You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] "fast"

50 Posts
34 Users
0 Reactions
86 Views
Posts: 41395
Free Member
Topic starter
 

What does it mean to you? Do you care?

I want a bike that is fun to ride - being light helps, having grip (but no rolling too slow) and suspension too, I'm happy with a slack head angle also.

I just wonder why so many weekend warriors worry about having a fast bike when all it seems they do is ride with their mates on a Sunday...is it not better to have fun?

Anyway seems most folk think such and such a bike is "fast" because it has a stiff frame and steep head angle LOL! noobs!


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:00 am
Posts: 9
Free Member
 

Speed is all about the rider, not the bike.
I'd rather enjoy my ride by making it about how I want to ride, not what the bike determines it should be.
I'd take fast as some sort of XC racer bike. no thanks


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:06 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I just wonder why so many weekend warriors worry about having a fast bike when all it seems they do is ride with their mates on a Sunday...is it not better to have fun?

Fun? FUN?! Riding fast on a fast bike is a serious business and I remind you not to forget it.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:06 am
 marc
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

You might ride with your mates, but you've got to be first to the top of the climb 😉


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:08 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I don't really care to be honest. Being fast is more about the riding really, not the bike. Anyway, unless you measure it with a maximum "fast" on a fully rigid bike might be 15mph and on a full sus 20mph.
I certainly don't want to have a bike that I think may [u]hinder[/u] me, so I have to keep my speed down due to the design or my choice of bike. For example bars that are too narrow, ouf of control suspension, poor brakes - or even poor maintenance.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:09 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A fast bike to me is loads of suspension, slack, loads of grip, don't care about weight, don't care about fast rolling. Point me at berms, jumps and tech stuff I'll ride as fast as poss. (whilst being overtaken by the bloke on a GT zaskar with road tyres)

You might ride with your mates, but you've got to be first to the top of the climb

In fact, when I read statements like this above, I dunno why I ever come on here..


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:12 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Is it not more a characteristic of "noobs" to be concerned about slack angles, or any other fashion?

As long as you like your own bike what difference does it make to anyone else? They haven't got to ride it. Personally I just like a bike that feels good most of the time, including going up and just riding along, so I wouldn't bother with overly heavy or slack, because that bike only comes alive under certain circumstances and it a drag the rest of the time - but each to their own.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:21 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Fast is about the sensation and the adrenaline

An MTb you don't go fast in absolute terms at all - how often do you top 30 mph? However an MTB at 30 mph has the sensation of speed similar to a motorcycle at 100 mph - therefore it is fast as ****!


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:26 am
Posts: 41395
Free Member
Topic starter
 

You might ride with your mates, but you've got to be first to the top of the climb

See:
Speed is all about the rider, not the bike.

EDIT toys19 said it better actually.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:30 am
 Keva
Posts: 3258
Free Member
 

I've got three quite different mountain bikes and my riding times are pretty much the same on all of them, it's just one usually performs better than another on different types of terrain.

Kev


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:38 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'd take fast as some sort of XC racer bike. no thanks

DH bikes aren't fast then?

In fact, when I read statements like this above, I dunno why I ever come on here..

You don't want to come on here because people may have opinions that differ from yours...?


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:41 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

its not about fast as much as its about fun

obviously going insanely quickly can be fun, but so can bimbling along looking at the view


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:45 am
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

I understand what he means by "you've got to be first to the top of the climb" Mid week night rides are intentionally a bit fast for the mob I ride with. We're mostly about the same fitness and we try to push each other, not to the extent of a roadie chain gang or anything, but just so it's a bit uncomfortable. Weekend rides are more sociable and slower.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:46 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

You don't want to come on here because people may have opinions that differ from yours...?

I think other some other STW'ers might say you have defined the main reason why I do come on here.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:51 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Fast ? To ride as quickly as possible (for 60 seconds)whilst wearing a helmet,a large back pack,the current must have kit and mounted upon a £4,500 full sus steed.Directly from the trail centre car park to the trail head shop to purchase more shite.

Fast ? All single speed riders YAHOOOOO !!


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:52 am
Posts: 8652
Full Member
 

Beating your mates is fun.
Seeing others suffer on climbs is fun.
Being the slowest & suffering at the back of a group is NOT fun.

