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just thought with 29ers now! I own one and it works for me .
Long travel hardtails are ace. Fact.
Not in the peaks they aren't.
No they're notace
I hope not.
Well, [i]literally[/i]...
I still want one.
i'm not saying they are just wondered really ...I was in the peaks last weekend and my hardtail was fine
Not killed mine yet 😈
Seeing as how I've got a 140mm hardtail 29er...I hope not.
What do you mean fine?
any bike is fine, you can ride any bike in the peaks and it will be fine, however if you want to go down the hills a lot faster then you need a bike that can handle the speed. And a long travel hardtail will allow you to ride faster and more aggressively than a 29r.
Id Rather have a long travel hardtail and hit the descents faster, with more confidence. IMO.
ace
No they're not
Oh yes they are
You're probably not hitting the descents all that fast anyway TBF.
What rear rim/tyre (and pressure) are you using to ward off all the hits your huge forks sort out for you?
Mines still alive 🙂
Rorschach, what have you got? I thought 29er's were all short travel forks. I'd may be interested in something like that.
Mine was alive all morning, It had a couple of 29ers for lunch and now it is resting!! 😉
I recall an article in Dirt a few years ago about aggressive hard tails. They had a On One 456 with a 29 / 26, 100mm fork. Seem to recall they loved it.
* How is a 29 / 26 abbreviated? 96er?? 69er?? (Oh err Missus)
With reasonably wide rims, reasonably big tyres and tubelessness, long-fork hardtails are awesome if you like to ride downhill but aren't really fast. I see Jinya Nishiwaki, the Chromag riding being quick and stylish on those videos of Whistler's DH runs, uses DH wheels and 2.5 Minions, dual-ply on the back, and still gets punctures and flat-spots when he's sending it large.
We're british, therefore long travel 26ers will always be seen roaming the hills, even when the rest of the world are on 29er/650b/whatever-the-current-trend-is
We're british, therefore long travel 26ers will always be seen roaming the hills, even when the rest of the world are on 29er/650b/whatever-the-current-trend-is
Well said that man, LTHT perfect for the uk, some big tyres and away we go..
I just built up a BFe with 150mm forks, didn't give a 29er a thought. Wanted a bike where I could potentially swap components onto other bikes.
LTHT seems to be a British thing. Perhaps it's the combination of not needing FS for most UK trails and the soggy conditions that destroys FS pivots etc. I've got a HT 29er now as I got feed up with creaking FS bikes.
Hope not, my Soul was on form today.
Bike industry only survives through constant innovation. A quality bike lasts years so there's no need to replace it. A company grows by selling more bikes (need expansion of the sport but MTB only really appeals to a niche); or by selling more stuff to existing customers. Hence 29ers, and loads of us owning several bikes where actually one would do.
26ers haven't suddenly become unfit for purpose just because someone's discovered that 29ers can be quite good for the right rider in the right terrain. Just means we have more choice of what to ride and bike companies shareholders get richer!
My ti456 is now redundant consequent to my new Helius AC 29er...
Dunno whether to split or just get rid or keep for real foul weather abuse.......?
spent the last 6 yrs riding 29ers
3 on one's
2 haro mary's
1 chumba hx2
2 karate monkey's
2 singular swift's
1 redline mono
2 gary fisher (super cal and paragon)
1 ventana el capitan (the best)
now riding a 456 with 160mm forks, all budget built.
one thing i have learnt on my journey......what you ride mean ZILCH, if you can ride means EVERYTHING.... 8)
Wise words Tony
I went in my LBS this weekend and it was all 29ers ...I was told that 26er will be phased out in time , I would buy a 29er but the conversion is too expensive at the moment ! mind you they would say that to get me to buy another bike ! the cheapest way I can see is an on one frame and fork !!!
sounds like a sucker shop that is believing the industry hype more than what the customers are asking for.
we have only sold a couple of 29ers ever and people just arent asking for them (In Leeds)
I hope they aren't dead - Ive just bought one!!(carbon 456 frame/Talas)
is that true Sancho , thats good to know I cant afford one its just the hype saying 26er is dead , I really get annoyed with this sport sometimes !!!
totally true, Ive got two shops in Leeds and only sold a couple of 29ers.
I dont like the hype and I dont like that fact that the trend has come from America where they dont ride trails like we do in the UK, they generally mince about on big fire roads and that is why they all want 29ers.
In yorkshire the riding is more technical woodland singletrack and a nice LTHT is perfect especially in places like Hebden, or the Dales.
29" working fabulously here in north east Scotland......
GW - what do you ride out interest? I only ask as a couple of your comments on this and other threads seem to strike a chord with what I'm after.
What a ridiculous bloody thread.
It's all bike riding why should wheel size matter?
