Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 120 total)
  • 'Designed for the UK'?
  • Dirtynap
    Free Member

    It's all marketing. Bearing quality and seals are needed in every place you ride; no exceptions. There is also some a belief by many UK riders that the UK is unique in terms of its terrain and riding conditions, its not.

    The UK's love of the HT is frankly bemusing, the rest of globe moved with the times and materials and so uses full sus unless you race XC, dirt jump or 4X. Infact most of the globe don't buy steel either. Frankly I have no idea why the LT HT is popular in the UK they don't make any logical since to me, but I spent must of my formative riding years in North America.

    james-o
    Free Member

    dirtynap, that suggests it is cultural as much as anything. i agree our terrain isn't any different, but as riders we don't look for the easiest or fastest way, more the most fun way. it really isn't just marketing, if it was marketing companies could make good bikes?

    ampthill
    Full Member

    Designed for the uk = fits the wisdom of UK forums

    I also wonder if compared to America we on average earn less and pay more for our bikes

    I don't think the phrase designed for the UK has no meaning. Mud is more of an issue here than any where else I have ridden

    Perhaps its also our lack of uplift. We require do it all bikes

    MrKmkII
    Free Member

    from my own experience, i've ridden long travel full susses, short travel, hardtail, rigid. i always see having suspension out back as not that much of a bonus. it's just when i ride really fast places like southern spain or the alps that i wish i had a different bike – i'm on a hardtail now and all i'd change is the forks to be longer – it's not the rear of the bike that makes it difficult – it's the 100mm forks i currently run!

    joolsburger
    Free Member

    Designed for the UK = Considerably more expensive that it should be.

    MrKmkII
    Free Member

    i suppose to elaborate on my post – yes, i've become culturally biased towards a certain kind of bike. and that's probably from marketing. heh, so what! i haven't actually got a LT-HT 😛

    GEDA
    Free Member

    I have recently built up a Dialled Bikes Alpine for riding around my local forest in Sweden and I am having great fun with it. I have a prophet as well but the Alpine is much more fun. The trails are rocky, rooty, and the woods are full of short steep climbs and descents. And loads of "skåne Shore", here instead of stiles they use 2-3foot steep ramps and to get across bogs they use raised wooden walk ways that range from 20 to 40 cm wide. It was a fun learning curve and I have fallen in the soup on a number of occassions.

    The funny thing is that the forest is in 2 parts. The southern bit is flatter with wide fire roads and smooth single track and the north is as I have described above. And guess where the Sweeds like riding? The south on their very racy XC bikes. They also thought my Prince Albert DB was a freeride bike so I am not sure what they will think of my Alpine? There are also some small DH trails that are perfectly doable on a hardtail but there I have had some riders look on with some puzzlement as I did them on a hardtail.

    And thinking about it when I started doing mountain biking 20 years ago I was riding around the Cheviots and it was the trail centers that made me realise that you could go over big drops and dead technical stuff as trail centers are pretty safe and good for building confidence and basic skills so maybe your right about British bikes and trail centres but in the wrong way. Trail centres just helped more people see what was possible.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Riding can't be that different in other parts of the planet can it?

    HAHAHA!

    As above. Compare say the Rockies to the South Downs to Finland to Lanzarote…. Some places are dry all summer then it snows all winter – so mud isn't as much of an issue. Some places are just dry all year and if it rains they call the ride off (California). Some places the hills are just so big that hardly anyone rides up them, they just use ski lifts. Some people (UK included) treat mtbing like skiing – a couple of weeks a year then the bike gets hung up. I once rode in Oregon, the ride consisted of a hell of a long fire-road climb followed by an insanely arse-ou steep and long bit of punishing bit of single track. I'm talking a couple of miles of it, not just a 60 second segment. No way would you have enjoyed that on some niche tastic 29er SS with mary bars and whatnot 🙂

    Riding varies absolutely massively all over the place. I'd say a UK bike has to have good clearance and a forward facing seat tube slot. Other than that, I'd say *typical* UK riders prefer mid travel FS or LT HT, and the most ridden trails now reflect that.

    It's all about the differences in riding culture I think – and they are quite significant as above.

    Dibbs
    Free Member

    A lot of early USA design FS bikes may have worked great in sunny California but due to the use of bushes rather than bearings they weren't up to a winter of UK abuse, GT LTS springs to mind. Had the Specialised designers ever heard of mud when they designed a bike and put the shock directly in the firing line of the rear wheel?

    Rickos
    Free Member

    I've not read all that, so sorry if this has been said, but there's a definite UK style when it comes to hardtails. The other European countries don't seem to get the fun idea of 5 inch forks on a hardtail and I think that's pretty much the same for most of the Uh-mer'cans too.

    ooOOoo
    Free Member

    Hmmmm we nicked the long travel hardtail idea from Canadia didn't we?

    Eccles
    Free Member

    my first hartail was a 65mm fork on a bike designed for 0mm, so I think my own LT tendencies developed from there.

    Rickos
    Free Member

    Hmmmm we nicked the long travel hardtail idea from Canadia didn't we?

