Everyone Wants The Do It All Bike... But Does It Exist? | GMBN Tech Show 341

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 217

  • @gmbntech
    @gmbntech  Месяц назад +4

    Are you searching for the do-it-all bike, or do you want bike that does one thing well? - How many different segments of mountain bike niche can you count, what are they?

    • @h1u2h3n
      @h1u2h3n Месяц назад +2

      depends on personal needs and preferences. most bikes i'd say can "do it all" to a certain degree just with differences in performance of course. the most versatile bikes imo if you go from road to trail would be a fully xc with different sets of tyres and suspension lockout.

    • @willlange9978
      @willlange9978 Месяц назад +1

      Rampage bikes will never race XCO or vice versa, but… my Zerode does pretty much everything I do. 140/150 climbing and descending local trails or 160/170 ripping at a bike park. It’s terrible for XC, but so am I.

    • @KJS711
      @KJS711 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@willlange9978How's the gearbox treating you??

    • @semadragun
      @semadragun Месяц назад +2

      I have an FS Enduro/All Mountain, 150 front and rear and for me it's the do it all bike...but the RIDER makes a big difference also. 😁

    • @elrictdb
      @elrictdb Месяц назад +1

      I had a choice between the Whyte T-140 and E-160 and I plumped for the T-140 as the majority of rides would be with my family on easy stuff. It was definitely a compromise as I would have preferred a lightweight xc bike for with the family and an enduro bike for out with the boys.

  • @hartshorn95
    @hartshorn95 Месяц назад +14

    For me a do it all bike is a bike for people who aren't racing, its a trail/ all mountain bike, a bike you pull out the shed and go riding wherever and whenever you want.

  • @bradvdb4136
    @bradvdb4136 Месяц назад +16

    All I need is one summer bike and one winter bike. Normal people that work for a living and have to pay for life can't afford to have a bike for every situation. I have a bike that is suited to the trails I ride and the state I live in, why would I want a down hill/enduro bike if I have no trails around me that support it and I don't race. All I want to do is go out and have fun!

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +3

      I completely agree - Getting out and having fun on the bike is the key!
      Cheers
      Owen

    • @edwardcook23
      @edwardcook23 Месяц назад +2

      Where I live an Enduro bike or dh bike doesn't make much sense. I have a bike park 4 hours away. And one set of trails that actually make use of an Enduro bike. Other than that a 140/130 trail bike is all I need for all the trails around me.

    • @paulgrimshaw8334
      @paulgrimshaw8334 Месяц назад +1

      Racing bike, road bike, track bike, crit bike, city bike, hybrid bike, gravel bike, downhill bike, mountain bike, trail bike, cargo bike, fat bike. That’s 12 bikes marketed to separate segments, not counting e-bikes.
      Pros and really talented riders might participate in one or two categories and excel. Ordinary people make do with one or two… usually something in the middle. The others put OCD on full display in the hope of impressing people on social media… as if the ability of transferring a pay check to bike companies indicates something other than the fact that they’ll be working forever.

  • @Shawn-in-da-Canyon
    @Shawn-in-da-Canyon Месяц назад +6

    This is what I want: 120/120 travel, 64°ish head angle, 77°ish seat tube, with a roomy cockpit and a high stack. And no more than 26.5 pounds.

  • @Blaake44
    @Blaake44 Месяц назад +3

    My 1 “do it all bike” is a 180mm canyon torque 😂 geeeet up 💪

  • @tedmanner1086
    @tedmanner1086 Месяц назад +8

    Trek Fuel EX 8 Gen 5 does it all capably - trail being its specialty with XC and light gravity at the extremes.

    • @drpaulmartin
      @drpaulmartin Месяц назад +1

      agree. Have tuned the forks and changed the shock... but a solid ride

  • @rustychain9518
    @rustychain9518 Месяц назад +3

    My Trek Gen 6 Fuel EX is as close to a do it all bike(XC, Trail, Downhill) as I think you can get...lots of compromises but it works well enough for all the types of riding I do.

  • @noelbodle8863
    @noelbodle8863 Месяц назад +4

    I’ve got a Transition Spur and loving it’s versatility it has to be the closest I’ve had to that do it all bike. I’ve built it pretty light with some carbon wheels and it just flies, not only that it is also very capable and constantly surprising me what it can ride. I never feel over biked or under biked wherever I’ve taken it. A well designed 120mm 29er is probably all that most people would really need in the UK to be honest.

