Cotic Rocket update...
 

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[Closed] Cotic Rocket update from Cy

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I'm not sure why bigger wheels are such a terrible thing in terms of making frames obsolete when the ubiquity of large diameter dropper posts and tapered forks have done the same for bikes with sub 30.9 seatposts or 1 1/8" head tubes? I bet in five years' time it'll be a lot easier to buy decent 26" rims and tyres than decent 1 1/8" forks!


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:02 am
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Speeder - Member

The clue is on the user name.

Well done - have a biscuit.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:04 am
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Have you ever stopped to consider that one reason 27.5 has proved popular is that it isn't closer to the 29 size? Maybe it is actually the (usually mythical marketing) sweet spot?

There is no such thing as 27.5 😉 , but I take your point and can't disagree. It may well indeed be the sweet spot, and I'm thankful that it is so close to 26 as I'm very aware that my next bike will be a 650B simply because that's all there will be.
I KEEP googling that bloody Yeti SB6C. It's calling my name....


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:08 am
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My brother in law has recently rediscovered bikes and can be excruciating to talk to about the subject. In his eyes, everything is judged on cash value and as such all conversations resolve back to what it cost. It's like a hideous parody of loadsamoney.
Where this becomes relevant is that while he would love my bikes or the time to ride them his opinions are steered by a serial bike swapper who seems to be dropping 5k plus on carbon wonder bikes. That's pretty much concentrating his attention on bleeding edge, and must be pretty much the marketing person's wet dream... He's not alone, and as there's always going to be considerations of 'shiny' and bling in a market essentially selling big kids toys, it's not an invalid point of view, his priorities and mine are just different.
I'm not particularly wedded to 26, except that I have some nice kit I really like riding. I've looked at 650's and fully expect that's what I'll be buying when I finally kill my 'old' alu fs, but I'm expecting my steel Soul and X to last a bit longer barring crash damage. It's not that I couldn't afford to go out and splurge, I just don't need or want to.
I'll join in feeling bad for Cy that the 'made in england' thing has not worked out and that he's essentially tossed a couple of years of sales of Rockets over it, I'm just not sure the wheel size question really enters other than possibly as snide cheap shots over last years' "26 ain't dead" slogan, and mine ain't for a bit yet.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:26 am
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it was the biggest con trick in MTB history and most people have fallen for it.

I'm not sure I buy this. Maybe I'm being naive but are there really loads of people who went "crap, my 26" is now utterly obsolete, I'd better bin it and go and buy a 650b to transform my riding"?
Or did the serial bike swappers and people replacing their bikes after years walk into the shops and come out with a 650b where a couple of years ago they'd have come out with a 26"? If so, how are they being conned?

I'm not that bothered about wheel size, but if I'd bought my bike this year instead of last year I would very likely be on 650b rather than 26" just because that's what's in the shops. And it would ride fine no doubt. I wouldn't feel like the industry had got one over on me somehow.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:45 am
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There is no such thing as a "sweet spot" that's just marketing BS. Even if there were it would be different for different parts of the trail.

The fact is that all three of the currently fashionable sized wheels are perfectly viable options for a mountain bike. None of them are inherently better or worse than either of the others. Yes, they each have certain advantages and disadvantages on specific bits of trail, but overall they work and once you factor in differences in geometry and suspension travel even the inherent differences get lost.

The problem isn't with any particular size of wheel, it is with the refusal to stick with any "standard" (whether that be wheels, forks, bottom brackets, seatposts or whatever) for more than five minutes. Manufacturers clearly don't want us to incrementally upgrade our bikes, they want us to dump them and buy a whole new bike (preferably every year or two).

Getting back on topic; I'm surprised that Cotic didn't stick with the 26" Rocket. They have a design that works and I would have thought they would get enough interest from the die hard 26" fans to make it viable. Who knows, by the time they get the 650B version ready there might be a swing back towards 26" anyway. However, it's not my house that's riding on getting this call right, so I'll just wish Cy all the best.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:46 am
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The problem isn't with any particular size of wheel, it is with the refusal to stick with any "standard"

My brother in law has recently rediscovered bikes and can be excruciating to talk to about the subject

recently had a conversation with a mate returning to the fold. What became apparent is the laughable idea of the "standard";

wheel size; 26, 650b, 29
steerer; straight, tapered, 1.5", 44mm
axles; 9mm, 12mm, 15mm, 20mm, 135, 142
BB's; BSA, BB30, PF30
gears; 1x or 2x, 9,10,11 (and explain why the more expensive bike has fewer gears)
disc; 6 bolt, centrelock.

