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Isla Beinn 24 vs. S...
 

[Closed] Isla Beinn 24 vs. Scott Scale Jr 24 Vs anything else

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If not then it's Beinn 24 vs Orbea MX24 Team, price is much of a muchness but interested by comments on weight as Beinn 24 is specced at 8.82kg whereas I've seen quotes of 21lb, or less than 10kg for the Orbea, yet in this thead Orbea quoted as lighter.

I suspect that once you put offroad tyres onto the Beinn 24 it'll come up much the same as the Orbea which has a super-light spec with the exception of the Deore cassette that's a bit of a beast.

I'm going for the Orbea for my son who's moving up from a Beinn 20. It has a slacker head angle than the Islabike which is a real bonus in the confidence stakes.


 
Posted : 15/01/2013 2:04 pm
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HI all

I do a bit of coaching young kids and so here are afew points to consider

1. Weight - less is better they dont have the same power in their legs that we do so lighter bike allows them to go further / faster

2. Gear - to many bikes come with a huge number of gears - firstly can be very confusing secondly often gears can go to big and we see kids trying to grind along in a huge gear not good for their bodies. We often recommend that parents wind in gear stops to limit gears

3. Suspension. yet to find a suspension fork that moves on a kids bike when ridden by kids. so ends up being heavy lump

4. Loads of our kids have Isla bikes, we dont recommend them specificaly, but seem well put together and have good residual.


 
Posted : 15/01/2013 2:21 pm
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My 8 year old upgraded from 20 Hotrock to 24 inch Cube in the team colours. It's awful looking but he likes it. It's his bike for general riding about on but we regularly visit blue and red routes at Whinlatter, 7 stanes etc too.

About a year on and my observations would be that

1 it's heavy.
2 it doesn't need more than a single chainring at the front as he never changes from the middle ring.
3 suspension forks work great for kids too.
4 it would benefit from disc brakes.

In short, if I could go back in time, he'd be on the Islabike Creig 26 I think. Silly money but worth it if your child is going to use it for example at trail centres or proper MTB riding.

I'm surprised no-one has mentioned the brakes yet as this is the biggest problem he has with the Cube. They basically sap confidence as soon as they get wet/muddy and stop working as well normal.
They are fine but discs would encourage far more speed and confidence.


 
Posted : 15/01/2013 2:46 pm
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http://btr-fabrications.com/index.php/products/ripper ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 15/01/2013 2:51 pm
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I put discs on my kids bikes because I had them around and had the time to build the wheels - made a massive confidence difference even at 4/5 especially because of the ability to use 2 or 1 finger braking due to the super adjustability.

May seem expensive to some, but my plan is to upgrade the next bike with the same parts, and hopefully get a better resale on the old bike because of the shiney v's and rims that haven't been hammered.


 
Posted : 15/01/2013 3:24 pm
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Round & round in circles,

I need help, my boy will be 7 in May. His inside leg measurement is 58cm (1ft 11in) and he is 130cm (4ft 3in) tall.
He needs a new bike, a proper bike. I like to cycle, but I don't know much about bikes the same as I don't know much about cars!
I have spent a few days looking at bikes and reading forums and I am frankly, stuck!
Islabikes, Cube, Scott, and now Orbea which look great but I can't find any official weights for. Islabikes say Bein24 but I think all other manufactures 24"s will be too big for my lad. Not sure about grip shift gear changing either.

Help !!!!


 
Posted : 17/01/2013 7:41 pm
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Suspension. yet to find a suspension fork that moves on a kids bike when ridden by kids. so ends up being heavy lump

Retrobike. Manitou Mars. Shock pump. PLUSH. 8)


 
Posted : 17/01/2013 7:50 pm
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