OZ Trails jersey!
This looks like a really fun bike!
I'd love to see Seth ride an even more playful and capable downcountry bike though. Something like this:
29 front wheel and 27.5 rear
130mm fork and 120mm rear travel
Pike instead of a SID
Maxxis Dissector F & Maxxis Forekaster R
Extremely hard to find something like this though. Maybe get a Santa Cruz 5010 and change out the fork to 10mm less travel?
I went from a 160/150 Bronson to a 130/130 5010 and never looked back.
There’s obvious pros/cons to either bike and that really depends on what terrain you are riding the most with each bike respectively. I also regularly run a couple of hardtails which I reach for 80% of the time before the FS.
Realistically (to me), “downgrading” to 130/130 was, in fact, an upgrade in suspension and pedalability compared to lugging the Bronson around, especially on longer mileage rides.
Choosing the right weapon for the war is where most people suffer the affliction of keeping up with the Jones’ when they could invest in themselves via fitness, practice, skills clinics, etc…
The 5010 is Spot on. I have the 5010 and the hightower and coming from an 170/170 These Bikes are Just perfect
Riding in Atlanta area the same type of bike is perfect for the terrain I'd imagine would be similar to where Seth's at. I've got a Blur similarly set up which rips on that terrain just like Seth describes. Nice to see my thoughts confirmed!!!
Nice being one of those who new already (thanks Evan 💪💪)
Your video's are always super informative. My only bike is a Siskiu D7 27.5 (120/120 down country) and I feel like I can get it to about 28-30 mph down some semi tech / loose trails before it gets real sketchy. I have some 2.6's and wider bars and it totally helps but now I know I am not supposed to bomb downhill with this type of bike.
i have also an "XC" bike with a short stem and so on and it feels great
Those trails look amazing! It’s so on my bucket list!