I'm not the target consumer but it puts me off buying something new, do you want to spend thousands on what ends up being the Betamax standard?

Back to the original point, give up trying to make them in the UK, it was a nice idea but not critical to the image or success of the bike.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:04 am
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and you forgot 10mm rear wheels, and 28.6/31.8 / 35mm handlebars, 30mm seat tubes & who know show many BCDs on chainrings.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:09 am
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I'm not sure why bigger wheels are such a terrible thing in terms of making frames obsolete when the ubiquity of large diameter dropper posts and tapered forks have done the same for bikes with sub 30.9 seatposts or 1 1/8" head tubes? I bet in five years' time it'll be a lot easier to buy decent 26" rims and tyres than decent 1 1/8" forks!

Exactly right and exactly what most people seem to ignore. It happens and has happened year on year from the very start.

For most people a new bike is a special purchase, not just a tool that gets replaced when it's broken. People have different reasons and rational for what they buy whether it's value (Canyon, YT, On-One etc), perceived prestige (Santa Cruz, Yeti etc), comfort of the established (Specialized, Trek, Giant etc) or made in blah (Orange, potential Cotic, US built GT/Trek/Cannodale etc) + many other reasons.

We all like to think the new bike is a step forward from what it replaced so something needs to be different be it new axle size, bolt through, wheels, geometry, weight.......... As long as they can say it's X times stiffer, lighter, faster, smoother, snappier..... people will buy them. 650b is this years reason to buy a new bike, just as something else will be next year. The market demands change and perceived improvements so that's what we get. It has always been so.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:09 am
 nuke
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I don't know who instigated it or why anyone perpetuated it but it was the biggest con trick in MTB history and most people have fallen for it. OK it's mostly benign in that it's a just a bike with bigger wheels but it's allowed the industry to sell a load of completes at vastly inflated prices where I'd imagine thy wouldn't normally have done so. All in the name of fashion and progress.

😆 I do love the idea that 'the industry' gets together and plots these 'con tricks'...
[img] [/img]

Imo the manufacturers are like sheep themselves and it only takes a 'critical mass' of manufacturers to go with a new standard before the rest follow...the real surprise of 650b was the speed of change.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:31 am
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[i]I'm not sure why bigger wheels are such a terrible thing in terms of making frames obsolete when the ubiquity of large diameter dropper posts and tapered forks have done the same for bikes with sub 30.9 seatposts or 1 1/8" head tubes? I bet in five years' time it'll be a lot easier to buy decent 26" rims and tyres than decent 1 1/8" forks!
[/i]
Well dropper posts are an option, no-one has stopped making standard posts because of dropper posts. As for taper steerers - if it wasn't for the 27.5 bullshit I expect these would be receiving a lot of criticism for the same reason. Can anyone actually tell the difference between a straight and a tapered steerer ffs?


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:37 am
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Tapered steerers have been about for years and hardly anyone batted an eye lid.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:44 am
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Tapered steerers have been about for years and hardly anyone batted an eye lid.

shame they didn't make a standard where you could easily swap out the steerer.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:49 am
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I KEEP googling that bloody Yeti SB6C. It's calling my name....

Well I know the geometry is bang on because it's near identical to my Spitfire (within a few mm and fraction of a degree).

However tonight I will be out in the woods for 4+ hours on a 26" steel hardtail with open bath forks with 32mm stanchions, 1 1/8" steerer, and a 27.2mm seatpost - not so coincidentally made by Cotic. It does have a dropper post, tubeless tyres, wide rims and a 1x10 drivetrain with clutch mech and narrow-wide ring though... And we'll have a lot of fun!


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 12:11 pm
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I don't know who instigated it
Where did 650B/27.5 originate anyway?
The French. Touring bike wheels. If the Americans had better availability they may have gone with it in the 70s instead of the 26" kids' bike wheels, they certainly knew about 650B then and recognised some benefits in it. As well as knowing that 26" made stronger wheels when almost nothing they were using was up to the job.