    Aye, us and the Canucks. No one else gets it.

    Mister-P
    Free Member

    Does Designed For The UK really mean designed for trail centres? When I have ridden trail centres the majority of riders I have seen are on 5 inch full sussers. But that is a different debate.

    Paceman
    Free Member

    Santa Cruz County in Califormia gets an average of 770mm rainfall per year, and Marin County even more… considerably more rain than we get here in East Sussex. Yes, temperatures are higher in the summer months so the ground will dry out quicker, but I don't believe their bikes are designed with desert riding in mind as some would suggest.

    'Designed for UK' is part to do with trail-centre friendly geometry / crud-catcher bolts etc, and part marketing in my opinion. Nothing more.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    When I have ridden trail centres the majority of riders I have seen are on 5 inch full sussers

    Does that mean that they ONLY ride trail centres with that bike?

    Or should they buy another so that some forum jockey doesn't think they're losers?

    If you only have one bike and live in say the Peaks or ride all over, a 5" FS seems a very reasonable choice.

    Mister-P
    Free Member

    Who said anything about being a loser molgrips? I simply said that people on here are talking about long travel hardtails being designed for trail centres but I don't see that many of them at these places.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Most people go on about 5" FS at trail centres in a rather disparaging tone, so please accept my apologies for makign the same assumption again.

    james-o
    Free Member

    'Designed for UK' is part to do with trail-centre friendly geometry

    trail center and natural trail geometry are one and the same tho, right? you can ride either on a steep 100mm xc race bike, or on an alpine-style 150mm fork hardtail, but UK Style to me means the balance between the two, the accepting of a slower climber / slacker feel for dh/technical trail-biased handling. that all started here and in canada in the mid-late 90's when 100mm was long travel. sounds like an advert tag, and a cheesy one at that, but it's more of an attitude toward riding than a spec of a bike, that attitude then influences bike spec and frame angles at most UK bike brands.

    Paceman
    Free Member

    Good point James, I stand corrected…

    … all marketing then 😉

    Dirtynap
    Free Member

    Commcencal UK spec meta's used to just have better sealed bearings, and a reveresed slot; I think.

    By the way there is mud in the US and lots of it, head the north west or east and there is lots of sticky mud, and lots of rain. They get the full four seasons unlike here where we now get two weeks of snow, two weeks of sun and the rest is grey and overcast drizzly rubbish.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    There is mud in some parts of the US, but not in others. In Wisconsin for example they put their bikes away all winter and do something else.

    In Wisconsin summer and other parts of the world the annual rainfall may be comparable to the UK but in the summer it tends to come in very heavy summer storms punctuating long periods of hot sunshine. So not much actual riding in mud….

    james-o
    Free Member

    hehe fair enough.. for some yes i guess so!
    maybe i'm biting on this thread as genesis used the whole designed for the uk tag at first, but we decided not to make a big thing of it atfter the first year as it's not easy to explain, you either get it or not, or it's obvious for those that care and matters not for those that dont! )

    interesting to see how people perceive it all though.

    BillOddie
    Full Member

    The only things I have seen with "designed for the UK" have been hardtails with big forks.

    It's all marketing guff.

    Anyway, some yanks do get the big forked hardtail thing as well, but they are generally in the Pacific northwest or in New England. Which makes them almost Canadian.

    Having ridden all around Europe on a Dialled Prince Albert with marz Z1s there does seem to be a different interpretation of Mountain Biking and what would be deemed to be a good ride.

    Case in point in Lake Garda you had to make sure that you explained to anyone recommending routes that you weren't German/Italian and that you liked a bit of Tech.

    I think the Euros tend to treat XC and DH almost as separate sports and don't get you can combine the 2 in one ride.

    Dave
    Free Member

    Does Designed For The UK really mean designed for trail centres?

    Could someone explain what this means?

    How do you design a bike for use at a trail centre?

    BillOddie
    Full Member

    How do you design a bike for use at a trail centre?

    You make it so it looks nice infront of the Dropoff Cafe/Hub at Glentress.

    james-o
    Free Member

    i reckon a trail centre bike is something like the kind of bike that MBR love – a 130-140mm travel, slack angled FS bike with 60mm stem and 700m+ bars. basically a short travel / smoother-surface DH-handling bike that pedals with the saddle up. not dsigned for trail centres specifically, but perfect for riding them. well assuming that trail centre means lots of realtively smooth, bermy, roller-compression bits etc. or whatever you call those nice floaty roller sections. so stick a larsen TT on the back and a minion up front on a 5 or old meta and youre there?

    Mister-P
    Free Member

    Dirtynap – Meta 5 UK meant that it came with Shimano kit rather than SRAM like the rest of the models did and it was exclusive to the UK market. This is now the Meta Limited.