  • @ItsATrap614
    @ItsATrap614 Месяц назад +4

    I think the modern short travel agressive trail bikes with their slack headangles and steep seat angles are about as close to a "do it all bike" as one can get. Very stable and confidence inspiring but still light enough for long rides or long or technical climbs. My Giant Trance with 130/120 travel and a 65 degree headangle is a good example, I use it for everything from XC rides to uplift days at the bike park and the bike takes it all in it's stride!

    • @stanmustard7292
      @stanmustard7292 Месяц назад +1

      I agree...long travel is overrated, my 130/120 Niner Jet can easily handle anything I want to ride, and I never get left behind. Up OR down.

  • @dadventuretv2538
    @dadventuretv2538 Месяц назад +2

    Unless you are racing at the highest levels, you don’t need all these bikes. One, maybe two will suffice. If you want lots of bikes, hey go for it, but they are not necessary.
    Just to piss everyone off I’ll say it- the best do it all bike is a big enduro style, beefy built Class 1 emtb. The motor means you can build it as burly as necessary with the geo to match to hit the steepest, gnarliest trails, but the motor means it will still be a hoot on more mellow stuff. And properly designed they will still soar like an eagle.
    For non racers, your typical 65ish degree HTA with anywhere from 120-150 rear travel and 130-160 front travel (or even a hardtail) (whether full 29er, full 27.5 or mullet) can do everything- it might be a bit slower on XC stuff and not give you as much safety net on the more extreme stuff, but it can still do even that stuff. If you find yourself constantly blaming your bike, or saying “if only I had ____ I could do that,” then the truth is that it’s probably not the bike but you.
    Bottom line- if you want a do it all bike, work on your skills. Better skills will allow you to do more with any bike than poor skills and multiple bikes ever will.

  • @Gamerhog2022
    @Gamerhog2022 Месяц назад +3

    I do blue/green trails and bike packing. The hard tail I have suits my needs for now. My transmission can probably use a good upgrade, I’m also thinking about going tubeless. Lots of parts to collect and switch out lol.

  • @ogmr.c3714
    @ogmr.c3714 Месяц назад +1

    I have a 2022 Stance 29er full suspension trail bike with 120/130 travel. I've swapped out the handlebars, grips, dropper post lever (all PNW components) and tires, went from Forekasters EXO (F&R) to Dissector DD (R) DHR II DD (F). The bike performs amazing on all the trails, it's even impressed other riders I met on the trails with $5,000+ dollar bikes that it can do the same trails/lines they ride. The best thing I like about it is that I didn't go into debt financing the bike with a credit card company which makes it even better.

  • @rethridermtb3262
    @rethridermtb3262 Месяц назад +1

    I have more bikes than I ever thought I would: gravel, road, tandem road, xc hardtail, trail hardtail, full suspension trail, full suspension enduro, and fat bike. All accumulated over several decades of riding.

  • @drahoslavhorvath
    @drahoslavhorvath Месяц назад +2

    I have only one bike... actualy ebike... Trek Rail 9.7. I am using it for riding with my daughter with kids shotgun pro (gravel / light trail) and it is also use for trail / all mountain / enduro when I am alone. It can cover all :-)

  • @seano218
    @seano218 Месяц назад +6

    One bike to rule them all? 27.5 hardtail, get your skillset on and you're good for anything!
    Btw GMBN, we are not racers like you guys/gals... we don't care about our times, we care about having fun!

  • @DavidSinanan
    @DavidSinanan Месяц назад +2

    I'm just getting back into it now. I've only got/can afford one bike right now, but I'm pretty happy with it. It suits my purposes well enough. I got a new 2022 Specialized Stumpjumper Alloy S3 on a killer sale in 2024. I have my qualms with the shifting, but otherwise I'm loving it. And having been out of the saddle for 15 years, and just getting back in? I'm going to give it a while before i even consider changing anything.
    My bike is a decent Jack-of-all-Trades for trail related, but it is certainly not for roads if you're looking for speed. Great for exercise, just not speed on flats. It's very agile and I'm happy with the travel, suspension lock-outs and brakes...now I just gotta get some conditioning back and get on some real trails.

  •  Месяц назад +3

    I had only one bike 15 years ago. Hard tail 26" Scott Yecora with idk 60mm of travel. Now it's different, I personally own 4 (DJ, XC, Enduro, E-Enduro). Depending on the use, I grab the bike that fits. Either pump track, short/long ride out at home, bike park with or w/o uplift. It all depends on circumstances I suppose.