What's next will be 'The First MTB-Specific, Developed For MTB Wheel Size'. 600C x 40mm wide rims. 2.4-2.8" tyres. I'm only half-joking. It'll be great for those that think 29+ is just too big but like the float of bigger tyres and like the option to use a 2.4" that ends up smaller than current 29ers, and think that 650B+ is too wide or not so realistic for sussers. And its only 16mm bigger than 650B so there's not much loss of chuckability, the same difference between 26 and 650. It'll make a nice strong wheel with the new F+R axle width standards that need those wider forks (that bit I'm not speculating on, it's here).

In the meantime Rockets will be out there and they'll be brilliant.
(that bit will really happen) : )

..and Nuke, pretty much spot on. Maybe not sheep, too many keen riders involved for that imo but there's a 'don't get left out' feeling driving things after the 29er process.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 12:23 pm
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Well I know the geometry is bang on because it's near identical to my Spitfire

Sort of looks a little bit like it with a 160mm fork.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 12:45 pm
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deluded - Member

Hmmmm – I don’t agree with the notion that grasping bike companies are hawking kit that doesn’t confer any real world benefits to the sport/pastime

The question isn't so much whether there's no real world benefits- it's whether they justify the change. In this case, it's a small change that requires replacing everything- and I don't just mean buying a new bike, I mean every LBS in the world having to do something about their 26 inch stock, early obsolescence of designs and machining, lost opportunities- every bit of tyre "development" for most companies in 2013 and 2014 being "Let's make it slightly bigger but otherwise the same"

chiefgrooveguru - Member

Have you ever stopped to consider that one reason 27.5 has proved popular is that it isn't closer to the 29 size?

That's the [i]exact[/i] reason- it satisfies the magpie's desire for change as stimulated by 29 inch wheels, while delivering a change so small that it's not scary (because you'll barely notice it) But that's not a good thing other than for salesmen.

chestrockwell - Member

Tapered steerers have been about for years and hardly anyone batted an eye lid.

Matter of degrees really, in lots of ways. Frinstance I think either the Pike or the Fox 34 are the first massmarket forks ever made with no straight steerer version? And that's a change that's taken about a decade to come about so there's been a pretty relaxed handover. And the negative impact on the industry are smaller since the redesign to accomodate it is smaller. Also it was compatible with 1.5 tubes. And even if you decide you MUST have a tapered steerer and so you change your frame, you can still use your old wheels.

So yeah it's largely the same thing, but the impact is different, in the same way as 50 wheel size threads are more annoying than 10 wheel size threads...


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 12:56 pm
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Sort of looks a little bit like it with a 160mm fork

Spitfire (160 27.5 slack) vs SB6C (both medium)
HA 65.7 vs 65.5
Reach 427 vs 427
Stack 590 vs 599
BB height 342 vs 345
Chainstay 441 vs 442

Fairly similar where it counts!


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 1:28 pm
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As everybody is getting their knickers in a twist about wheel sizes (for about the 1,000,000th time...) IF your 26" wheeled bike snapped or was stolen or whatever. What would you go and buy?


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 1:47 pm
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I must have been loking in the worng place. Where did you get those number from?
The Banshee site has different numbers (e.g 66deg HA at Low) the numbers put the SB6C as longer (WB & TT), steeper STA.
It does look like a riot though. I very nearly bought one but my LBS couldn't get hold of one and never bothered to tell me. Small wonder they folded.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 1:51 pm
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IF your 26" wheeled bike snapped or was stolen or whatever. What would you go and buy?

another 26" soul


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 1:53 pm
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I must have been loking in the worng place. Where did you get those number from?
The Banshee site has different numbers (e.g 66deg HA at Low) the numbers put the SB6C as longer (WB & TT), steeper STA.

The Banshee numbers are for 545mm A-C but a 160mm 27.5 Pike is 552mm, hence the slightly slacker angles. Actually, thinking about it further, that will take a bit off the reach and add a bit to the stack, and the Yeti's wheelbase is showing as a bit longer so there must be a slightly larger difference between equal size frames - but you can always go up a size for more wheelbase and reach. They're close enough that how you choose to run your front and rear sag will make more difference in how they feel geometrically.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 3:24 pm
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IF your 26" wheeled bike snapped or was stolen or whatever. What would you go and buy?

another 26" soul

Snap! errm... I mean ditto!

