#46
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This is what I’d lean toward if I were hard tail shopping. Light and xc-ish. I’ve no interest in big chunk on a hard tail, just big climbs and big long rides.
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#47
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Totally depends on terrain. I never ride downhill, always XC, so for me, weight was the main criterion. Wanted carbon, ended up with 853 and couldn't be happier. I think it has a 71 HTA, so very unfashionable. Works great.
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#48
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The current Epic hardtail comes from the same frame molds as the former S-Works frame but it uses less expensive carbon fiber sheets that is more durable but also weighs a little more. It's still very light though.
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#49
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I have a 2021 Steel Kona Honzo, I find it significantly more confidence inspiring than any steel hardtail I've had before. I reach for it over my Stumpjumper more than half the time, sometimes I forget I'm not on a f/s bike.
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#50
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Definitely watch Steve's HT party videoos on YouTube.
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#51
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Quote:
Thinking ahead to next season, and this is bubbling to the top of the list for a do-it-all, mostly gravel, but trail-capable bike. A mix of bike-packing (usually 3-4 day), local suburban trail (mostly green, some blue), etc. I have an older Niner Sir9 that fills this niche today, but it's usually set-up single speed. Plus, it's not boost (so no wheel swaps with my Fuel). Could go two directions with a build... more gravel/bikepacking focused, with a carbon fork and Force XPLR drivetrain (but with flat bar AXS pods). Or, a normal mid-grade mountain build (SID or SC fork, GX Transmission drivetrain). |
#52
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Quote:
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#53
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I demo'ed an HBSL on a 30 mile route of fire roads around Mt. Tam this weekend and had an absolute blast. Really lightweight and zippy, turns on a time and descends really playfully.
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#54
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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
#55
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I also considered the Fairlight Holt, but I'm sort of at a point where I want a "forever" bike. I've been really happy with the Niner Sir 9 (circa 2015, pre-major redesign), and mostly just want a newer, lighter, "better" version. Custom steel would be another option. Maybe from Manzanita - his super lightweight build from a year or two ago would be right up my alley too. |
#56
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Yes, there are hardtails that can run a 180mm fork. No, most riders have no need for those bikes bike (nor a FS bike with 180mm, for that matter). Most people live near trails in rolling terrain and don't hit the sorts of speeds a bike with a 62 degree HTA thrive at. A bike like that is fantastic in wide-open terrain at high speeds, and a pig everywhere else. The earlier recommendation of a Ibis DV9 is really solid. Slack enough to be fun on DH, can still climb well, and just fine on average trails. Light enough to be manageable. A great all-rounder, as are most XC/DC bikes now. |
#57
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Go custom and get a Built HT. You will not be disappointed.
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