How Much Travel Do You Need?

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • We put three different bikes to the test to see how much travel you need to ride your trails. We tested the Santa Cruz Tallboy, Hightower and Megatower back to back on the same trails. These bikes represent their respective categories well and served as perfect test rides for our super scientific study.
    Read the full article and watch full runs on each bike here - www.bebikes.com/the-hub/how-m...
    Biker's Edge Demo Bikes - www.bebikes.com/demo
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Komentáře • 757

  • @TheRealDanBell
    @TheRealDanBell Před 4 lety +513

    Sounds like a jet war in the background.

  • @mariearseneault9437
    @mariearseneault9437 Před 4 lety +133

    This is probably one of the best bike reviews I’ve seen on CZcams. Succinct, well organized, and honest. It was helpful to have two different opinions in one video. Nice job!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +5

      Glad you liked it! Thanks for the kind words.

    • @mjs1231
      @mjs1231 Před 4 lety

      Apposed to the corporate machine doing and saying anything to sign your ccrd up...ya

    • @financemarin
      @financemarin Před 4 lety

      Agreed. All comments on point. My only question: Where is this awesome area?

    • @justinbigatel6780
      @justinbigatel6780 Před 4 lety

      Ya I was scrolling though looking to see if he said anything about where they were. Looked like park city but not sure what trails.

    • @certainperfectratio
      @certainperfectratio Před 2 lety

      @@financemarin Park city I think

  • @tomashanzlik2595
    @tomashanzlik2595 Před 3 lety +36

    In process of picking a new bike and last week, I literally spend 50% of my wake time reading through articles and watching vids and this is definitely the top 3 I have watched! Good work, love the numbers and times.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety +1

      Hey thanks! Glad you liked the video.

    • @neaaat5545
      @neaaat5545 Před 2 lety +1

      Haha going through this same process

    • @tommysampson3575
      @tommysampson3575 Před 2 lety

      @@neaaat5545 samee

    • @JoseTorres-rl3rz
      @JoseTorres-rl3rz Před 2 lety

      Which bike did you end up with if? If you don’t mind

    • @tomashanzlik2595
      @tomashanzlik2595 Před 2 lety

      @@JoseTorres-rl3rz I am happy owner of Specialized Enduro - tried some friends' bikes and most were much harsher even when set for slightly lighter riders. Still watching reviews and the only other bikes I would consider now is Santa new Megatower and new Trek Slash (I tried neither). Enduro is for its weight very decent climber (never touch the shock lever) and beast downhill that pumps almost too much confidence for a mediocre rider. Only downside I recognized is a problem with clearing very tight turns - had a few I have to go through several times before clearing them nicely (up or down - no endo turn in my repertoire) but that might be also a lack of real skill... Also worth mentioned that I ride a bikeparks and black trails so if you do not plan to do the same these bikes are nonsense overkill.

  • @gregmacdonald2237
    @gregmacdonald2237 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video guys. Took a no right answer topic and helped us to be able to do a better job when shopping!

  • @bakedmacaroni7078
    @bakedmacaroni7078 Před 4 lety +389

    :how much travel do you need?
    James Harden: yes.

  • @fekkyb
    @fekkyb Před 4 lety +4

    I really enjoyed this video. It give me a clear insight on the differences between the 3 types of options and possibilities. 👍🏽 I would also want all 3‼️😁

  • @mojitomaker
    @mojitomaker Před 2 lety +1

    How you came to your conclusions, and how clearly you communicated them, was super valuable - great video, thank you.

  • @SunsPSD1
    @SunsPSD1 Před 3 lety +1

    Thought this was a really cool idea and well done. Thanks for this!

  • @hardmtnbiker
    @hardmtnbiker Před 4 lety +22

    I believe that you can push a short travel bike and use it as a medium travel as needed just depending on the “set-up”
    Wider rims with 2.6” tires, stronger brakes, and bigger forks is just an example.

  • @ronclarke8546
    @ronclarke8546 Před 4 lety +9

    Excellent review and comments by both riders! Very honest and helpful! Thanks! I have a 120mm short travel 29er and I love how it rides on the trails I have available to me here in Florida. One day I'd love to demo an enduro at a bike park.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +1

      Glad you liked it! I'm starting to find that a 120mm bike can be super capable and a heck of a lot of fun.

  • @1eyeblind
    @1eyeblind Před 4 lety +4

    Enjoyed your review on the 3 types of mountain bikes. I can relate to Brock, especially coming from the tallboy and now to a longer travel bike. Me going to an all-mountain style bike just fits me better for my style riding and trails I ride (or willing to ride). :)

  • @timhofmann1819
    @timhofmann1819 Před 4 lety +78

    "If I had only one bike" is such a theoretical question! 😅

  • @chrisrey4664
    @chrisrey4664 Před rokem

    Thanks for all these videos! So many bikes to chose from but I really appreciate 2 different riders and their preferences. My current bike is a 2019 Bronson but I've been blown away by the enduro bikes that can climb. They all have bigger travel and climb 100x better. I do love me some climbing 2-3k but it's always for fun decent. Just picked up a SB160.