(although I may be tempted by a Solaris, plus a 26" something else to make use of all the wheels and spare forks that I have in the store room)


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 3:26 pm
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coogan - Member

IF your 26" wheeled bike snapped or was stolen or whatever. What would you go and buy?

Every time I snap mine, I get new bits for free 😆


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 4:03 pm
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IF your 26" wheeled bike snapped or was stolen or whatever. What would you go and buy?

2 different scenarios and illustrates the point. If my "bike" snapped (ie. the frame) its got nice expensive forks, wheels etc so I'd buy another 26"-compatible frame. If I lost the whole bike to theft I wouldnt buy 26" as the industry is moving away from it and there will be less options for replacement forks/rims/tyres in the future. Whether I prefer 26 or 27.5 is irrelevant, it's clear 26 isnt going to be supported.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 7:18 pm
 accu
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I was waiting for the new 26" rockets, hoping the new ones will be available in matte green ...and was ready to order and pay it ..not only to think about it
but for several reasons I´m definitely not interested in the 27.5 version...
following the logic of cy´s statement and all the posts here
the question for me is now...how long will it be possible to buy a 26" soul and when will there be a 27.5" Bfe...?


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 9:09 pm
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I'd buy a 29er Rocket.
Might even be able to afford it properly by the time it's ready.

I would definitely get a Cotic fatbike *hint[i]hint[/i]*


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:09 pm
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If it snapped I'd be looking for a replacement under warranty. If it got nicked then things would be a bit more tricky. Funnily enough I'd go for a 26" Rocket if one existed. Since it doesn't I'd probably take a good look at the "nu-skool" 29ers (might do that anyway). If they didn't work out I might just go for the 26" Transition Suppressor. Pretty sure that I wouldn't go for a 650B. Not that I think there is anything wrong with the size. I'm sure it will be just fine, it just takes time to really dial in the geometry. The "nu-skool" 29ers are kind of a case in point and it's was only last year that companies were sticking different dropouts in their 26" frame and calling them 650B. The ones we have now are really just first generation and will look a bit dated in a few years. I'd also like to wait and see whether there is any resurgence in 26" in a few years time. Not saying it will happen, but I'm not arrogant enough to pretend that I know the future.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 10:47 pm
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Pretty sure that I wouldn't go for a 650B. Not that I think there is anything wrong with the size. I'm sure it will be just fine, it just takes time to really dial in the geometry.

There's no magic in geometry. But when 29ers appeared the majority of the mountain bike industry had never tried to work with different wheel sizes - it therefore took time to work through the geometric possibilities, particularly as a bigger wheel is hard to package in medium and smaller frame sizes. To relate it to my day job designing loudspeakers, if you know how to design for 10" and 15" drivers, you'd have to be pretty clueless not to be able to design for 12" drivers.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:10 pm
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I'd also like to wait and see whether there is any resurgence in 26" in a few years time. Not saying it will happen, but I'm not arrogant enough to pretend that I know the future.

had to smile reading that with the massive Audi banner ad at the top of the page featuring a picture of a vinyl record.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:10 pm
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I bought my first new bike in about 5 years a few weeks ago and didn't even think abut what size of wheels it had. It was a good price and had a good spec and it rode well when I took it for a spin around the forest. It was only after a few days I thought, huh, this thing has 650B wheels.

As for getting geometry sorted some companies, like Norco, (who pretty much missed the initial 29er thing) went straight to 650B and have got things pretty much dialed in now. I'm not sure I'd fancy an Enduro 650B or a Stumpy 650B this year, but the companies who made the decision more recently that last year shouldn't have any issues.


 
Posted : 11/12/2014 11:13 pm
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One of the funny things that happened as 29ers were coming in was lots of designers became obsessed with "making them handle as fast as 26in bikes", right at the same point lots of 26in riders were going "woah! These bikes handle too fast".

Was quite funny for me as I got the inbred 29er to market, did the Scandal 29, then went riding with Oxley and Benji and then did the On One Summer Season.

Quite polar.

Right now I see 650b hardtails closer to 29er geometry than the other way. Except for Whyte ones which look to have cool numbers.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 7:53 am
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What do you think of the Stanton Switchback Brant?
Correct me if I'm wrong but it seems to be inline with your thoughts on HT geo?


