I'm curious to hear what Salsa owners/others think of the Split Pivot Suspension system: efficient, pedal bob, etc.
For the pedaling to compress the suspension, the AS would need to be below 0. So if you're AS is 60%, the bob is still from weight shift. Right? My complaint just has to do with pedal strikes. I can't enjoy myself with a 60% AS bike going up a rocky hill having to be so careful about ramming a pedal into a rock. ugh.So anyways, on many of these bikes that had low AS, you had a significant amount of power being robbed by the pedaling forces compressing the suspension. Putting the power down on a steep climb didn't seem to make the bike move forward by an expected amount. When riding the higher AS bikes, this was a bit of a revelation, pedaling harder would make you go measurably faster, instead of bogging down. So my point is there's a lot more to it than the "visual bob". If one can get past that, it leads to a lot more bike-enjoyment IME too.
Seeing as the load transfer is trying to rotate the sprung mass of the bike and rider, if your anti-squat percentage is 100% then the anti-squat forces exactly balance out the tendency of the suspension to squat under the load transfer from acceleration and the net result is that there is no suspension compression or extension.
If the anti-squat force line crosses the front axle line at the ground, we can call this 0%, as none of the tendency to squat is counteracted and the suspension compresses solely due to the load transfer.
Crossing the front contact patch line half way between 100% and 0% results in 50% anti-squat and half of the force needed to combat the squat tendencies is combatted. The net result being some suspension compression, but not as much as if we had 0%.
Going under 0% the anti-squat forces actually work with the suspension compression caused by load transfer and put us in a pro-squat zone. In this region the suspension will compress further than at 0% with the help of the pro-squat forces.
Read the end of the paragraph and you'll understand.I thought 100% was that the extending force was at balance with the estimated weight shift. Below 0% is actual compressive force from the chain.
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Enginerding: What Is Anti-Squat & How Does It Actually Affect Mountain Bike Performance? - Pinkbike
Put on those thinking caps and get ready for a deep dive, complete with illustrations, into the definition of anti-squat.www.pinkbike.com