Just weighed my Top Fuel, 26lb. Spec is Alu frame, reba SLs, SLX brakes, shifters, mechs, XT chainset and BB, Bontrager X lite carbon bars and ACC seatpost. Wheels are Hope Pro 2's, 32 DB spokes and DT 4.2 rims, Discs are cheap Shimano ones, and Mud X tyres. saddle is a SLR (135g model). Cables are whatever came as stock.
Just after some ideas of where to loose a little weight, keeping in mind that most changes will be on a when it wears out or brakes basis.
Diet more and exercise?
WCA, thanks for the response but not the question i asked. I am fairly light, 6' 70kg, and i suppose could do with riding a bit more.
Chop your feet off and fit some cleats direct to the stumps.
lighter brakes and wheels. if your going to wait until it brakes though, then your best off asking at the time
Ashima rotors, superstar components titanium QR's for two low cost upgrades
Have a poo. A big one.
Mag pedals?
continental mtb supersonic tubes? 100g each instead of 200g for the cheaper ones. Ive ran them for a while now and no punctures yet.
no cheap ways of saving weight there. maybe stans rims.
As cynic-al says, it's all pretty decent mid-range kit, there's nothing there that stands out as being massively weighty. It's going to get expensive to upgrade that.
Change the forks for SIDs will be the biggest weight change, the rest of it is going to be a case of a few grams here, a few there.
have you got lockons? Get some foam or ESI silicon grips.
get a hardtail frame
Kev
If you are using lockon grips then change to good foams (Bontrager Xlite are very good), you'll save about 100g for about £9.00, a KCNC scandium seat post could be had for about £90 which will save approx another 80g or so.
Wheels will be the most noticeable difference, but not cheap, that said your current set up weighs about 1650g which is not weight weenie XC race light but is a good light weight for regular riding.
Mud Xs are a pretty light mud tyre, so I'd keep them for this time of year, lightweight tubes are good I used 90g - 100g tubes for a few years they are about £9 each, I now use tubeless as it's far superior.
no cheap ways of saving weight there. maybe stans rims
that was my gut feeling, and that i would be looking at 10grams here and there. Just wondering if there were any decent savings to be made.
get a hardtail frame
Had a hard tail and my back no longer likes hardtails.
hair cut, ride naked, lightweight tubes, change down to 24" wheels, ride barefoot and gaffa tape your feet to the pedals, get rid of your grips and just gaffa your hands to the bars, ride without a helmet and remember the rule you can take from our 17 year old drunken youth... eating is cheating!
HTH 😉
Cassette - go XT with a 32 rather than 34, or XTR/KCNC if you've more cash.
New wheels, Roval/Hope-Stans
Go tubeless.
Formula R1 brakes.
Ti all bolts.
Oh, and weigh everything (and compare) before spending any money.
You could buy my 9.9 if you want? That's a whisker under 21lbs. Very little effort, and 5lbs saved. 🙂
mrmo - MemberJust weighed my Top Fuel ... 26lb ... Spec is ... (very good list of bits) ... where to loose a little weight ... ?
...
26lb?
that's lighter than my road bike!
really, please, for the sake of your mental and financial well being, don't lose any sleep over it.
losing a pound will cost you about £500 - and you can have a lot more fun with £500.
Go 1x9/10?
Go 1x9/10?
no, simple as. I want to have another crack at Cristalp next summer, i do not want to be crying half way up a mountain.
Tubeless.. Does it actually save much weight? compare weight of innertube to sealant?
Cassette is XT, wouldn't want to risk anything cheaper (ie more steel) on the hub.
The wheels are getting on so maybe look at rebuilding/replacing the rims/wheels with some Stan Alpines??? in the spring.
Grips are Bonty lock ons but i have a set of foam grips to fit at some point.
SID fork, lots of weight in theory but expensive. i guess there are alternatives but all expensive.
Tubeless.. Does it actually save much weight? compare weight of innertube to sealant?