    • @seano218
      @seano218 Месяц назад +1

      And your mood!

  • @davidtomasetti8520
    @davidtomasetti8520 Месяц назад +4

    My do it all bike is ironically my Specialized Turbo Levo. It can handle everything from any mountain trail I'd ever ride to bombing through the city streets. all the while keeping a giant smile on my face!!.

  • @jonnypennell2428
    @jonnypennell2428 Месяц назад +3

    One bike can do it all, just not be the fastest at everything

  • @spacedoutboy404
    @spacedoutboy404 Месяц назад

    I built up a We Are Arrival with intend suspension. It’s set up as 130/140mm, but with the removal of some spacers I get 140/150. And if I change the linkage and remove more spacers from the fork, it’s 152/160. That’s versatility!

  • @ianbrown2336
    @ianbrown2336 Месяц назад +2

    My first full suspension was a gary fisher sugar 4+

  • @frankharradence5546
    @frankharradence5546 Месяц назад +1

    Yep one main bike an AM. 130 Atherton does everything I need in my riding, a mixture of xc/trails occasional Bike Park.
    Do have my owned from new but much upgraded components 1998 Kona Kilauea… that I ride from time to time just for that 1990’s feel.

  • @Brendan95902
    @Brendan95902 Месяц назад

    My pimped 2022 alloy Specialized Stumpjumper is my do it all bike. At my level of riding, it does everything I need it to do, and it does not affect me negatively if people on much lighter bikes can leave me in the dust. It is solid enough that I doubt that I could extend it beyond its design brief.

  • @VFXBishop
    @VFXBishop Месяц назад +2

    I think I'd rather just have a slightly heavier hardtail that I could XC and All Mountain on with different wheelsets. THOUGH I do appreciate the idea that a bike can be modular and easily modified to suit the ride of the day.

  • @monstermini225
    @monstermini225 Месяц назад +2

    I have a Very modded 2024 alloy stumpjumper with 160mm fork. It now has evo / 15 geo, it bombs down the hills i ride, it can climb back to the top.
    It can do just about everything an xc - enduro will.
    I have a gravel bike for pavement and mixed gravel and smoother dirt trails.

  • @saml8119
    @saml8119 Месяц назад

    I feel like a modern 140mm trail bike can now do most things. Obviously not at a competitive level but it can get by in most categories. No way I’m going through the trouble to change a bunch of stuff. I don’t even mess with flip chips. Set it to where it feels best and then I forget about it

  • @jmeyer61
    @jmeyer61 Месяц назад +1

    Already have the GeoMetron G1 (the first iteration), but that Nicolai version with Pinion and belt drive looks amazing.

  • @Dan-xo9ly
    @Dan-xo9ly Месяц назад +4

    Being able to afford more than one bike is for many people impossible. So no wonder that people would want the most versatile bike possible.

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +2

      Agreed versatile is key - would you want a bike that you change for different days out - switching wheels and or links or even shocks out to have one bike to do it all - but with some changes?
      Cheers
      Owen

    • @89winslow
      @89winslow Месяц назад

      ​@@OwenBikeNerdunfortunately this would all add a rather large cost to an already costly bike?

    • @davidmalakoff147
      @davidmalakoff147 Месяц назад +1

      @@OwenBikeNerd I have a Giant Trance 29, 120 Rear and 140 front suspension. It is my do it all bike. I sold my SC Chameleon, my Scott Genius and kept this. I have 3 sets of wheels. 1 for more aggressive trail; 30 mm ID and heavier, knobby tires. Number 2 are a set of carbon 25 mm ID with Vitorria Bazro's for more XCish mellow flow trails. The other is an older set of 22 mm ID carbon wheels with gravel tires for the 4-5 times a year I ride gravel. Added up still cheaper than 1 more bike.

  • @grummbeerbauer3527
    @grummbeerbauer3527 Месяц назад +1

    If you are anything near serious about biking you need (at least!) a second bike for redundancy. In the two years after starting with MTBing on a rather cheap XC alloy bike, I often was waiting for spare parts or a timeslot in the local bike shop to get that one bike fixed. Missed many opportunities to go riding that way. That alone was reason enough to get a 2nd bike (trail fullsusser), and it allows me to start train my bike handing skills on more challenging trails.

  • @Superteastain
    @Superteastain Месяц назад +1

    I have Gen 5 Top Fuel thats maybe 5? years old. It shreds. I call it my BMX. It's not too hot on super gnar but down country its awesome.