Buy what you like and ride what you want to, I don't think 26" wheeled bikes will disappear any time soon and I don't think there's anything wrong with choosing a 29er either if it suits your needs...
07/8 Giant STP
Most long travel hardtails are cack. The head angle changes so much when going round corners that it messes up the handling.
A guy I know builds downhill hardtail frames that have a stupidly slack head angle. He is faster than most people on DH rigs. This is the exception to the rule.
What do you mean fine?
any bike is fine, you can ride any bike in the peaks and it will be fine, however if you want to go down the hills a lot faster then you need a bike that can handle the speed. And a [s]long travel hardtail[/s][b] full suspension bike[/b] will allow you to ride faster and more aggressively than a [s]29r[/s] [b]hardtail[/b].
That's better
Long travel hardtails are awesome. Fact. Any fork under 120mm travel is for ****s.
I can't tell the difference between my summer season with 100mm forks on and my old 456 with 140's
there. I've said it
You'll love it when its built Rorschach. My Yelli is running better than ever with 140mm. LTHTs forever (29ers or 26ers)
Anyone selling a nice reasonably priced LTHT frame in a size which would fit an adult? (not 29er though) thanks
Most long travel hardtails are cack. The head angle changes so much when going round corners that it messes up the handling.A guy I know builds downhill hardtail frames that have a stupidly slack head angle. He is faster than most people on DH rigs. This is the exception to the rule.
Surely the head angle changes by the same amount per inch of travel on any HT I'm guesstimating about -0.5deg' per 1/2" of fork compression is about the norm... Obviously not the case on an FS as you tend to get both ends squatting together at a similar rate in any given corner....
but surely the key is being able to adapt to a steepening HA rather than write off all LTHTs, otherwise are you suggesting you need to go to a ~60 degree static HA to produce a sagged ~64? that would be a very specific DH HT not a general riding LT HT IMO...
Don't suppose your mate would be Paul Burford would it?
I remember him being pretty rapid and I'm sure I heard he was fabbing up a DH HT...
this is not a silly thread you need to be riding the right kit to do the job ..and of cause look the part lol
coarse ^
Most long travel hardtails are cack. The head angle changes so much when going round corners that it messes up the handling.
So everyone's got it wrong. Except you?
Don't suppose your mate would be Paul Burford would it?
I remember him being pretty rapid and I'm sure I heard he was fabbing up a DH HT..
Yeah it's burf. He is pretty handy on a bike.
I don't like long travel hardtails, due to the bigger changes in geometry as the fork compresses. A bike with 5 inches of fork travel will have less of a change in geometry and and not have the wallowy feeling you get with long travel hardtails.
I had my talas 36's on my hardtail about a month ago as my revs had blown a seal. At full travel the bars were at the right height, but the bike handled terribly. Drop the travel to 130mm and instantly the handling improved. I put up with the low bars.
It is personal choice at the end of the day, but I think they handle like 3 legged donkeys.
so is 120mm the sweet spot then . I have 140mm on mine with a dtswiss 15mm bolt throu but when I tried a set 120 reba's they seemed stiffer ! with a QR
You'd have to be pulling some serious G or have your weight too far forwards for your head angle to change drastically in corners. And if you're cornering that hard on a LTHT either the terrain is relatively smooth or you're bloody good, so it won't matter either way.
Depends on the bike. IMO anything over about 130mm and hardtails don't handle as well.
Kudos, this may seem confusing but there's nothing to stop you setting up a 6" fork with the same spring rate and compression damping as a 4" fork, so that the amount of sag and change in travel per Newton of force and thus change in head angle is identical. It would just take 50% more force to reach full travel on the 6" fork assuming linear action, so you won't bottom out as hard/often.
cause
coarse ^
Course. Welcome to pedant's corner... 🙂
Kudos, this may seem confusing but there's nothing to stop you setting up a 6" fork with the same spring rate and compression damping as a 4" fork, so that the amount of sag and change in travel per Newton of force and thus change in head angle is identical. It would just take 50% more force to reach full travel on the 6" fork assuming linear action, so you won't bottom out as hard/often.
Thus defeating the point of having a longer travel fork.
Why does that defeat the object? It means you can ride your bike ~20% faster/harder (suspension forces increase with the square of speed) before you hit the bump-stops. And a bike that still has suspension travel left will grip better or roll faster than one which hasn't.
I am thinking surely there is a cut of point with the amount of travel up front and how usable it is, since the back end doesn't move as such.
Kind of relating to GW's point:
You're probably not hitting the descents all that fast anyway TBF.What rear rim/tyre (and pressure) are you using to ward off all the hits your huge forks sort out for you?