  • @jedimanultra
    @jedimanultra Před 4 lety +19

    Tbh I think 130-150mm is sorta a good start point for anyone who wants to hit trails, have good pedal efficiency but also hit some downhills when they arise.
    I’ve got a 130mm trail bike, but with its good Geometry and intelligent riding it’s never really felt out of place, it’s not the best when going downhill but once you start popping off roots to skip sections the bike becomes something else

  • @chrizzla1978
    @chrizzla1978 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanx. After 5 days of searching, watching and reading i choose the megatower. I wish I had found your video at the beginning. It’s the resoult of 5 days searching. Perfekt 👌 keep on!

  • @kawkaw7234
    @kawkaw7234 Před 4 lety +7

    awesome breakdown...these are the kind of reviews everyone at a crossroad needs

  • @feinchan
    @feinchan Před 4 lety +143

    here i am crying with my 100mm xc hard tail

    • @depe8658
      @depe8658 Před 4 lety +2

      105mm xc as well, fully though

    • @froznfire9531
      @froznfire9531 Před 4 lety +16

      I drove with my 80mm wallmart bike in bike parks and it worked... sure a fully is better, but use what you have and have fun with it :)

    • @igormarinkovic1531
      @igormarinkovic1531 Před 4 lety +2

      Why not ... i feel like i dont need more than 100mm

    • @two_broberni7233
      @two_broberni7233 Před 4 lety +6

      I have a 120 mm hardtail and i like it like that i dont need more than that

    • @danielvillada8866
      @danielvillada8866 Před 4 lety +5

      I have 75 mm travel and take it everywhere

  • @dadventuretv2538
    @dadventuretv2538 Před 4 lety +7

    I demoed the Tallboy. What a bike for less technical and gnarly trails but that still can get steep. I like my Bronson for the one bike to rule them all- smaller wheels and bigger travel = maneuverable, poppy and plowable = fun anywhere. Nice vid. Great getting such similar bikes to limit the variables as much as possible to just suspension travel.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +1

      Totally right. The Tallboy can shred with the big kids. I really like that bike.
      Glad you liked the video.

  • @drewsenthused6079
    @drewsenthused6079 Před 4 lety +1

    Good video! Great work guys!

  • @luisguevara4113
    @luisguevara4113 Před 2 lety +1

    Great review! two different opinions but they explain WHY they chose the one they did. Knowing their train of thought helps the audience choose the right bike depending on what trails they have around and how they like to ride, fast, play around, XC, and so on. Keep these thoughtful reviews coming. Thanks guys.

  • @cantrdr
    @cantrdr Před 4 lety +9

    What an excellent review. I bought the HT but rode the Tallboy back to back with it just this weekend (and a MT a while back). Your review is exactly how I felt. Find the trails you love and there is an awesome bike for you. But between these three, the HT magically encapsulates the TB and MT in one...opportunity costs regardless.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety

      Glad you liked it. Stoked you're on a Hightower. It's a great bike.

  • @averageoutdoorsman9799
    @averageoutdoorsman9799 Před 4 lety +2

    Location is a huge factor too. Midwest here. Very few local trails that will max out 130mm+ suspension. But I still love the slack geometry.

  • @Jon-nz3dm
    @Jon-nz3dm Před 4 lety +45

    I think the most important factor is simply where you live. I see all these youtubers living in Cali, BC, or North Carolina that are all running around on 160mm fork enduro bikes, but where I live in the Dallas, Tx area that much travel would be silly. We have no elevation, the whole area is pretty flat with lots of short burst climbs into 5 second descents. Anything over 130 is completely unnecessary. And that really makes it fun, having a short travel bike here. In north Texas, a 26-31 pound bike is much more fun than a heavy 34 pound enduro bike.

    • @koretell
      @koretell Před 4 lety +1

      well said, I was riding the N. Shore back when my arms were my suspension , ha ha.
      For me looking to get my 1st FS in BC I'll compare one bike MF. For 2020 the Meta tr mid 29 is in the 1190MM WB, And i think thats where the AM was last years. Now the AM is in the 1200mm with 160mm i believe.
      I'm fascinated on how this has changed in the 2 years i have been thinking of a FS, I think it's going to be the TR, and maybe upfork it by 10mm. For the NS and my local Bike park.

    • @AustinsThicc
      @AustinsThicc Před 4 lety +2

      Jon L kinda of agree but having a 130/130 trail bike I’m looking at going up to probably the 150/140 range. Trails like sansom park in Fort Worth and Cameron Park in Waco can be unforgiving on the short travel bikes. Those are the 2 main trails where I spend 80% of my riding.

    • @UltimateMTB
      @UltimateMTB Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly, here in New England every trail system is either a giant rock garden with singletrack trails that are mixed climbing and descending or a lift-assisted ski resort bike park. Unless you're riding at the park, anything more than 130 is unbearable on the climbs and wont really help you on descents. No trails really flow like the ones shown in this video

    • @5tr4nge75
      @5tr4nge75 Před 3 lety +2

      Here in the southwest UK, or trails are either nearly flat, and best ridden on a fully rigid. Or so steep and balls out insane that even a 160mm full sus is underbiked. And there doesn't seem to be any middle ground.
      It's certainly an interesting place to ride.