  • @krishollyman143
    @krishollyman143 Месяц назад +1

    just have the one bike ,a jamis faultline 2 ,i dont actually know what class it is ,i just know it suits me fine for the small amount of riding i do

  • @jameskelly9522
    @jameskelly9522 Месяц назад +1

    My Intense Sniper T has filled a lot of categories for me.

  • @ish474
    @ish474 Месяц назад +1

    My stumpy can do it all but I still have other more focused bikes. However, i can take it anywhere and get by while still having fun. I run it 160/160 but stayed with a 36 instead of a 38 and I have 2 different wheelsets for more mellow or DH use

  • @DirtlovR
    @DirtlovR Месяц назад +1

    I think the era of many bike genres comes to an end thanks to the crisis in the industry. We can already see that brands shrink their lineup in favour of adjustability.

  • @DatPenguin97
    @DatPenguin97 Месяц назад +1

    I think one of these gravity oriented do-it-all bikes would be noce to do local mellower stuff and change it to the bigger configuration for the semi regular bike park visit

  • @johnnykramolis7469
    @johnnykramolis7469 Месяц назад +2

    Trail hardtail 🤘😀

  • @ElveZ83
    @ElveZ83 Месяц назад +1

    Had an xc hardtail (Giant sth): broke
    XC Fully (Specialized Rockhopper): broke
    Allround fully (Winora sth): broke
    Freeride (100mm front 120mm back in 1999 was freeride...) fully (Haibike Haiend 2): blew 2 RockShox coil shocks on that but i still have it today (and en e-enduro - propain ekano 2 al - not broken 😅 till now)
    Verdict: if you go hard, get more bike. 🎉

  • @francisdee9955
    @francisdee9955 Месяц назад +3

    One hardtail, commencal meta ht, for light riding and one enduro rig for the rest. nukeproof mega

    • @gmbntech
      @gmbntech  Месяц назад

      What would you consider light riding?

    • @francisdee9955
      @francisdee9955 Месяц назад

      @@gmbntech Not too technical. Not too rough.

  • @jpauldion
    @jpauldion Месяц назад

    Built up 2 older bikes, but still quite capable and they cover all the bases for me. GT Zaskar 9r 100/120 for XC. Trek Fuel EX 130/140 for trail and even crosses into enduro and DH to a degree. Between the 2 bikes I can ride all the terrain and even bike parks without thinking of another bike to fill the gap. Some can get by just fine with a 120/130 trail bike too.

  • @rottieshepcalibre9156
    @rottieshepcalibre9156 Месяц назад +2

    I would race xc on an enduro bike. Enduro is my only bike. And an old 26” for donkey rides to the shop

  • @lionelwagner472
    @lionelwagner472 Месяц назад +3

    For me the do it all bike would be the scott genius (ST) it has 160/150 mm of travel, the twin lock system allows you to switch from full travel to just 100mm front and rear or full lockout
    So you can ride anything from gravel to some enduro or bike park

    • @gmbntech
      @gmbntech  Месяц назад +2

      Do you ride it on jumps as well?

    • @lionelwagner472
      @lionelwagner472 Месяц назад +1

      @@gmbntech yeah, but mostly on bike park jumps, not on strict dj jumps where you can’t really get through with longer bikes.

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +2

      Orbea Occam SL is pretty similar - 140/140 with Squidlock remote for the fork and shock - and Light too...

    • @zooromain
      @zooromain Месяц назад

      I just lock out the front and rear on my 275 revel rail. Have another wheel set with slick tires.

  • @fudganuld
    @fudganuld Месяц назад +1

    My Ragley BluePigRace is defo a Do-It-All bike...Ha!!

  • @lifetimemtb1671
    @lifetimemtb1671 Месяц назад

    A Enduro Bike is a do it all bike in my opinion. I‘ve done XC weekend rides with my dad who is riding a canyon lux for xc. We‘ve done 2500m of climbing per day twi days in a row and next weekend I went to Leogang for 2 days.
    For normal riders a Enduro Bike is all you need

  • @pidgeon4813
    @pidgeon4813 Месяц назад +1

    My gt zaskar Hardtail is used for xc,enduro, and has a second set of wheels for bikepacking

  • @johnssmith4005
    @johnssmith4005 Месяц назад +1

    I'm with Doddy on this subject Trail bikes at the sweetest spot there is

  • @heywood165
    @heywood165 Месяц назад

    Guerrilla Gravity (rip) were the first brand I noticed that made each of their models modifiable into a longer/shorter travel version to suit the type of riding you wanted to do. Yeah, other brands have easier and cheaper ways of doing it, but GG bikes allowed you to go from 125mm all the way up to 170mm rear suspension whereas other brands only differ 10 to 30 millimetres.