    GEDA
    Free Member

    They have plenty of "designed in Sweden" bikes here. What is wrong with saying you have designed the bike for a specific market? Not mountain bikes but these bikes are really popular in Sweden but would not be so popular in the UK. (As everybody wants long travel hardtails 🙂 )

    zaskar
    Free Member

    'Designed for the UK'

    = rainproof and to be used in the cold.

    ahwiles
    Free Member

    if there are people /countries /magasines out there who don't understand the point of bikes like the DB Prince Albert, Cotic Soul, Ragley blue pig, on-one 456, Genesis Altitude, etc. then it's their loss.

    the kind of cheeky 'badger-tech' trails that these bikes are at home on are just another riding niche. i'm not sure i really understand what 'slopestyle' means, but i bet it makes sense to a lot of people.

    it really is all just cycling, and it's all ace. I don't have any chairlifts or slopestyle parks where i live, i don't race xc, but i do have lots and lots of lovely technical singletrack and a skinny steel frame with 5" forks is just about perfect. Stiffer frames and shorter forks mean a harsher ride, sore wrists and ankles = less fun. Full-bounce bikes are more comfortable and offer more grip, but i'm not sure that means more fun.

    'uk specific' – ok, if that's what we're calling this particular niche…

    shoefiti
    Free Member

    Part Marketing, part not marketing innit. As stated before the Longer Travel HT's with slacker geometry and crud mounts, mud clearance in quite specific to UK and Canada in terms of market share of bikes sold.

    Also folk like to feel special don't they, there is quite a different cycling (in particular MTB riding)culture in the UK (you only have to look at the mags available in other countries to support this view) So marketing is always going to be more effective if you go with the existing trends and reinforce an existing ideology. Why would folk selling frames, bikes etc make the suggestion that a bike 'designed for Germany' would be better than one for where the majority of the intended market is actually going to use the bike – they arn't are they. Also we have existing stereotypes of other places and the riding that they do, it would be daft for marketers to try and second guess that to exploit it.

    Are you going to be swayed towards buying a car that was marketed as 'designed for the US', probably not as if like me you have never driven there (or ridden there for that matter)so i'm putting my faith in those selling me the car or bike that they've made that it's the most suitable option for my intended use.

    If you are not swayed by this sort of marketing, well kudos to you Jedi of all that is bikes and bike marketing, now tuck back into your tube of pringles and get back to your IT job, or go buff your mary bars.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Short memories? Or am I just old? I remember fitting 1.8" rear tyres in the winter in the hope that the wheel will still go round. That was Herefordshire though…

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I just remembered that was on UK designed and built bikes, so doesn't really help clarify this "UK designed" thing at all, does it? = ;87)

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Next time you are at Mountain Mayhem and it's muddy, sit trackside and watch the people passing by. The bikes where wheels no longer even turn that are being dragged through the mud by wretched souls are Santa Cruzes mostly, and some Specialised. The ones that are actually being ridden tend to be Orange 5s 🙂

    audiophile
    Free Member

    Uk riders like do it all bikes as compared to most other places we have a lot of different terrain crammed into a very small area. I went riding with some Americans years ago and they were amazed at the different stuff they could ride in the course of a day. I would predict that the largest amount of "do it all" tyres are sold in the UK market due to terrain and weather conditions. The mud clearance thing is part of the issue, look at the difference in bikes designed on the east and west coasts of the US. Plus, we are Brits and probably just like to be different and quirky. More power to the LT HT.

    juan
    Free Member

    I am so laughing out loud at some of the comment about riding in the UK and riding in the EU.
    If I was to trust this forum, it would mean riding in the UK (and that would mean that doing the devil staircase in scotland being the same ride as pootling around QEII park) is so much gnar than riding in the EU because people in the EU only ride XC.

    Now that's amazing. I think some of the people on here should spend more time on geographic dedicated forums. You can't compare UK riding with EU or US riding the same way you can't compare riding in sussex and riding in cumbria.

    My do it all bike in the UK was a HJ single speed. Beore that I had a hoss too (people where all very surprised I rode at MM with it). But the former was more suited to my riding.

    Now I am back at home and the SS is useless, so I put gear on. Then I only uses it when I ride with the GF or I do some not rocky rides (or rides that involves 45 minutes of bike carriage).

    I am now going to make a STW like sweeping generalisation if you'll allow me, my EU XC bike:

    Most of people will buy a bike that is suited for their local riding. And as said before, LT HT were a canadian stuff way before it came in the UK. As for commencal having two version of the frame one for the UK on for the rest of the world, yeah right…

    Peter, google for sobre 😉 it's some nichastic french stuff.

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    Marketing and fashion, isn't it. Lets see, why do you need a 140mm travel hardtail for UK conditions? Slack angles, are nice in some areas, but lets face it, when on-one produced a frame designed around slack angles and a 100mm fork, what happened? People went out and slapped a 120-140mm fork on it. Fashion.
    Most stuff in trail centres, and outside of them, is perfectly rideable, and enjoyable, on a 100mm hardtail, but an LT hardtail looks hard- it's the poseurs equivalent of having an RS4 instead of an A4. They both do the same job, but one takes less skill to use than the other.

    hilldodger
    Free Member

    why do you need a 140mm travel hardtail for UK conditions?

    because it's fun ?

    Dirtynap
    Free Member

    ^^^ yes it can be fun, but so is a full sus and your ass and back hurt less at the end of day.

    Why punish your body more than you have to?

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