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Like it. I shall be having one when they appear at Paul's.
Like it. I shall be having one when they appear at Paul's.
Cap doffed....
Genuine question: Do people really make bike purchasing decisions based on "Do I think it looks pretty?"
same as Simon, very nearly at the top of the list
Genuine question: Do people really make bike purchasing decisions based on "Do I think it looks pretty?"
Not solely, no. I doubt anyone buys a bike they genuinely think is ugly though.
If the Marin really does ride that well, someone else will nick the good ideas and package it into something that isn't totally hideous, that's the point at which I'd be interested ๐
Coming from someone who likes/has the PRST-1, I'd say ride it properly before condemning it.
That and seeing how it copes with a Peaks/North/South Downs winter. I really hope that collection area can cope with Sussex "lurkin" Flint.
I'm waiting for the linkagedesign blogspot guy to publish the suspension kinematics - I suspect it will be like the Polygon version - the Pinkbike graph showed it really didn't pedal miraculously better than everything else but marginally better and yet every journo will be raving about it due to a placebo effect.
Why not book a test ride tom rather than rely on the bits of paper. Of course it will be similar to the polygon one a test ride will tell you more than speculation
Genuine question: Do people really make bike purchasing decisions based on "Do I think it looks pretty?"
I do, I pick a range of bikes I like to the aesthetic of then I try and test ride as many of those I like. Try and pick the best from that bunch.
I have completely ignored bikes which have very positive reviews purely because I don't like the aesthetic.
Hilda Ogden may ride like a dream, but there's no way I'd go there.
It just seems over complicated. The telescopic bit is asking for trouble. It'll be caked in crap in no time at all and so will fail.
I don't think it's ugly as such though.
Do moto gp bikes have such complex suspension? Or Paris Dakar bikes?
Do moto gp bikes have such complex suspension? Or Paris Dakar bikes?
No. But they don't have an engine sat on top of them that bobs up and down.
Genuine question: Do people really make bike purchasing decisions based on "Do I think it looks pretty?"
I didn't buy my Geometron for it's looks that's for sure.
๐Hilda Ogden may ride like a dream, but there's no way I'd go there.
Do moto gp bikes have such complex suspension? Or Paris Dakar bikes?
They tend to be linkage driven single pivots. With the pivot behind the drive sprocket an inch or two below the chain.
Because chain tension on a motorbike is approximately constant (an I4 engine with 360deg firing order at 10,000rpm is 333Hz, a cyclist is ~ 1.5Hz). So you open the throttle and the suspension compresses slightly because at the same time the rider will be throwing their weight over the front of the bike to stop it wheelieing.
A push bike you push down on the pedal and the last thing you want is the bike to squat down away from you, so you add linkages (or raise the single pivot and typically have it much more inline with the drive sprocket or infront). This means as you push down on the pedal the bike squats, which tries to lengthen the chain which the pedaling counteracts pushing the bike back up again.
The objective being that the push-bike is in the same shape at the start of the pedal stroke as at the end. A Motorbike only needs to deal with making the bike behave itself (grip, handling) as at the frequency it operates the suspension doesn't move.
Unless you start looking at 'big bang' engines and V-twins/V-four, which are deliberately designed to bounce the rear tyre on the road giving you a burst of acceleration which breaks traction, but then a recovery which makes it more predictable and controllable. Which is why you won't see an i4 engine in a Dakar style bike, it could have more power, but wouldn't have grip.
Its certainly not the prettiest bike I've seen but I don't think its anywhere near as horrific as some make out. I quite like it.
In that Instagram video where he's climbing the steps, is that good bike or good rider?
Why not book a test ride tom rather than rely on the bits of paper. Of course it will be similar to the polygon one a test ride will tell you more than speculation
Because I don't trust myself to be objective about something so hard to detect eg how much less energy is used during pedalling.
Basic physics can tell you that.
Which is why you won't see an i4 engine in a Dakar style bike, it could have more power, but wouldn't have grip.
You've never actually ridden off road in any kind of a competetive way on a motorbike have you..
Talk about stating the bleeding obvious.
No one would ever consider trying to use an engine like that for anything even slightly tech offroad.
Zippykona - probably both. But of course a 30 Stone individual might not manage it!
Well here's a review - doesn't seem to pull any punches but they reckon it's a good thing. [url= https://www.wideopenmountainbike.com/2017/05/marin-wolf-ridge-review-rich-thomas ]https://www.wideopenmountainbike.com/2017/05/marin-wolf-ridge-review-rich-thomas[/url]
Leigh Johnson was racing the only one in the country at the national enduro champs last weekend
was in the lead but for some reason he retired after stage 4, mechanical puncture?