  • @keelangerken5154
    @keelangerken5154 Месяц назад

    The outgoing 2023 RM Altitude with the Ride9 has been my goldilocks bike handling everything from 15-20mile xc rides to double black dh trails. A few friends have done the same with Ibis Ripmo/Mojo HD. Canyon spectral, and Specialized stumpy Evo/Enduro

  • @johnsonjae
    @johnsonjae Месяц назад

    We used to hit the gnarliest trails on rigid MTBs in the 90s. The idea of suspension blew our minds. We had to ride the same bike home on the pavement at the end of the day. I think Full sus bikes are awesome, but personally I feel like they are too specialized for a do it all bike. To me, the do it all bike has to be equally at home doing 100 miles of pavement and ripping down a double black diamond trail. While I would love to have the money and space for a bike for each type of riding, that is not my reality. My do it all bikes are my gravel and hardtail XC bikes. A XC with drop bars, or gravel with 100mm of travel up front would be pretty versatile. I feel like the industry has gone away from do it all bikes, because too many people want a bike specific for the discipline that appeals most to them. For some, that is road, some gravel, some hard tail XC, and some full sus/DH. Do it all bikes exist, most people just don't want to take them to the trails if they have the money for something more specific. There is also a big divide between being competitive in a discipline, and capability. "I wouldn't want to" as Anna said.

  • @MonsterdonMTB
    @MonsterdonMTB Месяц назад +4

    That G1 is way better than you described. It's designed as an enduro bike with a 180/170mm fork and 162 or 175mm on the rear, just flip the chip and change the shock progression and travel. Their mutators adjust chain stay length and BB height independently, no need for a new linkage like you said.
    To change travel all you need to do is change the shock (and matching fork) and then you can alter the BB height to suit, super simple job to do. In short mode the travel is 142/155mm and in long it's 182/200mm.
    I think it's overlooked how insane having all that in one bike is. For most people you can have an enduro bike that can be set up specifically for your body and riding style. Buy an extra fork and shock and you have a dh bike ready for your annual Alps trip or bikepark weekend after an hour in the garage. The same is true if you want to rally with shorter travel.
    Then you factor in the quality and durability of the handmade frames with properly sealed bearings ready for all 4 seasons of the UK winter with arguably the best customer service and geometry in the industry. Best bit its a bike they want you to keep and grow with for years, not replace with next year's colour way and I think the industry needs more of that eco minded, consumer friendly mentality

    • @MonsterdonMTB
      @MonsterdonMTB Месяц назад +2

      Also a wheel/tyre swap makes a huge difference to how your bike rides. Enduro/trail bike with a light, fast rolling trail set and sticky downhill set has been my go-to for years now. Unsurprisingly a G1 is next on my list.

  • @Mark-pk1fm
    @Mark-pk1fm Месяц назад +6

    In reality for most of us we find a bike that is the ‘do it all bike’ but if money and space was no object we’d all have 5 bikes each ✌🏼😁

    • @IvanPrskalo
      @IvanPrskalo Месяц назад +2

      Well, that second part happened to me... From Specialized Epic FSR i went to Stumpjumper FSR... Then I opened my law firm, gained some money and now I have gravel, eBike, all mountain bike (can't call it enduro since is 170 front and 140 rear, set up as mullet), and then I have steal framed hardtail with 150mm travel fork, then one cross country hard tail wit 100mm fork, and in the end, yes I do have roadie Scott Speedster just in case... 🙄 🙄 🙄

    • @stevesullivan9377
      @stevesullivan9377 Месяц назад +1

      5? Is that all? I’ve got 3 and can justify at least another 3. Well I can justify it to myself. Other people take more convincing.

  • @emir5034
    @emir5034 Месяц назад

    Yes guys it exists!!!! Its called BANSHEE PARADOX V3!!!! If u spec it rightly, u'll never need ANY other bike, for most of the riders.

  • @KlintonSilvey
    @KlintonSilvey Месяц назад +2

    I would love a 24lb bike with 170mm of travel and no pedal bob that won't break no matter what I do. That would do it!