    • @austinsmithey8508
      @austinsmithey8508 Před 3 lety +2

      Same down here is Austin, anything over about 130 is complete overkill. I have a 100mm xc hardtail and there have been just a couple times so far where ive felt under biked(or just underskilled)

  • @Cartsp70
    @Cartsp70 Před 4 lety

    GREAT REVIEW THOUGH GUYS , I’m not criticising, Ive just demoed all these bikes and I love the Megatower, Me personally though I ride a 2018 5010 XE BUILD with Dt Swiss carbon rims and 240” hubs , it climbs incredible and descends just as fast as the Megatower

  • @shonshon247
    @shonshon247 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting and thorough video. Thank you so much!

  • @dcouture79
    @dcouture79 Před 4 lety +2

    I ride a Bronson because I wanted a bike that could climb but rock the descents. SC drops the new Tallboy and oh my! Had no idea the trails could be that much fun. Insanely capable for a low travel machine

  • @PeepMeRide
    @PeepMeRide Před 4 lety +59

    Nice comparison! I've decided that I'm currently over biked for my local trails and riding style. I rode a 120mm on a trip last month and it was so playful and fun that I'm going to make a switch (at least for awhile). I don't need to be the fastest. I just want to have fun. Cheers

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +7

      It's a nice change of pace and can open your eyes to a new style of riding.

    • @ZeroCool-vn9bd
      @ZeroCool-vn9bd Před 4 lety +1

      The thing is, you can have 120mm of amazingly dialed travel or 120mm of travel where you are bracing yourself for every rocky section depending on your fork/tune. Dampener construction makes a huge difference. I have a specialized enduro with a lyrik that I put a coil U-Turn spring on one side(115mm-160mm adjustable travel) and a DH damper on the other side, since these shocks are so system interchangeable in the sram lineup. It may weigh a bit more than the air equivalent, but it's so versatile, and feels so good for jumping and DH after experimenting with many different fluid weight combinations. Bottom line is, there are many options out there, and there is no replacement for travel if you need it. Granted I have a dedicated bike in every travel range and category, I love my enduro, and if I could only choose one bike out of 11, it would be the one.

  • @AWABALLO
    @AWABALLO Před 4 lety +1

    Very nice video, good job.... subscribed!

  • @hansramirez8323
    @hansramirez8323 Před 4 lety +5

    Best review I have ever scene

  • @kayakutah
    @kayakutah Před 4 lety +28

    I love the climbing hard time data, Vs. "well, it felt faster"!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks for the feedback. It was nice to actually be able to back up our thoughts with some data.

    • @MrJoshItIs
      @MrJoshItIs Před 4 lety

      sorry to be 'that guy', but I studied stats, their data wouldn't be statistically significant, with possibly the climbs if it were to be repeated 30 times as normal. I'd hazard most of the differences were well within the differences of multiple timed decents. I could be wrong, put the onus is on that real data.

    • @MrJoshItIs
      @MrJoshItIs Před 4 lety

      that being said, I'd lean to trusting their 'feel' because that is a seasoned rider making adjustments because they felt it needed.

    • @jppickavance
      @jppickavance Před 4 lety

      This was a solid video and review. It really does break down to what you can afford, what you ride mostly, and what preferences you have. I as well have drifted to an enduro carbon bike and feel it climbs surprisingly well. The reward in pointing it down as it “feels” like it makes me a better rider. I would also in the perfect world have an enduro bike and a short travel trail for the variety. Agin, enjoyed the info on this video ... pedal on!

  • @workhorsemtb7075
    @workhorsemtb7075 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent video my friends

  • @mattjustin3596
    @mattjustin3596 Před 3 lety

    Great video, was trying to decide between the Hightower and the Tallboy.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety

      Thats a tough decision to make. Luckily you can't really go wrong either way.

  • @snowairland
    @snowairland Před 4 lety +3

    👍🏽 I’m excited for the occam am review.

  • @conanthanoz19
    @conanthanoz19 Před 4 lety +2

    My 2005 Slayer "All-Mountain" bike with 125mm of travel would be the Trail bike in this test, although with the smaller 26" tires, it's probably not even close to as good as the Tallboy as a Trail bike... This video has given me a lot to think about. I think the upgrade that I need most, that isn't discussed in video...need friends to ride with.

  • @joesteel3459
    @joesteel3459 Před rokem

    I ride a full sus 140mm travel bike (2017 Scott genius 720 plus) feels like the best of both worlds in a sense, having enough travel for what downhill I ride, plus the 2.8 tire provided some additional supplenesses, but also having partial and full suspension lockout capabilities for climbing.

  • @ruggedlandman6910
    @ruggedlandman6910 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the reply guys, keep up the good work 🤘

  • @igormarinkovic1531
    @igormarinkovic1531 Před 4 lety +3

    most of the vids are about trail bikes as thats the standard now. my bike is now looking more trail than xc and its even labeled like XC Trail. New times new solutions. Im on 100mm as i spend most of the time on flat but i like light trail and climbs are so interesting to me. I live near danube and there are dozens of swamps and forest roads its beautiful.