Its roughly the same weight as using light weight tubes, but without the punctures and you also have the option to run silly low pressures which you could never do with lightweight tubes.
if lightweight is your main goal you might as well sell it and build a new bike. there's not one single part on there that couldn't be replaced with something a bit lighter.
no, simple as. I want to have another crack at Cristalp next summer, i do not want to be crying half way up a mountain.
You need stronger legs then! But thats gonna add weight... 😉
I would suggest only taking it out in the dry to avoid any excess weight.
Unless you are wanting to suspend it from a hook that is only rated for anything under 26lbs 😉
GW's right, a nice 2010 Top Fuel 9.9 would be perfect! Mail in profile 🙂
Wheels are the obvious place. ZTR hubs on Alpines with Revs would prob save you about a pound for a few hundred, go tubeless at the same time. As Kingtut said it doesn't save weight over silly inner tubes, but it has a number of other advantages tubes don't!
a TF9.9 might be nice, what size is it? but i haven't got that much money.
Save the money and train harder and spend the money on some sports psycology/motivational exercises- and thats from someone who is 17 stone and some and still rides a hard tail. A few grams is only a psycological boost, its your performance that will count when you are already on a bike thats that light and fully suspended. You know thats the way to go......
Joking aside - train on a heavier bike before then ride the lighter one for the event.
Joking aside - train on a heavier bike before then ride the lighter one for the event.
That is the heavier bike, the only other functioning bike is a road bike.
Tie a brick to it 😉
i am sure the cotswolds finest winter dust will suffice.
Go minimalist, if all you do is ride off road and you only weigh 70kg fit a surly singlespeed cog on the front, ditch your front mech, cables and shifters, fit an 11-34 cassette on the rear.
This saves weight and money as the surly will outlast everything else and you can fit it on backwards when it gets worn.
If you know someone with a lathe get them to turn the teeth off your outer ring to save spending £30 on a bash ring.
This will knock nearly 1kg off the bike for an outley of £30 for the surley ring plus you can also use a short cage mech when that needs replacing cos youve less chain to accomodate which also now weighs less!
The other advantage is that you will get a lot fitter as you have effectively ditched the bottom two wimp gears and will have to work more on steep climbs.
Remember a 27 speed bike only has 13 usable gears as the rest overlap.
Mrmo it's an 18.5".
Suggsey I'm not sure of your point, I'm not sure sports psychology [i]would[/i] make a bigger difference than shaving some weight off the bike! Training and losing weight off you is different, but he's not that heavy.
Is that bar the 265g one. There are plenty of biggish risers at 170g these days, and with light grips that a quarter pound right there. Pretty unlikely your bars are going to wear out though.
"SLX brakes"
Around 430(+)g each (160mm rotor), I think post mount
'standard' (2011) Magura Martas are around 325(ish)g I think
Even Elixir R's (£160 pair on merlin) are 367g each
"SLX shifters, mechs"
About 1g (per pair) between XT and SLX shifters, but almost 30 between SLX and XT shadow rear mechs. (XTR will be lighter of course, quite how much I don't know)
Not much in the way of weight but just a couple of things that sprung to mind
" I want to have another crack at Cristalp next summer"
Thats ages away, you can always put the gears back on beforehand?
The feeling of needing to shed weight of an already light bike is in itself an indication that performance wise mrmo does not think he is at his peak of performance!
As for the sports psycology side of it, I used to use various techniques including visualisation as well as MTFU and training as hard as my body would take-and this was many years ago before it was widely touted as sports psycology.
As someone else has said put some big tyres on a heavier bike and beast yourself (obviously with a suitable regime for the task in hand).
We can all blame our equipment for a bad performance.
Put any top cyclist in their specific discipline on a heavier bike and see if they still win against Joe Average on a super lightweight machine.
This will knock nearly 1kg off the bike for an outley of £30 for the surley ring plus you can also use a short cage mech when that needs replacing cos youve less chain to accomodate which also now weighs less!