    • @MonsterdonMTB
      @MonsterdonMTB Месяц назад +1

      Sounds like you need a Geometron

    • @KlintonSilvey
      @KlintonSilvey Месяц назад

      @@MonsterdonMTB methinks you missed the weight part. (Not to mention wheels/tires)

  • @RayHarmon
    @RayHarmon 29 дней назад

    I ride a Transition Patrol everywhere. I have not had a need for another mountain bike. I would like a gravel bike and just be a two bike quiver. There are some others I'd enjoy for racing but I'm okay with one to do downhill to XC. I like being on one bike. I like working on one bike.

  • @iraklichargeishvili6820
    @iraklichargeishvili6820 Месяц назад

    you missed hardtail bikes :D with 140-150 mm travel, 2.3-2.8 mm tyres, dropper post and so on... not for racing of course but you can still race for fun. you can do bikepacking, enduro/downhill tracks, dirt jumping, bikeparks, gravel/roads... but with limitations. if you want to be best in one category, buy bike that is built for that.

  • @Cassie_MTB
    @Cassie_MTB Месяц назад +2

    I've got my personal do-it-all-Bike last year. A Nicolai Argon GAM Pinion. Aggressive Hardtail, able to go down (much better than me), go up, go in the air, go on long distances and even with a lot of Bikepacking gear. I just have a second Wheelset to switch between asphalt/fire road and the gnarly stuff. Sold my Full-Sus and will sell my Gravel in the near future, because the Nicolai does anything.

  • @hancokleynhans5561
    @hancokleynhans5561 Месяц назад

    Looking for a do it all? The Pyga Hp4 high pivot can change from 150mm to 190mm of rear travel by just changing shock length...

  • @joelbrownlee-cervantes6474
    @joelbrownlee-cervantes6474 Месяц назад +1

    My Ibis Ripley AF 120/140 with 30mm wheels can do XC riding fine and can handle some spice when the going gets down. My one bike is lonely though. It needs a stable mate. Just dont know if its a "bigger" bike or "smaller" bike

  • @nath_tayl0rr
    @nath_tayl0rr Месяц назад

    2:34 I think of you like mtb you should have a trail, and a DH or enduro depending on preference, if you want more cardio rides then get a gravel bike also. I don’t think you need a 5-6 different bikes. It would be nice but unnecessary, in my opinion

  • @philiprayner
    @philiprayner Месяц назад +2

    the only problem is the bike world forgets that not all riders can afford a more than one bike and to get the one bike that does it all the bike shops and ridding groups tell you you have to have the most expensive bike and equipment

    • @fearless144
      @fearless144 Месяц назад +1

      @@philiprayner I completely agree with you speaking facts 🗣️💯.

    • @feedbackzaloop
      @feedbackzaloop Месяц назад +1

      I think you are putting a horse before the cart: for a price of one modern do-it-all adjustable bike you can get two-three "outdated" bikes it is supposed to replace.

    • @MonsterdonMTB
      @MonsterdonMTB Месяц назад +1

      Pedalable Enduro bikes that can be easily converted to DH for bikepark trips for the win! Also bring back user adjustable fork travel

  • @TreddyCS
    @TreddyCS Месяц назад +1

    Just getting back into riding, lost almost 140lbs over the last 2 years! Would a modern hardtail not be the do it all? Like they’ve came out with gravel bikes that are just 90s mountain bikes😅 and I know some stuff is pretty gnarly, but you just clip in and go fast!

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +2

      Welcome back to riding - bikes are awesome right?
      Modern Hardtails - agreed are supremely versatile - and depending on where you live and what trails you ride - of course they can be the one bike! but then some of the new shorter travel trail bikes can be great too...
      Again welcome back to riding!
      Cheers
      Owen

  • @lelev760
    @lelev760 Месяц назад

    You forgot hardtail and mullet segments of segments!

  • @MastaShredduh
    @MastaShredduh Месяц назад +1

    Did Anna really pronounce it “Ah Dee Daas” it’s “uh Dee duhs” glad that’s cleared up. :)

    • @willlange9978
      @willlange9978 Месяц назад +1

      All Day I Dream About Singletrack.

  • @IvanPrskalo
    @IvanPrskalo Месяц назад

    To me, one bike to to it all would be something like Santa Cruz Tallboy or Revel Ranger..

  • @sprungmass
    @sprungmass Месяц назад +1

    Too many adjustments are a marketing gimmick for 99% of the riders. Most people don't touch any adjustments and ride the bike stock. Even if they do, they can't discern the difference between these small adjustments. Stumpjumper Evo is a prime example.