Like say if your going downhill and you hit a large rock bottoming out say a 180mm fork this causes the bikes geometry to steepen significantly, then as the back end goes over the rock the whole frame pivots on the front hub steeping the geometry further; throwing the rider into the dirt?
i'm a massive hardtail fan really and love ltht's. for me i hope i never have to ride a 29er. I've always run quite a stiff fork on the ltht and still bottom it out sometimes. Granted less can be more but I love the freedom having the xtra travel gives for hooning downhills and that extra margin for error. It's a nice feeling knowing the back end is bouncing around and the front is dominant in absorbing everything. Plus you can get away with higher pressures in the tyres which is handy if you've been doing drops to flat half an hour prior to your descent.Personally I find these bikes add versatility and feel great. Granted they may not be required all the time.
Look, I'm not interested in theories about what might work or should work on the trail. I have tested both on a variety of bikes and long travel hardtails do not handle as well as shorter travel ones.
Rather than speculating what should work, go out and test it on a few different bikes and then come back and report your findings. Riding your bike 20% faster/harder because you have a longer travel fork is all good in theory, but in practice it doesn't work.
as long as i'm having fun I really don't care. I have a 150mm BFe and it is great fun. I'm happy no matter what people say
i think was thinking behind the summer season - slack angles yet optimised for a 100mm or whatever travel fork - fair enough. I guess to a point I agree - a burley stiff fork and relaxed angles are fine and probably account for much of confidence given to ltht's. So the issue is not the travel but a frame designed around a burley fork - and as it happens such forks are usually lt.
thing is there's not many short travel burley forks that are any good for hard riding ( unless the travel adjust oin a longer fork is used) . Most of these shorter travel forks are for dirt jumping ( xeno and marz DJ etc 80-100mm) and do not have very good all round abilities, outside of jumping and 4x So the frames in part have been designed around what forks are in the market. Still nice to have the extra travel too though if you hit large rocks etc at speed.
I get what Kudos is saying and I kind of agree, I've had a 7" HT in the past (Exalt) and TBH opting for the full 7" of travel just didn't work out right, plenty of people who had them prefered them with 150 or 140mm forks, I think alot of it is in the angles, applying the same HA to a HT frame primarily designed for DH use doesn't quite work but I do think an ultra slack HT might, of course it wouldn't be a great climber which is what alot of LTHT riders are after too that happy medium position a non-FS 'AM' bike that goes up as well as down....
I reckon 120-130 is probably the sweet spot for many certainly going over 150mm of travel means your sagged HA probably isn't much different from a firm 5" fork anyway... and yep the limiting factor will always be the back end kicking you in the arse anyway...
So yeah 5", 6" tops unless you are building a proper DH HT then I think a very slack HA is needed to make 6"+ work effectively...
as long as i'm having fun I really don't care. I have a 150mm BFe and it is great fun. I'm happy no matter what people say
I'm not a fan, but if someone is having fun, that is the main thing.
Horses for courses.
human propelled fun machines are ace 😀
Why would I want to test a theory which makes little sense and my own experience confirms is more wrong than right?
The head angle getting too steep theory would only make sense if all these long fork HTs had steeper head angles when fully compressed than shorter travel HTs. Unsurprisingly they don't!
Also, fork length and fork travel don't fully correlate. Bigger stanchion forks are longer A-C than equal travel slimmer forks. And it varies from brand to brand. Fox 32 140s are the same length as Rev 130s.
And another thought for you - on a 150mm HT your feet only have to move up 100mm when the rear wheel passes over a bump which has bottomed out the forks. Can you bend your legs 4"? Your hands are almost directly over your front axle, your feet are well ahead of the rear. It would be very different if your cranks were above your rear axle, like the hellish thump when sat in the back of a small car when going over speed humps.
Haven't long switched from a burly 100mm HT (Identiti Mr hyde with 100mm Society Xeno 36mm stanchion/20mm axle forks) to a burly 150mm HT (BFe with Marzocchi 44 32mm stanchion/9mm QR forks).
So far I actually think the BFe handles better. Sure, it wanders a bit on steep switchback climbs but in every other situation I've ridden it so far it feels sharper and more sure-footed than the Mr Hyde did.
I ran the forks on the Mr Hyde as soft as I could to counteract their girder-like build and have the BFe's forks running harder than recommended for my weight to avoid too much dive.
All this is always going to be VERY subjective. For me I seem to be better 'centred' on the BFe which I guess is down to the angles more than the forks, and this gives me more confidence in the corners while the longer fork/slacker angles on the BFe make it more confidence-inspiring when things point down (the steeper, shorter Mr Hyde always felt a bit nervous on steeper stuff).
Long way round to say 'ride what you like and feel comfortable/fastest/funnest on'.
slainte 😀 rob
i think alot of this maybe the way the fork is setup. If it dives all the time as soon as the front brake is hit then that may not be fun as the ha will change i guess. Although tbh the change isn't a massive factor imho as per above post. Guess it may come down to the frame too. Surley not all ltht's are the same.