  • @MaxMustermannnnnn
    @MaxMustermannnnnn Před 4 lety +2

    I started at 130mm with a Fuel EX. Later I bought a DH bike. Because of the DH bike (i ride a lot bike park) I got so fast that i went through the travel of my Fuel EX all the time with max spacers in the fork and shock. Bought a Megatower.

  • @pierrebroccoli.9396
    @pierrebroccoli.9396 Před 4 lety +6

    Good conversation.
    I went from a XC Hardtail to a 150mm Enduro bike. Love the latter. Yes the climbs can be a bit of a grind but I find the Enduro bike better on tech and loose climbs than the XC and then when you point it down hill - fun fun fun.
    Also air time and popping off stuff, the Enduro is just so much more capable. Just firm up the compression on the suspension if the trail is less rowdy and pop away.

    • @SoundboxPR
      @SoundboxPR Před 3 lety

      Do you got a 29 or 27.5?

    • @pierrebroccoli.9396
      @pierrebroccoli.9396 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SoundboxPR 29er Trek Slash. Bit slack on the seating but a good bike otherwise.

  • @bigredman31
    @bigredman31 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the reviews, I was torn between the tallboy and Hightower. Now, I’m still stuck but Leaning Hightower 😂

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety +2

      Glad you found it helpful. I think the Hightower is probably a more versatile bike that will cover a wider variety of terrain. The Tallboy will be more enjoyable on mellower trails.

  • @Niidiin
    @Niidiin Před rokem +2

    1 bike, for 1 rider, for 1 playground 🤘 no bad bikes in 2022, only different priority. Nice test. 👌

  • @msrfrog
    @msrfrog Před 4 lety +7

    Where you live and ride is a huge factor. Im very happy with my 27.5 trance . Might seem like over kill for a all arounder , but in the Catskills it's very rocky and rooty.
    I did ride a $500 hardtail for two years in the same conditions. And then I got my trance. So much more fun on the trails. Although slightly slower on climbs and smooth decents.

    • @joyfred100
      @joyfred100 Před 4 lety

      What travel is that 140/150? Im in the Catskills too and in the market, happy to have a recommendation

    • @msrfrog
      @msrfrog Před 4 lety

      @@joyfred100 I think that was the specs 150 up front and 140 rear. On the 27 .5 that is. The 29er is different . It's a good trail bike . Soaks up lots of roots drops and rocks.

  • @kenilworth7070
    @kenilworth7070 Před 3 lety +13

    “Ask any racer, any real racer. It doesn't matter if you win by an inch or a mile; winning's winning.” - Tallboy

  • @alecfhon1984
    @alecfhon1984 Před 4 lety +1

    good video!!!! nice review !

  • @bucktales66
    @bucktales66 Před 4 lety

    Great comparison video. I'm a former cross country guy from the east coast living in Cali and I can't get enough of the bigger trails, drops, rocks out here. I'm leaning towards an enduro bike. I need to find a demo day to compare different bikes bake to back.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +1

      Its super helpful. Really highlights the differences between each one.

  • @TheTennisCompany
    @TheTennisCompany Před 4 lety +16

    This has been the industry challenge in other sports such as snow skiing or tennis. Any time you monkey around with geometry design changes to positively affect performance in one area there is always a negative affect in other attributes. The "Trail" bike is the one quiver bike, good at everything, not great one thing. Longer travel bikes in general (enduro) add two components to it's riding characteristics that will negatively affect climbing. One is weight and the other is longer travel bikes are less efficient, your typical pedal bob. Lighter frames /wheels with an efficient rear linkage system like the DW link (found on the Ibis bikes) will greatly improve the pedaling efficiency up hill. Riding preferences is all in the eyes of the beholder.

  • @downundermtb4744
    @downundermtb4744 Před 4 lety +4

    Bike for every trail I agree all three.

  • @coltonwinkel510
    @coltonwinkel510 Před 3 lety +2

    Man that first trail is glorious 🤤

  • @elektroN1401
    @elektroN1401 Před 4 lety

    i have an 140mm front an rear all mountain ebike with an 67.3° headangle and i love my bike for what i ride.

  • @ryanmerryman7657
    @ryanmerryman7657 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice comparison video and better riding!

  • @waynepriest6403
    @waynepriest6403 Před 3 lety

    Excellent job of riding all three on the same trail, same day, same weather, etc. Levels the conditions/playing field so that we can focus on the bikes. [I'm trying to figure out if I want to move to an All Mtn Bike from a Trail Bike] Thank you

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the kind words. The test wasn't perfect but we felt it gave us a good idea of how each bike handled the terrain.

  • @thepedalsadvocate7389
    @thepedalsadvocate7389 Před 4 lety +1

    Great vid. Thanks!