Just ask Conan the Barbarian what is best in life, he knows 🙂


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:53 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

As long as I ride as fast as I'm capable of, then I'm happy. My bikes are fairly light, but then I'm under 10 stone so can get away with it. I remember racing a few years back, the winner kicked everyone's ass, winning expert/elite on a knackered fully rigid bike with v brakes, wearing a yellow oilskin jacket.

You then see people racing open category on 5k bikes, and getting lapped - seems a bit strange having a quick bike if you're not very fast yourself.

Guess as long as you enjoy riding, it doesn't really matter what you ride.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:54 am
Posts: 3
Free Member
 

Surely everybody has their own individual definition of fast, both climbing and descending. I'm happy as long as I'm riding to my best capability, getting a buzz, and at least not holding my mates up


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It's not about winning, it's about beating your mates.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 9:57 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Being first to the top means first down the descent unimpeded. Very serious business that.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:00 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

feels fast, or feels on the limit of what you can do on that type of bike? fast is relative to bike and terrain, i go slower on my cross bike on wet rooty trails, but it can feel very on-the-edge and fast is a similar feeling. my 140mm trail FS feels 'slow' on the same trails, even though i'm going faster. it feels more safe, so it's not always fun in the same way.

top speed downhill on my road bike feels proper 'fast' as in a real speed-buzz, tbh my mtb rarely if ever matches that for feelings of speed (in most of the UK at least - Alps can be different!), it's more like a felling of being near a limit of what i can do when riding the MTB.

faster for a given effort level is probably more important to regular group riders or event riders / racers who have a competitive element beyond just racing your mates here and there.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:02 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

yeah good point Gary - nothing worse than being beaten into the start of a good ST descent by a competitve, fit but technically lame rider in events! 🙂


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:03 am
Posts: 6902
Full Member
 

Riding different bikes is a great way to keep things fresh IMO. An arse-up, head down, narrow bars, superlight bike can be awesome to ride at times, and also a right **** handful on technical stuff. It's good to experience.

It is true that w/e warriors, like me, almost never ride fast. Not in any sustained way which is the essence of racing. Leather it up one hill, down the other side, and then full speed ahead up the next one - just not a style of riding I'm capable of. I guess it is pointless to worry about a 'fast bike' if you can't go full tilt on it for longer than 30 mins.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:04 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

poor troll


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:05 am
Posts: 7540
Full Member
 

Its all relative.

Some bikes are faster, and feel it when you ride them. I was lucky enough to have a go on a S-works Epic at a demo day, it was an absolute bullet.

But I doubt it would keep up with a DH bike at Fort William.

My slicked up stumpjumper is fast on the way to work but would be pretty shite round Innerleithen.

Also a genuinely fast [i]rider[/i] would be faster than me on pretty much anything!


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:07 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Going fast is very important on a lot of the trail centre stuff - because a lot of the trails are vastly more fun if you can hit them at speed. Kind of makes them more three-dimensional.

I hate having to pedal to get my fun though.

On steeper stuff I'm not too bothered about getting down in the quickest time....great if you are a DH racer, but I'd rather take an interesting/fun line down and be at the bottom 30 seconds later.

So, in summary - It's all about the fun. Some trails are more fun the faster they are ridden, others are more fun if you pick your way down via the most interesting bits 🙂

I'd never sacrifice descending ability (of a bike) for pedalling/climbing ability.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:08 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

yeah good point Gary - nothing worse than being beaten into the start of a good ST descent by a competitve, fit but technically lame rider in events!

Very reason I made a point of getting a bit faster up the hills a while back... 😮


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:16 am
 D0NK
Posts: 592
Full Member
 

fast to me is more xc racer than DH bike, don't matter how many seconds you can save going downhill you will always lose/gain the most time on the ups.
Was riding my SS lastnight, long, low and not as good for tech stuff as my other bikes but for storming through wooded singletrack, slightly muddy with a fair bit of squirm and drift going on it was awesome and quite probably "faster" than my other bikes.

it is pish on ICR tho.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:18 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

a motorcycle at 100 mph

Thats not fast 150+up dual carriageways is fast


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:20 am
Posts: 8652
Full Member
 

Thats not fast 150+up dual carriageways is fast

Yes, that feels fast to me too. It's the speed where I start worrying about chains snapping or being caught speeding.

