
iamkickstand wrote:... but I don't think it allows you to ride a trail once previously deemed unrideable on a hardtail given similar Geo.
iamkickstand wrote:Take pro Dh for example, I don't think that would be any easier on my fuel, as it would be on your chameleon, in fact id argue neither would be significantly faster than the other.
Now I won't argue that the entire course overall the fuel may be faster, but in the rock garden of pro Dh alone I don't think you have enough speed on an Xc bike in there....
300hp wrote:I think that faster/slower and easier/harder are independent of each other.
300hp wrote:MTB free has a video of the run he can post for perspective.
That's exactly my point. Suspension will NOT give a rider the ability to clear a section of trail he has previously been unable to clear. That is EXACTLY my point. it does NOT make it easier to ride, more comfortable? yes, more forgiving? Maybe, faster? possibly, but not always.mtbfree wrote:iamkickstand wrote:... but I don't think it allows you to ride a trail once previously deemed unrideable on a hardtail given similar Geo.
This was not the question. We were debating whether it would be easier... if a rider is good enough to ride a trail on one bike, that person can probably ride it on any other bike that has similar geometry.iamkickstand wrote:Take pro Dh for example, I don't think that would be any easier on my fuel, as it would be on your chameleon, in fact id argue neither would be significantly faster than the other.
Now I won't argue that the entire course overall the fuel may be faster, but in the rock garden of pro Dh alone I don't think you have enough speed on an Xc bike in there....
This I completely disagree with. Rock gardens are the #1 obstacle that FS helps out with. I don't know about you, but I would definitely be able to carry more speed through there on even a 100mm travel XC bike than I would on my Chameleon. As someone who has switched back and forth from FS to hardtail to FS to hardtail (yes, I meant to type that twice) for XC riding, you're not going to convince me that a rock garden or a rocky descent will be just as easy on a hardtail, unless the rocks are so big and the spacing is such that you actually have to hop from one to the other like a trials rider. If you can not plow over, or skip through from rock to rock and have to actually pick your way down the hill at near walking speed a FS bike will not perform any better than a hard tail, in fact I would argue the hardtail would be better in some instances.300hp wrote:I think that faster/slower and easier/harder are independent of each other.
I don't. If I can ride trail faster on one bike than the other, that's the first indicator to me that it was easier. Another great indicator is how fatigued you are at the end. If one bike requires significantly more input from the rider to make it through a section, to me that means it was more difficult.300hp wrote:MTB free has a video of the run he can post for perspective., I have lots of video editing to do
300hp wrote:PS, ride sunday?
mtbfree wrote:Rock gardens are the #1 obstacle that FS helps out with.
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