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 8:44 am
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Northwind - Member

The question isn't so much whether there's no real world benefits- it's whether they justify the change.

I wasn’t talking exclusively about wheel sizes. As with all things that evolve, bike tech does so incrementally over time as well - hydraulic brakes, SPD’s, tubeless rims, wheel sizes, bolt-thru forks, clutch mechs, dropper posts, wider bars, the use of carbon, drive chains – narrow wide rings etc., etc. All these things conglomerate (sorry, couldn’t think of another word) to make the bikes more 'enjoyable'. I know that’s a subjective word – but you know what a mean, pushing boundaries back and all that. Don’t view them in isolation. Would anyone argue they're not good to have around, how the industry including LBS’s have not grown and prospered from them? My LBS’s are in quite good shape at the moment so I’m not overly concerned about them having to shift stock and re-orientate - that’s the very nature of their business and the supply chain.

My answer to your question therefore is yes – they are worth it.

BTW – I have two bikes, both 26” and old. My favourite being a steel HT with a 27.2 seat post that’s oxidised to the frame and now immovable! I am however saving up for a 27.5 HT build (I have the frame a Stanton Switchback) that will have updated parts.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 9:39 am
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deluded - Member

I wasn’t talking exclusively about wheel sizes. As with all things that evolve, bike tech does so incrementally over time as well

Except that this is exactly the opposite, an abrupt change over an artificially short timescale.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 9:46 am
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I don't agree it was abrupt.

over an artificially short timescale.
What does this mean (not being rude, genuinely interested)?


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 9:48 am
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I don't see how you can think it was anything but abrupt tbh, the abandonment of 26 inch happened in only a little over a year, and 650b bikes had almost totally taken over even before there was a proper range of tyres for them.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 9:58 am
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@cy - respect for trying to get a UK built Rocket out the door, I hope something comes of your project.

As for wheel sizes and commercial reality (not aimed at Cy) - I'd maybe buy a 650b Rocket, but a 26", no way.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:02 am
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Deluded member

I think the word you were looking for was "accumulated" 🙂

I agree, they are perhaps a bit more obvious than Dave Brailsford's "marginal gains" but they all add up. Some things like tapered steerers are hard to quantify but others, like wide bars are less so.

Take a typical (probably no such thing but I hope you know what I mean) bike from ten years ago and compare it to the equivalent today and you'll really see the difference. But apply each change one at a time, like those word games where you have to change one word to another a letter at a time, and you wouldn't really notice a huge difference in each stage.

You can divide the changes that have taken place in to hard and soft.

Hard changes affect the frame basically: Wheel size; tapered steerers; geometry; Bottom Bracket design. You can't apply them to existing frames - you have to get a new one.

Soft changes are add-ons: short stems; wide bars; riser bars; tubeless; 1x drivetrains. You can swap these around on an existing frame.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:03 am
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We had 29'rs before 27.5! It seemed clear to me that wheel sizes were in play for change a lot longer than just over a year. And again, I wasn't just referring to wheel sizes.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:06 am
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recently had a conversation with a mate returning to the fold. What became apparent is the laughable idea of the "standard";

wheel size; 26, 650b, 29
steerer; straight, tapered, 1.5", 44mm
axles; 9mm, 12mm, 15mm, 20mm, 135, 142
BB's; BSA, BB30, PF30
gears; 1x or 2x, 9,10,11 (and explain why the more expensive bike has fewer gears)
disc; 6 bolt, centrelock

I just bought a new bike last week, it has :
135mm and 170mm QR wheels, a tapered headtube with external headsets (don't know which one), a seatpost of some size or other, some 31.8 bars and stem and a 100mm BSA threaded BB.

I'll probably be able to find spares for most of those parts for many many years to come even if some of them are so far from standard that they're sub niches within a very niche niche. Bit like buying a car, I didn't buy the C-max and worry that the boxes of spare parts for my MG Midget were 'obsolete'. I'll just buy bit's that fit the C-max as and when they wear out. Just replace C-max with O-O Fatty and MG midet with El-Mariachi Singlespeed.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:06 am
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wrecker - Member
What do you think of the Stanton Switchback Brant?
Correct me if I'm wrong but it seems to be inline with your thoughts on HT geo?
POSTED 1 HOUR AGO # REPORT-POST

Never looked before but like the look of those.
But limited for bigger lads wanting a saddle up ride but covers a lot of riders well.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:16 am
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deluded - Member

We had 29'rs before 27.5! It seemed clear to me that wheel sizes were in play for change a lot longer than just over a year. And again, I wasn't just referring to wheel sizes.