Huh? You save the weight of an inner ring, the teeth on your big ring, front mech, cable and LH shifter, but add a heavy middle ring, and a chain guide and save 1kg?! You may save a couple of hundred grams at most, likely less, and the OPs already said that 1x9's not an option.
Edit: suggsey I don't really get that though, you're saying that weight saving won't make a difference so spend money on sports psychology, and yet you're 17 stone? Surely losing 5 stone would make a bigger difference than any sports psychology stuff, which is basically just another thing to throw money at.
18.5 is too small, mine is the 19.5, danger is past.
Is that bar the 265g one. There are plenty of biggish risers at 170g these days, and with light grips that a quarter pound right there. Pretty unlikely your bars are going to wear out though.
It is flat.
"SLX brakes"
Around 430(+)g each (160mm rotor), I think post mount
I thought they looked quite chunky.
So wheels and brakes sounds like a good plan.
What are the ashima rotors like?
The feeling of needing to shed weight of an already light bike is in itself an indication that performance wise mrmo does not think he is at his peak of performance!
There is no think, i know i am not as fit as i was a year ago, circumstances. It is a case of finding every motivational thing, a mix of training rewards etc.
Start going out with the roadies to get a kicking.
Do some XC races to get a proper kicking etc.
"This will knock nearly 1kg off the bike "
Erm, how?
Surely losing 5 stone would make a bigger difference than any sports psychology stuff,
No surely about it.
Weigh stuff. Wherever there's an OEM or own brand part in particular. Inner tubes! Surprising how many bikes come with enormously heavy cheapo inner tubes. Other than that 26lbs is a decent weight already, for something durable and workmanlike.
nje20, why would you need a chain guide with an unramped pinned ring front shifter along weighs 150g, 10" of chain 50g, inner ring 55g, cable 20g.
OK I over estimated quite a bit but you still end up getting fitter and it proves that more gears doesn't equal a bigger willy.
With regard to fitness and bike weight, fitness rules everytime as I pass many riders on multiple K machines on my 5 year old sub 1K hardtail and I ain't no spring chicken.
nje20, why would you need a chain guide with an unramped pinned ring
It'll still drop the chain, when it gets rough.
BTW you're pissing in the wind trying to out smart Njee when it comes to being a weight weenie.
mrmo, you are halfway there knowing that performance wise you are down on last year,self belief is more of a performance booster than a kg off the weight of the bike!
As for the bit re me being 17 stone plus to put it into perspective, I did LeJog last year(averaging 90-100 miles a day at reasonable average speed) and had to put in a hell of a lot of solo big miles and as I was doing it for charity I used that as my motivator when times got bad or the weather was downright horrendous to train in.
I got down to 16 stone in a reasonably short space of time and was happy with my bodyweight as I had the balance right for what I wanted to achieve(ex rugby prop and I aint never going to be below 15 stone till the day I die).
Its only when the body is at its peak performance that a little weight off the bike will make the difference. I am not talking about riding a 36lb freeride bike comparing it to a 26ib XC machine but the difference between a 26 and 24lb bike.
train train and then vary your training some more be it riding SS on your regular route to using bigger tyres of a different hill to fartlek train on.
How about some different cardio exercise ie rowing- a great form of mental exerciesa to push your limits against what you 'think; is your limit.
Give up trying to lighten the bike, it sounds like you can't afford to make a significant difference and a 26lb full susser is hardly unraceable. I came 4th in Oktoberfest 8 hr pairs and 14th at 24/12 racing solo on a 26lb full-susser this year - I could have done better but it would have been down to more training not a lighter bike.
You admit you're not as fit as last year, why aren't you riding as much? Address this. If it's because you hate riding in bad weather, spend the cash on things more likely to make you go out. Goretex shorts, some overshoes or Goretex boots, some crud catchers. Hate maintaining your good bike and wearing stuff out, get a dirt worker to help clean the bike trailside, or invest in a cheap singlespeed hack MTB or something. If you find your local trails boring, spend the cash on going and riding somewhere new and reinvigorate your interest.
Spending £500+ to knock 2lb off your bike is ultimately going to be disappointing.