  • @nathancole8103
    @nathancole8103 Месяц назад

    If I won the lottery, I can think of 5 or 6 bikes I would buy immediately!

  • @GrahamFootBicycleLover
    @GrahamFootBicycleLover Месяц назад +2

    I know, you know what I'm going to say... When I through a leg over a Fatbike, my world changed. It does everything. Obviously its not a full sus downhill monster but it can cope with most trails and keep up. It can do XC/Enduro/trials/singletrack like a beast/bikepacking/touring... the list goes on and its simple. Very low maintenance. ok, Come join me guys. See you in FoD. I'll get my coat.

  • @Shawn-in-da-Canyon
    @Shawn-in-da-Canyon Месяц назад

    Kona was originally founded in Vancouver, BC. Their headquarters are in Washington.

  • @niner8tangojuliet149
    @niner8tangojuliet149 Месяц назад +1

    I put drop bars on my downhill bike with a GRX group and swapped out the 2.8s for some 38mm cross tires. It does everything. Poorly.

  • @NoCoBandit
    @NoCoBandit Месяц назад

    Latest gen of the YT Jeffsy in a XXL for my 6'5" self. The only qualm I have is thay the wheels deflect way too much to inspire much confidence in them. Then again...I am a VERY long time BMXer and am used to/prefer very responsive/stiff wheels

  • @peterschleibach7533
    @peterschleibach7533 Месяц назад +3

    I need two Bikes: A multiple Speed dirtbike for dirt, 4x and pumptrack and a uphill friendly Enduro Like a Tyee for everything else.

  • @richardeldridge5170
    @richardeldridge5170 Месяц назад

    Could add ‘dirt/jump’ bike and ‘slope style’ bike 🤷‍♂️

  • @sled5196
    @sled5196 Месяц назад +2

    My Trek Fuel EXe does 90% of my riding. I have it beefed up with a bigger fork and shock so i can ride park and enduro/light downhill type riding, I also take it cross country riding comfortably as the battery assist more the makes up for my lack of fitness, and I can up the power to give the ride a bit more thrill if the ride is starting to get a bit stale. Only exception is when I do proper downhill riding, I have to load up the purpose built DH bike.

  • @garrylovell3472
    @garrylovell3472 Месяц назад

    One bike I feel depends where you like riding plus your ability so bike brands could offer biulds that can suit at least two styles you like and can help you achieve it as components, tyers and types of suspension mix can change a bike? 😮😊

  • @TivonSanders
    @TivonSanders Месяц назад

    Have we gotten so used to mountain bikes being as expensive as some cheap used cars, that Anna has to say that the price of the entry level new gen Trek Fuel is for the whole bike and not frame only? If so, that's really worrisome.

  • @jdjones752
    @jdjones752 Месяц назад

    Kona originally from BC Canada

  • @andymakarewich
    @andymakarewich Месяц назад

    Kona bikes are from Washington state BUT were founded in Vancouver BC

  • @davidhollingsworth5163
    @davidhollingsworth5163 Месяц назад

    Kona is from Washington

  • @ParrishJamesTV
    @ParrishJamesTV Месяц назад

    Fuel ex gen 5 140mm. Ex8 Best Value

  • @Underdoglemon
    @Underdoglemon Месяц назад +2

    I guess you forgot dirt/slopestyle and Trial bikes

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +2

      true true - I missed Fat bikes too -
      Cheers
      Owen

    • @Underdoglemon
      @Underdoglemon Месяц назад +1

      @@OwenBikeNerd Your welcome, been loving the job you did covering eurobike recently!

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад

      @@Underdoglemon oh gee thank you - it was awesome - so, so, so many new bikes and kit to see - hopefully the videos shared my energy!
      Which was your favourite bike from the show?
      Cheers
      Owen

    • @Underdoglemon
      @Underdoglemon Месяц назад +1

      @@OwenBikeNerd Loved everything nicolai did and the very creative dangerholm bikes. I've been a fan of his instagram for ages, so seeing those in the flesh was amazing. Sadly I didnt have too much time for going around as we had our own booth in the startup area

  • @LaurentiusTriarius
    @LaurentiusTriarius Месяц назад

    That spicy has Brian Cahal written all over it...