  • @Twentykixx
    @Twentykixx Před 4 lety +3

    Nice edit guys. Most of us who ride regularly over multiple disciplines and topology understand the design philosophy and geometry of the current mountain bikes in the stream. My first bike into MTBiking was a Trek EX9 All-Mountain rig. This bike had 130-120 full suspension travel. I then went to Scott as I matured to benefit from a single quiver bike using the twin-lock and never looked back. After buying Scott’s 2017 Genius 700 LT Tuned that supports 27.5 and 29ers with 160/160 travel and the twin-lock for geometry when climbing/fire roads/descents, this bike smokes everything I’ve ridden as a quiver killer bike. Each configuration using the twin-lock has crushed all comers and encompasses all three of these bikes presented here literally into one bike. From 27.5 @2.35” all the way to 2.8” tire sizes and the flip chip for 29er @2.6” tires is truly a quiver killer. From all day rides in Galbraith, to A Line in Whistler, bike does it all progressively. What I’m getting at is this, from entry into mountain biking, to mid-high transition, into the gnarlier burly trail-sets will define your weapon of choice. A rider who doesn’t understand what he’s looking for and decides that safety via abundance of travel, will not enjoy the ride if they live in certain places. Which will also tend to increase the cost much more than they expected to spend. 1. Research your local riding trails and typical riding expectations based on your skill set. 2. Research your local bike shops and test ride different manufacturers and geometry configurations. 3. Go to the most gnarly trail head and take a walk. Meet some riders at those places and ask questions. They will guide you and give experience lessons to assist you. They may even get you riding with them and you will progressively get better. 4. Don’t spend too little or you will have a terrible entry into MTBiking and possibly get hurt. This sport is great but you WILL have crashes and setbacks. Last thing you want is to have your rig be the cause. 5. Buy all the safety equipment...helmet, knee pads, elbow pads, some good knuckle padded gloves, and eyewear. Use them all for your first year. 6. Don’t try to use clipless right away, use flat pedals when starting out unless you have previous experience using them. Any decent rubberized athletic shoe will suffice. 7. Watch a shit ton of CZcams professionals to edify your fundamentals related to equipment, skills, and experiences. 👍🏼

  • @topspeederalmond
    @topspeederalmond Před 4 lety

    Thanks Guys.

  • @StraightLine_MTB
    @StraightLine_MTB Před 4 lety

    I'm a fan of having 2 bikes...but fight having the Enduro bike and AM bike when I should go with the trail bike. Great review!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety

      Hey thanks! It’s nice to be able to have an Enduro bike and a Trail bike. Most of the time I only have one. That’s when I go with the Enduro bike.

  • @TonyPuleo1
    @TonyPuleo1 Před 3 lety

    Nice video...well done explained

  • @peaohvee1784
    @peaohvee1784 Před 4 lety +15

    I've got a 13/120 mm trailbike and i'm picking up a DH in a couple weeks :)

  • @thisisbenji90
    @thisisbenji90 Před 4 lety +17

    It seems to me that the 120mm bike worked the best for you guys despite the comments. It was only marginally slower in the downhill and significantly faster climbing.

  • @WildMidwest1
    @WildMidwest1 Před 2 lety

    Been on my 2020 Tallboy just over a year now. I bought her on a whim because of love at first sight.
    My two slight grumbles are: (1) the Fox 34 Performance fork becomes challenged on sandy washerboard fire service roads. That could be my setup more than the fork itself. Sometimes I wish I had Grip2 high and low speed compression and rebound settings rather than Grip1. On the other hand, the simplicity of Grip1 means I spend less time fussing and more time riding.
    (2) Setting the shock sag is pretty unscientific. Because the shock piston is in a frame tunnel it involves measuring pencil marks on toothpicks. Sag setup is an issue I knew about before buying the bike. The technicians at my LBS who sold me the bike couldn’t help me with setting sag… they just shrugged and said “good luck.” I expect sag setup is similarly difficult for Hightower, and maybe Megatower. After lots of testing shock pressures I think it’s about right, but I couldn’t tell you what percentage my sag is.
    I replaced the 175 mm cranks with 165 mm to eliminate pedal strikes. I tried a 34 tooth SRAM chainring before returning to 32 tooth on the 165 mm cranks. The 34 tooth chainring is better for 175 mm cranks, and the 32T chainring is better with shorter cranks. Those details relate to my local terrain and body form.
    We Are One Union wheels with I9 Hydra hubs are a perfect complement. I tried a bunch of different tires and I am happy with Kenda trail tires as long as I stay away from goats-head thorns.
    On flowy SoCal trails and street riding (90% of my year-round riding) I couldn’t be more pleased with this bike. She’s a real beauty - I get compliments on her all the time.
    Thanks for providing a great Santa Cruz comparison review.

  • @88997799
    @88997799 Před 2 lety

    My custom build 2018 Santa Cruz V10CC has all the travel I need!

  • @edinburghnick
    @edinburghnick Před 3 lety

    Really helpful vid! I'm thinking of getting a full sus again after a year with a hardtail. I ride a mixture of xc/trails in my local hills and trail centre blues and reds. Generally prefer the flow trails but that's partly due to a lack of confidence on tougher trails. The local hills have a big variety of routes, long flat climbs, step techy climbs, fast rutted and rooty downs. I had been leaning towards the HT before I saw this video but now I'm wondering if the TB would suit better... What do you guys think? I'm 38, 6'5" if that makes any odds...

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety +1

      I don’t think you can go wrong with either one. If you want to start trying tougher trails, the Hightower will be more suited for that without sacrificing too much on the climbs. If you’re happy not pushing your limits, go with the Tallboy. It makes flow trails a ton of fun.