It's a thread largely about the untimely death of the 26 inch wheel. 29ers don't really come into it, nor other things that aren't wheels.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:18 am
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dunmail - good points.

I'm sticking with conglomerate though - [i]to form or gather into a mass or whole.[/i]

😀


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:20 am
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It's a thread largely about the untimely death of the 26 inch wheel. 29ers don't really come into it, nor other things that aren't wheels.

I think the discussion took on a broader note.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:21 am
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I'm sticking with conglomerate though - to form or gather into a mass or whole.

Conglomerate always reminds me of the rock type which is basically a mess of unrelated components stuck together. Mind you have you seen this ... 8)


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:36 am
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You have to remember the UK is a small place and behind on the curve. The US which drives these things moved wheel size a long time ago. I went riding over there with people in 29ers in 2006.

I've no idea what Cotic's sales are outside of the UK, but if you even want to consider it, then 26" is not an option.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:49 am
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You have to remember the UK is a small place and behind on the curve

I don't think we're behind the curve at all. The internet lets us see what is going on everywhere in real time.
We are different, and less open to marketing than the mericans though.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:53 am
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I've no idea what Cotic's sales are outside of the UK

A surprising number in Germany. Mostly 26in afaict. For a country where 29er probably could make more sense. Quite a few On-One's too.
Never seen a 650b/27.5 ever (apart from one when I was in Scotland).


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:57 am
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.. and less open to marketing than the mericans though

Not sure about that, if there's any generalisation maybe we just respond to different marketing. You could say other markets are more open-minded. I wouldn't, but it's just a different way of seeing the same thing. The UK is certainly different to the bigger markets of Europe and the US, less so now that 5-10 years ago maybe, even so we don't always see the current general trends favourably because of that.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 10:57 am
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The UK is certainly different to the bigger markets of Europe and the US, less so now that 5-10 years ago maybe, even so we don't always see the current general trends favourably because of that.

I think we just destroy forks and drivechains quicker though. Remember Sam Hill's comments about the Schladming (or was it Champery) WC?

Steve Jones: "So do you ride in the rain at home"
Sam (straight faced after destroying the competion in the worst conditions ever, and who'd mostly had dry runs) : "no, it'd get my bike muddy"

Maybe a new bike for the sake of it makes sense if you have no other cost's involved. But if you're in the UK you buy into stuff for other reasons, stuff that lasts, nowhere else 'does' hardcore HT's in partuclarly steel ones, whereas 5-10 years ago you could turn upto some STW rides and stick out like a sore thumb if you weren't on a Dialled PA or Inbred. Even FS was a novelty in the UK untill 5 yeas ago. We didn't do expensive bikes because we were too busy forking out every other week for a new chain. We adopted 29ers in the same way, rigid niche singlespeeds like the Swift and inbred that were great for bombing about on muddy singletrack, while the rest of the world was pumping out carbon XC-race exotica.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 12:47 pm
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We are different, and less open to marketing than the mericans though.

Don't agree with that at all. From what I see, outside the vocal minority on here we are more then open to marketing which is why the market is quite happy to ignore those that make such a fuss about the change (but, for the most part have no real intention of buying a new bike anyway) and sell bucket loads of the 'next big thing' to those that want to buy.

From what I understand America took to 29ers as they suit the terrain they generally ride over there.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 12:58 pm
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Even FS was a novelty in the UK untill 5 yeas ago.