  • @exothermal.sprocket
    @exothermal.sprocket Месяц назад +1

    I think most people could do well with 2 bicycles to cover most things, or 3 at the most.
    -Full suspension trail bike with about a 150 to 160 travel. Mountain trail, steeps, jumps, some XC use.
    -Hard tail bike for trail, street, gravel, backpacking with 100-120 front travel. Do everything, durable, not particularly optimized for anything particular.
    -Street/pavement bike with drop bars, carbon fork (or damping system), focus on light weight and rolling efficiency.
    Pick your above category, or two, or three.
    All the other bikes on the market are pretty specialized bikes that go beyond the above list, or focus on jump/park riding, racing, DH, or something else most people are just not going to do.

  • @thisisabsolutelystup
    @thisisabsolutelystup Месяц назад

    The do it all bike is the older cheaper one you reach for every time you think the new one will get damaged / dirty / stolen

  • @user-ck1ke5vx9w
    @user-ck1ke5vx9w Месяц назад

    My orange stage evo does everything I can manage

  • @AlexAlex-oz4de
    @AlexAlex-oz4de Месяц назад

    #quiz kona was founded in british colombia i think

  • @Kjell0908
    @Kjell0908 Месяц назад

    I really only need one bike I have trek Remedy 9 and I do basically everything with it do long rides more in the realm of Xc but I also do downhill in bikeparks with lifts and I never felt that the bike was holding me back but to be honest sometimes in some downhill situations I wish the suspension was a bit better.

  • @simoto9009
    @simoto9009 13 дней назад

    Speccy gen 3 Levo pro. Trail side geo changes and its own shuttle! Now that’s what I call “do it all” just saying.

  • @bastig.5690
    @bastig.5690 Месяц назад

    Shapeshifter❤

  • @user-ku3gn5mh6q
    @user-ku3gn5mh6q Месяц назад

    Yeah have a trail bike
    Does most of what I need

  • @lufbraroots
    @lufbraroots Месяц назад

    Big heavy enduro bike (privateer 161) with downhill tyres setup mullet handles everything i can throw at it i do still have the 29” rear wheel setup with a lighter casing tyre for more xc rides however if im riding im climbing and descending off road i have no interest whatsover in riding gravel paths 😴

  • @andyarchitect
    @andyarchitect Месяц назад

    Just get a trail bike... its a jack of all trades 😊 will suit 90% of riders for 90% of the time... well something close to that.

  • @yetifanuk
    @yetifanuk Месяц назад

    Specialized Kenevo does it all.

  • @JeffMTBinVA
    @JeffMTBinVA Месяц назад

    I have two bikes, HT and a 150/140 full sus that I ride exclusively now and have used it for everything since getting it. The one bike that does it all leads to a question I've been trying to get answered, for an average rider at a downhill bike park is a super enduro good enough or should you really go with a dh bike? This will be my next bike down the road.

  • @MrT08031970
    @MrT08031970 Месяц назад

    I think if your budget allows it ofcourse you can buy multiple bikes, most important is that you have fun even if it is on a do it all bike. 😁(Kona is from Vancouver)

    • @gmbntech
      @gmbntech  Месяц назад

      Totally! What bike are you riding at the moment?

    • @MrT08031970
      @MrT08031970 Месяц назад

      @@gmbntech I own a 2013 epic comp carbon and a stumpjumper fsr also 2013 still use both 😁(the new 2025 stumpjumper looks very nice)

  • @Seppster58
    @Seppster58 Месяц назад

    #QUIZ Kona Bikes founded in Vancouver B.C. Canada and established their headquarters in Washington state.

  • @billderas3420
    @billderas3420 Месяц назад

    #askgmbntech What about the new Ibis Ripley and Ripon bikes? Ripley is getting more trail-ish. Looking pretty kewl.

  • @manitolas
    @manitolas Месяц назад

    not a full sys unless you live in a dh park.

  • @shedavan1155
    @shedavan1155 Месяц назад +1

    #askgmbntech... what are some ways to upgrade spring forks?

  • @leonschatzl1711
    @leonschatzl1711 Месяц назад

    A bike could have all the geo adjustments in the world, but once I see the cables through the headset I‘m out.

  • @danielmerritt6840
    @danielmerritt6840 Месяц назад

    Kona is from Washington .

  • @kimkyndichristiansen1852
    @kimkyndichristiansen1852 Месяц назад

    #askgmbn how do you find grip on rocks? I've tried lowering tire pressure and slowing down my rebound. But I still slides around every time. Any advise?

    • @OwenBikeNerd
      @OwenBikeNerd Месяц назад +2

      Ooo great question - we'll aim to cover that in an up coming AskTech!
      Cheers
      Owen