Garylake, reason for not riding as much is time, i used to commute by bike, got made redundant now work to far away to ride and no facilities so even parking half way and riding in just isn't going to work. Addressing this by trying to find a new job where i can ride to work.
I know trinkets don't make you faster but they are nice to haves. and 26lbs is a decent weight, and if i can get any reasonable weight saving for sensible money makes sense to me, I am not going down the bolt kit route.
reasonable weight saving for sensible money. might not exist, bearing in mind you allready have good gear. however, if i owned your bike and wanted to make it faster (maybe not much lighter) i'd get some wheels with stans crest rims and go tubeless using some racy tyres.
mrmo - the problem with your bike is that [i]everything[/i] on it is half decent already. Big gains come when you have single items letting the whole thing down - crap wheelset or fork. When everything is pretty good, you can only end up shaving a small amount off [i]every[/i] component. Hence why it becomes expensive.
Unless you are competing, I doubt you need to change anything! A good rider on a heavy bike will still be a good rider, a novice on a featherweight will still ride like a novice (but probably break something in the process).
Many of us are developing bike bulimia, with some even developing genuine body weight problems to stay whippety.
Say you have a budget of £x to shave weight, why not use it for more diverse riding experiences too improve your skill instead? Go to that trail centre you've heard about or on holiday to (insert location here). Or even go on a skills course? Experience is a huge influencing factor to riding, I dare say significantly more so than equipment. I have no idea of your ability but everyone can improve somewhere.
It may appear heavy when you're off it, but does it feel heavy when you ride? Would you really notice 500g difference?
I'm guilty of it too, but I think the proverbial princess has a very expensive pea under her mattress. (I'm not calling you a princess!)
Very good post Herman
For the record, going 1x9 can save about 2/3lb, but it depends on what kit you have on there already.
http://velonews.competitor.com/2009/06/news/wrenched-and-ridden-mrps-1-x-chainguide_93654
When you get down to the lightest possible (body or bike) weight then it is aerodynamics next:
http://www.trainright.com/info.asp?uid=4428
"Riding fast is often about physiology, but that’s not the only factor that makes or breaks a World Champion. Reaching the top of professional cycling is also about aerodynamics. It’s not the force of gravity, nor the friction of the road surface that proves the biggest obstacles for riders to overcome. It’s wind. And the faster a cyclist rides, the more aerodynamics comes into play, as wind resistance increases exponentially as speeds go up. In other words, it is harder to accelerate from 25 to 30mph than it is to accelerate from 20 to 25."
Chris Carmihael has said that the bike accounts for just 2% (drag) though.
Less important for XC, shirley?
If you are happy spending the money and are competing, then why not get a set of race wheels? Something like some Hope pro 3SP on Stans rims with some tubeless racing ralphs.
Keep the other wheels for beating up and training on, and then when you put the others on at race time (or rather practice time as you'll need to scrub in the brake pads and get used to the tyres), you'll immediately feel the pound or so in weight loss.. Hey presto.. Huge psychological boost!
Will be the best part of £500 though. There's cheaper solutions in the grips, rotors, tubeless etc..
Go through every part on your bike and compare with other items on this list:
http://weightweenies.starbike.com/listings.php
Enjoy.
stick a shit load of carbon on it.... 
I reckon the frame is the heavy bit there. See if you can find out what it weighs compared to a similar travel Yeti or Santa Cruz
You could try 2x9 or 2x10 - I went with a middleburn duo and 11-34 cassette and pretty much have most of the range I had with 3 rings, apart from the ultra granny ratio which is near unusable anyway.
Apparently you can then save a bit more with a road mech on the front.
Looking for tyres with less rolling resistance might make more sense than dropping weight.
Also tuning the rear shock - the efficiency of the rear suspension is going to make a lot of difference trying to race a FS.
Ditching lock ons for foam grips? Jeez, that is a serious step backwards 😯
Ditching lock ons for foam grips? Jeez, that is a serious step backwards
Why? some of them are pretty good plus grippy in the wet.