  • @Rose_Butterfly98
    @Rose_Butterfly98 Před 4 lety +11

    I guess I'll stick with my 120mm. Since I need to use it for daily riding as well.

  • @alexsoti3997
    @alexsoti3997 Před 4 lety +4

    I have a Enduro with 180 front, 165 rear, ok i'm dying when I have to climb but bro the descents feels soooooo good

  • @jonanderson1777
    @jonanderson1777 Před 3 lety +2

    I have a tallboy4 with a fox36 set to 140 and cascade link at 128rear. Fun new england bike

  • @73TCON
    @73TCON Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the vid, good one. I'm luck to own a Carbon Norco Optic (120 rear 130 front, trail bike) and a Devinci Troy carbon 29, 140/160) so most bases covered. I agree with much of what you found, so thanks again. Not sure if you guys are under an airport or if it's the freeway or what, but lots of jet sounding background sound for so much forest. Interesting.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety

      Those bikes would about cover anything. Both are pretty awesome.
      We are right next to an Air Force base. We constantly have jets flying overhead.

  • @Kekuems
    @Kekuems Před 4 lety

    Your conclusions were fairly insightful, might just trail up my AM a bit with some tokens and a lighter tread and go maximum enduro for my next bike.
    Or just buy two new bikes, we'll see. :p.
    BTW, not saying you guys were illegible, just the BG noise was just a bit distracting is all. Thanks for the video!

  • @johnwick3725
    @johnwick3725 Před 4 lety +171

    You guys each need a dedicated mic

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +66

      We have one. Doen't help much when you have F-35's taking off right over your head.

    • @TheBlocGod
      @TheBlocGod Před 4 lety +1

      @@bikersedge *cough* lapel mics would help *cough*

    • @michaelKOTD
      @michaelKOTD Před 4 lety

      @@bikersedge if you mentioned that in the vid it would of made it less distracting xD

    • @_rhapsodist
      @_rhapsodist Před 4 lety +1

      @@bikersedge it would have helped a lot

    • @Wheelsanstuff
      @Wheelsanstuff Před 3 lety +3

      The audio was fine.

  • @Krom1hell
    @Krom1hell Před 4 lety +4

    I have a somewhat older enduro (which now looks more like a full susspension trailbike)....Goes fast on the trails and at 150 travel it has somewhat more than I normally need.....
    I mostly hate climbs :))...... I like a bigger travel because I love jumping and plowing over stuff.....

  • @Mctyz125M
    @Mctyz125M Před 3 lety +1

    The gentleman on the right I had a feeling he would weigh more into the megatower because of his height. Looks more like the riding style. I feel like I would go more towards the tallboy for the way I ride, even though the hightower and the mega tower is more comfortable downhill. But having the tallboy suspension a little stiffer for how aggressive I ride made a major difference. Also moving the bars a hair forward gave more confidence in all sections body height 5' 10".
    Would like to try a little less head tube angle and the crank set a little further back. Possibly go to a L to an XL if I had less head angle. Curious thoughts.

  • @charlie112359
    @charlie112359 Před 2 lety

    Great review. Having a difficult time choosing between a TB versus an HT. Other factors aside, would you say a longer travel all mountain is a better fit for someone very new to the sport - assuming the short travel TB is less forgiving than an HT? Thanks for the great reviews - they are some of the best I've come across.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 2 lety

      I personally think the best style of bike for a beginner is an All Mountain bike like the Hightower. They're very versatile bikes and they're a little more forgiving than a Trail bike. I don't think you could go wrong with either one though.

  • @huntii
    @huntii Před rokem +3

    140/125 , never had a problem

  • @SuperGee75
    @SuperGee75 Před 4 lety

    Awesome vid!! Rider weight and height will make some differences as well I assume seeing both reviewers are of different built?

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety +1

      Weight and height will change things a little but each rider was on the appropriate size with the bike tuned to their rider weight. A rider on an XL frame is always going to have a longer bike to get around a corner than a rider on a M. Different weights will lead to different riding styles and braking needs. Really shouldn't have a huge effect on the test however.

  • @cameronnock1646
    @cameronnock1646 Před 4 lety

    thank you very much

  • @ozziejim8472
    @ozziejim8472 Před 3 lety

    Good info.
    That’s music was driving me nuts!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety

      What music? I think you're hearing things.

  • @charliepalmer2465
    @charliepalmer2465 Před 4 lety

    I think one thing you should touch on next time is Air pressure , and how that could help make lower travel do more...

  • @TrailBreaker
    @TrailBreaker Před 4 lety +5

    I have a 130 mm 29er trail bike and a 153 mm 27.5 bike. Thought I’d use the trail bike most of the time and the enduro on “fun” days but end up grabbing the enduro every time! The trail bike might be lighter and faster on XC type trails but I don’t care. It’s just not as fun for me 😁 Nice comparison BTW👍🏻👊🏻

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! Personally that's how I am. I end up with the big bike and just riding trails that suit it.

    • @bryanmurphy26
      @bryanmurphy26 Před 4 lety +1

      150mm sounds like a good place to be.