Not sure about that, FS have been in the majority round here for going on 10 yrs with plenty about before that.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:02 pm
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nowhere else 'does' hardcore HT's in partuclarly steel ones, whereas 5-10 years ago you could turn upto some STW rides and stick out like a sore thumb if you weren't on a Dialled PA or Inbred. Even FS was a novelty in the UK untill 5 yeas ago.
STW really isn't a representative sample of the UK cycling public. To suggest that FS bikes were rare and Inbreds common 5 years ago is to ignore what's actually been going on.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:08 pm
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I had a FS seventeen years ago and they weren't that rare then.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:12 pm
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TINAS, I mean the way we like LT HTs and smaller wheels generally speaking (edit, or used to?), so no suprise that a global move away from 26" will be least popular here. Prioritising tech ability over light weight etc - not all of us, but a lot more so than Europe and probably as a higher % of riders than in the US overall (depends where in the US). The UK seems closer to Canadian tastes after the LT HT Canadian thing in the late 90s that really took off here, Konas, Coves and Chameleons. Certainly there were a number of those with 1x8, Azonic bars + 60mm stems, 110mm Z1s and 2.35 tyres + D521s among our riding group in '98. Not that much different to current hardtails really.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:23 pm
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no suprise that a global move away from 26" will be least popular here.

Outside the walls of internet forums I just don't think that's the case though. I know a lot of people who ride and none of them get worked up in the slightest about the demise of 26". Most think it's a good excuse to change bikes.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:33 pm
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nowhere else 'does' hardcore HT's in partuclarly steel ones, whereas 5-10 years ago you could turn upto some STW rides and stick out like a sore thumb if you weren't on a Dialled PA or Inbred. Even FS was a novelty in the UK untill 5 yeas ago.
STW really isn't a representative sample of the UK cycling public. To suggest that FS bikes were rare and Inbreds common 5 years ago is to ignore what's actually been going on.

Indeed, that doesn't in any way shape or form represent the riding scene I've seen and been involved in around Aberdeen. Maybe 15 years ago full suspension was rare, 10 not so much and in the last 5 years its probably the norm. All the enthusiast riders I know have been on full suspension only for more than 10 years now. I think you might be confusing the Uk riding scene with around where you live, the same way folk do when suggesting particular gearing set-ups are "all you need for Uk riding".


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:35 pm
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So 26" is dead after all?! am disappoint 😥


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:37 pm
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chestrockwell - Member

Outside the walls of internet forums I just don't think that's the case though. I know a lot of people who ride and none of them get worked up in the slightest about the demise of 26". Most think it's a good excuse to change bikes.

Most of the people I know are pretty bloody annoyed about it and have put off buying bikes because of it.

I was all set to buy a new disc road bike this year, but the inevitable new standards stampede means I'm not going to bother.

You're right about full sussers though - I remember hordes of Marin riding, bearded, Ron Hill wearers stampeding majestically across the moors round here many, many years ago.
🙂

The most popular bike I see round here is the Orange 5 - I'm pretty much guaranteed to meet at least one every weekend ride.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:41 pm
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Outside the walls of internet forums I just don't think that's the case though
I'd tend to agree, forums are skewed but a number of posters must be representational. And 'least popular' is relative, not meant as 'in general'.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 1:49 pm
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Most of the people I know are pretty bloody annoyed about it and have put off buying bikes because of it.

Judging by your behaviour on here I'd contend that anyone who isn't bloody annoyed about it keeps their mouth shut for fear of you boring them to death....


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:22 pm
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Most of the people I know are pretty bloody annoyed about it and have put off buying bikes because of it.

Hasn't effected anyone I know. One bought a 26", two others a 29" and I bought a 27.5". Really feel people are getting their knickers in a right twister over this personally.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:29 pm
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😀

I haven't started a wheel size thread for as long as I can remember.
(EDIT - over a year. [url= http://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/i-was-wrong-about-650bheres-why ]This one, if you missed it. [/url])

I've never had a pop at any individual for their choice of bike purchase.

I fully support the smaller bike manufacturers - have no problem with fatbikes, 29'ers or alternative solutions to existing problems.

I've heard no rational answer to the points I've made re the unnecessary rapaciousness of the major manufacturers, so I'll continue stating my point of view until someone stops me from doing so.

If you don't like my posts, I'm sure you could either find a way to block them so you don't have to read them or just ignore them.

Thanks for your opinion, I shall be certain to bear it in mind in future.
🙂


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:31 pm
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I've heard no rational answer to the points I've made re the unnecessary rapaciousness of the major manufacturers,
PARKLIFE!!


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:41 pm
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STW really isn't a representative sample of the UK cycling public. To suggest that FS bikes were rare and Inbreds common 5 years ago is to ignore what's actually been going on.

I don't agree, I reckon the first really popular FS bikes were the monocoque enduro and the stumpjumper that folowed it, then the Giant VT? So that's 2002 onwards, and even then I remember people having them but they were the minority in any group and didn't ride them as much as their HT's.