What a load of cock this thread is. Basically some people like some bikes others don't. Why argue about it?
I rode for a short time a 29erm for the first time the other day. Granted it was a bloody fancy titanium IF frame. But it was really good I got up a climb easier than I ever had before I really liked it and would like to try more. I can even see myself owning one. However when I got back on my BFe I knew that I would never swap it for a 29er. My two bikes are perfect for my riding, I can see a 29 being useful if i did longer more xc rides but I don't.
well said,
human propelled fun machines (hpfm), I think that should be the new name for all bicycles
"i'm off to ride my human propelled fun machine" sounds so much more interesting
"I'm off to ride my bike" has gotten old hat 😛
Long way round to say 'ride what you like and feel comfortable/fastest/funnest on'.
Yeah this.
I find I can corner faster, jump better and have more fun on a ht with less travel. If you find a LT hardtail works better for you, great.
Bike handling is subjective.
lol
Sancho - Member
totally true, Ive got two shops in Leeds and only sold a couple of 29ers.I dont like the hype and I dont like that fact that the trend has come from America where they dont ride trails like we do in the UK, they generally mince about on big fire roads and that is why they all want 29ers.
You mean you don't stock them and you tell all your prospective customers they are crap? 😉
Right I'm getting some 120mm forks ! For me surge ! 🙂
Love my cove hummer
now with 140 travel
great for dartmoor
exmoor the quantocks.
Only 1 of the dozen
or so giys i ride with
has a 29er,but hey this
be devon not california!
GW - Member07/8 Giant STP
Hmmmm...
One mans long travel hardtail is another mans trail hardtail... what constitutes long travel on a hardtail these days anyhow?
Is a bike designed for a 100mm fork a long travel hardtail just because someone has banged a 150mm fork on the front?
What does any of this have to do with 29ers????
IMHO... there is a HUGE difference between a hardtail frame to which you can INSTALL a long travel fork, and a hardtail frame which is DESIGNED for a long travel fork.
Head angle is just one part of a puzzle involving other variables such as seat angle and bottom bracket height... shove a long fork on a frame such as a BFe/456 and you get...
1. slack head angle which can feel like good fun
2. slack seat angle which means you'll be falling off the back on the techy climbs.
3. high bottom bracket which mans flip/flop steering and a general feeling of tottering about at low and high speed in the gnar
Don't mention travel adjust forks... a poor crutch for a crap design 😉
My long travel hardtails has 160mm of travel, a 63deg head angle, a 72 degree seat angle and a low bottom bracket... it's ace.
I'm looking forward to trying a long travel 29er hardtail.
Good topic gents, just thought I'd add my thoughts. I have 2 long travel hard tails at the mo, a Chumba hx1 with 140mm talas forks and a pace rc 325.5 with revelations. I also have a 100mm kona hard tail.
All I can say is that they are all great bikes, but I think the most important component is tyre choice, not travel. I have ridden my chmba down some gnarly stuff with slippy as hell schwalbe Tyres and been scared witles, a week later ridden the same stuff on my 100mm kona with frilly panaracer tyres and it was a blast....maybe we are too focused on suspension at times. Who knows.
I have also ridden in the alps on an orange 160 alpine alongside a riding buddy on a 100mm travel blur xc, and he made me look like I was sat still....the reason, I was on a hire bike and he was on his own steed..
Funny you should use a Bfe to justify your statement messiah. An XS Bfe has *very close geometry to my small STP when fitted with a 100mm fork. Both frames ride shit with a long fork IMHOHO... there is a HUGE difference between a hardtai frame to which you can INSTALL a long travel fork, and a hardtail frame which is a hardtail frame which is DESIGNED for a long travel fork. DESIGNED for a long trave DESIGNED for a long trave fork.
*Bfe's stays being half inch longer
My long travel hardtails has 160mm of travel, a 63deg head angle, a 72 degree seat angle and a low bottom bracket... it's ace.
They must have changed the definition of "low bottom bracket" because last time I looked a BFe had 12.25" BB height.
intrigued by your response, care to elaborate?Hmmmm...
😆 Cheers for pointing that out SM2, BBs lower on an STP too
scott_mcavennie2 : They must have changed the definition of "low bottom bracket" because last time I looked a BFe had 12.25" BB height.
What fork length Scott?
I can only go from what I've measured... the BFe I borrowed had a 160mm Wotan fork it and the bottom backet was at the same height as the wheel axles with 25% sag, which with big tyres on was 330mm (13").
My LTHT with 160mm forks sagged 20% has the bottom bracket 25mm lower which is 12".
I quite liked the BFe but the fork at 160mm was simply too long for the geometry of the frame (IMHO etc etc).