  • @axial27
    @axial27 Před 3 lety

    I currently have a 150mm travel all mountain bike, but I demoed and Ibis Ripley, and riding that made me realise how important good suspension platform is. So my next bike will be a bit shorter in travel.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 3 lety

      DW link is really good. Sometimes a good suspension design will let you get away with less travel.

  • @TheButlerNZ
    @TheButlerNZ Před 3 lety

    My new old bike is 178mm, before that my old Foes was 152... in between (my road and downhill cheapie) was 76mm of RST awfulness.
    Even my old enduro trailbike (1986 Yamaha IT200) had 300mm.... The 10yo totems on my Giant are a little brittle in their response tho.. My old Bombers on the foes were so plush my favourite trick was to stick a neubie on it and tell them to ride into the nearest gutter... watch them tense right up followed by the comment "I hardly felt it?"...
    (3.0" Gazzaloddi's helped... man I wish I could get one now to restore the foes. (it still has 20yo ones on it and I only retired it in Jan.

  • @LeDank
    @LeDank Před 2 lety

    I ride a 120mm on everything. Just bought a 135mm as an upgrade. I think that will get me through as gnarly of stuff I care to ride. If I went to bike parks all the time with lift access, I’d get an enduro. Either way, all bikes are good.

  • @jamespilar9840
    @jamespilar9840 Před 3 lety

    I think it's great that you both , have a different opinion on what is your opinion are different. This being a great statement, how each have a different opinion , what are the different opinion that each of makes a different opinion on what each mtn bike are different.

    • @jamespilar9840
      @jamespilar9840 Před 3 lety

      For each of our size ,weight , height are different

  • @davidmithen9223
    @davidmithen9223 Před 4 lety

    Maybe you could have rated the bikes in terms of GNAR as well. Good vid thanks.

  • @DaveConnersTheConnersTeam

    Really great audio!

  • @dev_IL666
    @dev_IL666 Před 4 lety +7

    140mm to 160mm is all you need !!! If you know how to work it that's all you need. NO need for a downhill bike. Been riding my all mountain/enduro since 2012 and never lets me down.

  • @eriotero8397
    @eriotero8397 Před 9 měsíci

    Great content

  • @scottpowell7668
    @scottpowell7668 Před 2 lety

    Though this video is a couple of years old its still very informative but I/m not sure you'll see this question. I've been on my Santa Cruz 5010CC since I purchased it in 2017. I live up here in the Pacific Northwest where we have some long technical climbs (1000' to 3000' climbs) and the moderate to extreme descents. I've only recently been riding with some very good riders who have pushed my harder than I've been pushed in many years (I'm 61 years old but in good shape but they're all 20 years younger). I noticed that are all on 29'ers and I have 27.5. To be honest going downhill (I'm just an above average mountain biker, not extreme and not a jumper) I don't have the confidence on steep technical downhills. So I was looking at changing to a Hightower to instill more confidence (per some recommendations) with a increased head/tube angle pushing the wheel out further, more travel (as compared to the 5010). The local bike shop has the Tallboy and will not get a Hightower for at least a year. Wanted to get your opinion on a Tallboy for a above average rider, not going for speed or big air, just having a fun time with friends on hopefully a more confidence (downhill) inspiring bike? Thank you!!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 2 lety +2

      Glad you liked the video! I don't think the Tallboy is going to get you much more confidence, especially on steep and rugged trails. The 29" wheels might help with rollover, but you're not going to gain a ton in terms of confidence. A Hightower is going to be a much more forgiving option if that's what you're looking for.

  • @daveharris39
    @daveharris39 Před rokem +1

    Usually there are differences in HTA and Seat tube angle as well as the differences in travel and weight.
    The shorter travel bikes that I've ridden have a more slack STA, which makes a big difference to me in how it pedals. A 75.9° STA vs a 76.9° STA (Spur vs Sentinel) is the main reason I sold my Spur. I'm simply more comfortable on the Sentinel, and if I'm more comfortable, I'll ride more and I'll ride more confidently.
    In short, if you're not trying to win races, ride what you enjoy rather than what is "best" for some other metric.

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před rokem +1

      It makes sense that shorter travel bikes have slacker STAs though. There’s less travel to sag into so you don’t need it to be as steep to keep your weight centered on the bike. If a 120mm bike had the same STA as a 170mm bike you’d be way further forward than you’d want at sag.

  • @quaaludes7898
    @quaaludes7898 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Jeez did you film next to an airshow? :D Great review!

  • @N8MRN
    @N8MRN Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the review i had a full sus 160mm (all mountain , at the time?) bike on 26 and now have 120 mm hard tail trail bike on 27.5 +. I rented a 140mm full sus this summer on 29s. i was surprised how different they felt, but i couldn't quite place all the issues or quirks. i miss the high handle bar feel the most of the 160mm travel bike but cant afford one. i would like to try to save up for one. i would also have to decide what tire size now, too. i guess all mountain is now smaller? Is it more about reducing the height combined with the bigger tire size but having a stiffer fork with less travel?

    • @Jon-nz3dm
      @Jon-nz3dm Před 4 lety +1

      I would say go with 29" wheels, depending on your size. The industry is really pushing 29ers and for good reason. They roll over stuff easier and carry speed better. I'm 6'4" so it makes sense for me. I think they might be a little big for someone that's 5'6" though.