Still seems like only the last 5 years or so when you could go out for a ride and be in the minority on a hardtail. And that still coencided with me moving from the Peaks to Berkshire, when I went back upto North Yorkshire 26" hardtails seemed to be the prefered choice again.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:42 pm
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And you can shut up as well......
🙂

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:43 pm
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The advent of 650 has delayed my next mtb purchase a bit

Now waiting for the collapse/abandonment of 29", when I'll bag me a bargin (a bit like those oranges the other day)


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 2:55 pm
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Now waiting for the collapse/abandonment of 29"

Not gonna happen.

Can't believe we're talking about this, poor Cy, again. 😳


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 3:02 pm
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Still seems like only the last 5 years or so when you could go out for a ride and be in the minority on a hardtail. And that still coencided with me moving from the Peaks to Berkshire, when I went back upto North Yorkshire 26" hardtails seemed to be the prefered choice again.

There has been some degree of mountain biking occurring in other locations during the period involving folk you've not met though, so your experiences might not be entirely representative of Uk MTBing as a whole.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 3:48 pm
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You've really got to feel for Cy and the Cotic team. The Rocket statement earlier this week and now the Soul275 paint issues:
http://www.cotic.co.uk/news/


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 4:12 pm
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I'd tend to agree, forums are skewed but a number of posters must be representational. And 'least popular' is relative, not meant as 'in general'.

Problem with forums is that those that strongly believe something (e.g. 650b bad, 26" good) shout down those who think differently. You don't see many defending 650b now, I guess they just went out and bought what they wanted instead of being shouted at and poked fun at on here.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 5:28 pm
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I don't have a 650b btw and after testing a couple have no intention of getting one any time soon.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 5:31 pm
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Who's shouting?

I'm happy to participate in a rational debate about the wheelsize issue.
Be nice if those in the bike industry or media declare their interest, just so we all know where we stand.

The only abuse I've seen regarding this issue was a year or so ago when an industry type speculated that the reason I was so anti was that someone else was shagging my wife. 😀


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 5:34 pm
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No comments are directed at specific individuals and can be related to any number of threads. Point being every forum has strong personalities with strong views. Many people just read threads without comment or back off when they get shouted down. That does not make forums such as this representative of UK MTBers on every issue IMO, 650b being a prime example.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 6:09 pm
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get a room you two


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 6:24 pm
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What size?


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 6:25 pm
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Twin or double?


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 6:33 pm
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The three main wheel sizes will continue.
650b has become the default size for new bikes and 29ers are firmly established but trials, dirt jump etc will likely stick with 26 for a while meaning they'll be stuff available but on different websites to the one you've used in the past.
Likewise suppliers like Superstar will I'm sure continue to stock a limited range of 26 inch stuff, they'd be daft not to given the number of 26 inch bikes out there.

My own experience. Built a 650b HT in the summer, rode it back to back with the 26 inch one I already had....sold the 650b one, it just wasn't as much fun to ride, far more of a steamroller and I like faster handling more playful HTs.

I have however built up a 650b FS, the wheel size seems perfect fit that kind of bike, long travel Enduro style bikes for ploughing through things and carrying as much speed as possible.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 7:07 pm
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Defending 650b? Who needs to they are just getting on and riding them. I was 6 months early buying my 26" bike - it was a bargain but if I'd waited a little longer I would have gone 650. Why it's replaced 26" at that end completely. I can still buy stuff for 26 and I can get 650 wheels in my frame.

I spend a bit of time in my mates shop (not in the UK which is obviously special) and apart from the odd joke about the legacy/old tech nobody really comments on it. He doesn't need to explain that this 650 thing is x,y or z to people. They come in ride round on some bikes come back and maybe demo them. If they like them they buy them. It's not dented sales it's not changed what people are doing.

All the UK doesn't fall for the marketing BS is frankly BS anyway. Throw in the top comments of "I've ridden a 650b bike and I didn't like it" or "I tried that there 29r lark it's rubbish" shows a massively closed mind. When it comes to getting a new bike I will ride what is around see what I like and pick the bike I want, the size of the wheels will be irrelevant, the quality of the ride will be important.


 
Posted : 12/12/2014 11:46 pm
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