Wanting to give a fatbike a go.
Am a long time dedicated road biker (5k + miles annually), own a Trek Superfly aluminum 29er that I maybe put 100 miles on annually. Completely ignorant to the fat bike world, but am intrigued. Other roadies are touting the experience, especially compared to hours and hours and hours on a trainer. In the house. Over our extended Iowa winters.
55 yrs. old, 150 lbs., 34" inseam, long arms.
And so to my questions. Unless completely bitten, a fat bike will be a dedicated winter/snow ride. Have hundreds of miles of dedicated rail to trail paths at my disposal less than a mile from front door, but they haven't resulted in my 29er seeing any additional miles. Have even more miles of groomed x-country ski/snow mobile trails. Elevation gains are measured in inches, so the need for any suspension is nil.
Road bikes/components/tires have been sorted for decades. From the research I've done, your sport seems to change specs with each model year, especially dropout/hub/axle/rim/bottom bracket dimensions. How "fat" a fat tire is appears to change weekly, with re-engineering of stays/forks/hubs/drivetrain alignments close behind. 170 mm, nope - 190 mm, nope - sorry - lets go 197mm. Until Thursday.
I narrowed down my choices to a couple complete bikes. Both 150mm thru axle carbon forks (no "squish" needed or wanted), both 190 mm rears - all aluminum frames. Hubs are comparable (weak link in both from what I can see), X5/X7 drivetrains, better rims on one, better brakes on the other. I've done the upgrade thing many times with road bikes, would like to avoid with exception of cockpit/tires.
Was planning on buying one or the other this week, but with the speed of evolution going on right now in your sport, the lack of any "standard" and 2016 models on the horizon, don't want to end up with another Betamax tape player and become obsolete before the first pedal turn.
If it were your $1,500.00, what would you do?
Thanks
Am a long time dedicated road biker (5k + miles annually), own a Trek Superfly aluminum 29er that I maybe put 100 miles on annually. Completely ignorant to the fat bike world, but am intrigued. Other roadies are touting the experience, especially compared to hours and hours and hours on a trainer. In the house. Over our extended Iowa winters.
55 yrs. old, 150 lbs., 34" inseam, long arms.
And so to my questions. Unless completely bitten, a fat bike will be a dedicated winter/snow ride. Have hundreds of miles of dedicated rail to trail paths at my disposal less than a mile from front door, but they haven't resulted in my 29er seeing any additional miles. Have even more miles of groomed x-country ski/snow mobile trails. Elevation gains are measured in inches, so the need for any suspension is nil.
Road bikes/components/tires have been sorted for decades. From the research I've done, your sport seems to change specs with each model year, especially dropout/hub/axle/rim/bottom bracket dimensions. How "fat" a fat tire is appears to change weekly, with re-engineering of stays/forks/hubs/drivetrain alignments close behind. 170 mm, nope - 190 mm, nope - sorry - lets go 197mm. Until Thursday.
I narrowed down my choices to a couple complete bikes. Both 150mm thru axle carbon forks (no "squish" needed or wanted), both 190 mm rears - all aluminum frames. Hubs are comparable (weak link in both from what I can see), X5/X7 drivetrains, better rims on one, better brakes on the other. I've done the upgrade thing many times with road bikes, would like to avoid with exception of cockpit/tires.
Was planning on buying one or the other this week, but with the speed of evolution going on right now in your sport, the lack of any "standard" and 2016 models on the horizon, don't want to end up with another Betamax tape player and become obsolete before the first pedal turn.
If it were your $1,500.00, what would you do?
Thanks