  • @BMfins
    @BMfins Před 4 lety +1

    Damn hill air force base and them jets!

  • @gavvypatty
    @gavvypatty Před 3 lety +2

    This is my favorite bike shop

  • @josef.contreras2130
    @josef.contreras2130 Před 4 lety +1

    Trail bike keeps you honest on the descent and enduro on the ascent. All mtn., well just depends where you live AND your age.

    • @lumberjack8261
      @lumberjack8261 Před 4 lety

      Wait, you mean that the trail bike keeps you honest on the ascent, but the enduro on the descent because it doesnt make sense that the enduro is easier to climb since it has more travel

  • @RichardsWorld
    @RichardsWorld Před 2 lety +2

    Should a heavier person 225 pounds, get a bike with longer suspension travel, or go to a heavier duty bike?

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t think that’s needed. Buy the bike that fits your riding style. Suspension can be tuned to fit the rider weight. If you ride short travel trails buy a short travel bike.

    • @RichardsWorld
      @RichardsWorld Před 2 lety +1

      @@bikersedge Makes sense. Thanks!

  • @duds7952
    @duds7952 Před 4 lety

    I have a sc blur, a xc bike, and i wanted to train more descents, like, really techy descents for training, and i was thinking about the tallboy. What are your thoughts on this? (Sry i'm still learning english kkk)

  • @gregc8822
    @gregc8822 Před 3 lety

    I’ve had a Megatower (Coil) for 4 months, COVID lockdown has cancelled all my uplift and alps trips... so I just ordered a 2021 Hightower frameset.
    This review helped a lot with the decision, thanks.
    Ultimately i struggled to climb the Megatower, and the cornering is also tough - the MT just wants to steam roll through everything. I have never had to plan and think about my turns before. Can’t wait for HT

  • @Basement_CNC
    @Basement_CNC Před 4 lety

    I have a Vitus escarpe (150/140) and it is a true "do it all" Bike. from Bikeparks to climbs i couldn't bei any happier

  • @barkingmadman1169
    @barkingmadman1169 Před 4 lety +1

    OUtstanding review. The conclusion, as you said, may be a little confusing. The real value of this video is the discussion and opposing view. Each rider can identify with one or the other reviewer, given their own preferred riding style.

  • @jimm244
    @jimm244 Před 2 lety +1

    I have a 5010 and a (pre-mullet) Bronson, the 27.5 equivalents of the Tallboy and Hightower. The comparison is similar. The biggest difference is the 5010 is more poppy and the Bronson a bit more supple. The 5010 is a more efficient climber, but the Bronson is fine. The 5010 is fun at the bike park, but the Bronson is more planted, faster, and even more fun. For flowy & twisty the Bronson is fun, but the 5010 makes me grin ear to ear.
    If I’m riding all day in mixed terrain, I’ll usually take the Bronson as it’s less fatiguing and a bit more forgiving. If someone was looking for a single bike only (27.5), the Bronson is where I’d steer them. And btw, an enduro bike is just too much for 90% of what I ride.
    Maybe it’s telling that I just decided to add a 29’er to my life and chose the Hightower. The 5010 and Bronson will be sticking around, but I bet a year from now I’ll be grabbing either the 5010 or Hightower (based on the ride) and the Bronson will be collecting dust until someone visits from out of town. When they visit, the Bronson will guarantee a fun time wherever we go.

  • @charliepalmer2465
    @charliepalmer2465 Před 4 lety

    Can you please let me know what the travel was on the trail vs All Mountain bike.. thank you, enjoyed your video!

    • @bikersedge
      @bikersedge  Před 4 lety

      Trail had 120mm and all mountain had 140mm.

  • @darrinkulyk9560
    @darrinkulyk9560 Před rokem +1

    Depends where you Ride I Live In Vancouver So I Ride A 160/155 CF Warden Its An Awesome Bike 😎

  • @pbrenneman5
    @pbrenneman5 Před 4 lety

    I rode a YT Capra 180/180mm for about a year then just swapped over to a Santa Cruz 5010 140/130mm. I think something that was maybe understated was suspension, on my YT I had Fox Factory 36 and X2 and to build up my 5010 I put the Fox 36 on it but reduced the travel to 140mm and the 5010 frame I got had a DPX2 on it. So initially, the 5010 was pretty limited. Sure it was a lot easier to pedal but the DPX2 felt just plain aweful which made the bike feel aweful. At 15% sag I had to run max volume spacers to keep from bottoming out which made it feel horrible on fast small bumps. I swapped that shock out for a EXT Storia LOK coil and now the 5010 feels amazing. I'm faster than the YT on flow trails, about even on fast but somewhat technical decents that aren't too chunky, and on chunky technical decents the 5010 starts to be kind of exhausting to ride so I'm a few seconds slower. The bigger difference to me is pedaling performance , the 5010 is waaaay easier to pedal. Over the year I rode the YT I averaged approx 30 miles a week but on the 5010 I've averaged 40 miles a week so far. As I've set it up, my 5010 is a lot more fun and a lot more versatile a bike and I would never go back to an enduro bike unless I was basically only riding DH trails.