Then again, I've gone faster sat on an aeroplane choosing which wine to have with dinner. It didn't feel as fast though.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:35 am
Posts: 2
Free Member
 

I do know if anyone started talking to me about head angles and the like I'd ride away, fast.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 10:40 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

well said samuri.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:19 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

i concur.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:20 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

or being caught speeding.

bedause if we get caught at that speed its a prison sentence


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:22 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

"fast" it's about the look isn't it? If you look fast, you [i]must be[/i] fast.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:23 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Dual carriageways? I am talking about proper roads 🙂

Good point about aeroplanes tho - they don't feel fast at all


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:27 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Good point about aeroplanes tho - they don't feel fast at all

But some of them do actually look fast.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:30 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

samuri - Member

I do know if anyone started talking to me about head angles and the like I'd ride away, fast.

This is like some strange ubercool form of ludditism. Does this mean that you, glynp and tum-yeto wouldn't consider what the head angle might be next time you buy a new bike/frame?


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:45 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Planes feel fast when they take off.

I have four bikes - don't know, or want to know, the head angle on any of them.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:50 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

To a large point i do care about going fast, however riding fast only has an appeal if it provides the element of fun i want to experience.

If i go fast whilst solo riding it gives me less fun, therefore isn't important.
If riding in a group i strive to be the fastest rider there, either to push myself or to push others a little beyond their normal comfort zones.

I've found when descending in a group i tend to go first, i begin to check behind me and either i speed up to try and loose the person chasing or i slow down to let someone catch up, draw them closer then try to get them to stay with me as i wind up the speed.

If i'm mid pack, it's the chase, so if i catch someone i'll slow up to let them get a few hundred metres on me, then go try and catch them up.

Not sure if all this is showing off, trying to push my limits.

It's never been about the bike for me, it about how i ride. Some times the hardest line is more fun but slower option, but more FUN, other times riding smooth through an easier section feels more fun because it faster.

So yes, riding fast to me is important, but never has a bike made me feel to ride faster because of design.


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 11:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I have four bikes - don't know, or want to know, the head angle on any of them.

That's all well and good, but do they look fast??


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 12:05 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Please don't hate me but on all of my rides, road or mountain bike I have to go as fast as I can, all of the time. Even my commute is done as fast as I can. The lockout on my fork is more important to me than the travel it has.
Even on my multi day off road tours, I can't take it easy voluntarily. The slow bit comes (all too often) when I'm knackered.
I just don't enjoy 'smell the flowers, look at the view' rides. I get irritable in groups as the pace always gets slower the bigger the group and if I'm the one lagging, I really go off on one.
I like to know about head and seat angles, chain stay length, width of seat stays and design, top tube length......


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 12:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I enjoy going fast, but sometimes I make a deliberate effort to ride [i]slowly[/i] & take it all in. There's a certain pleasure in slowly climbing technical stuff...


 
Posted : 26/10/2010 1:06 pm
Posts: 41395
Free Member
Topic starter
 

monksie - Member
Please don't hate me but on all of my rides, road or mountain bike I have to go as fast as I can, all of the time.

If you really are riding to the best of your ability, the amount of training you've had should enable you to win TTS etc surely?


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 12:35 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Don't be daft, cynical. That's like saying any one of us could save up for a year, take a year off work, ride as fast as we can every day and at the end of the year, sack work and go and win prize money in professional bike racing.
A cart horse that runs round a field all day every day will never beat a race horse that runs around the same field for two hours per day.
I reckon you and me are the cart horses. Want a race? :-}


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 1:39 pm
Posts: 41395
Free Member
Topic starter
 

No way am I racing you, you must be well fast.


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 1:48 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Nah, not a word of it.


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 2:06 pm
Posts: 41395
Free Member
Topic starter
 

If you go as fast as you can on every ride you will be way fitter than me.


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 2:13 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I only ride once a month


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 2:19 pm
Posts: 129
Free Member
 

Bah! I only opened this because I though it was another diet thread..............

Fast and mtb's are not something I generally think about. I just go out and ride around 😉


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 2:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I am currently travelling at ~30km/sec. That's fast. So are you.


 
Posted : 27/10/2010 2:50 pm

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!