Did a quick first ride today, time for some impressions:
- It's huge but steering is great.
- It feels extremely light (especially) on roads.
- The back end is quite bouncy on roots and small to medium stones.
Also to anyone on a strict budget without bike-building experience who might read this ... Stay a little below your budget, you never know which special tool you might be missing until you really need it. In my case it was a cable cutter. Let's just say it's a bad idea to try cutting shifter cable housing without one, let alone brake lines.
Parts:
Reba: The 120mm Reba comes without any tokens and feels very linear. It almost uses full travel when riding down stairs, so tokens will be added.
Cassette: 11-46 is most likely overkill for what I'm riding. The steepest climb here is a street with around 14% gradient and I didn't need the 46t cog to climb it.
Stem: 40mm is very short. It's nice if you love having a short stem for descending and snappy steering, but I see why many people (especially racers) choose to run long stems.
Tyres: Mavic Crossride Tubeless Quest don't feel great ... my back wheel lost grip in a regular turn without any braking going on.
Brakes:
I read your concerns and went at it slowly. A few things surprised me:
- The bitepoint on the MT4 and MT5 is very different from each other. The MT4 grabs earlier while the MT5 starts braking with the same force with the lever about a centimeter closer to the bar.
(Is this normal or could there be air in the system?)
- The MT4 can brake quite strong.
- Maybe the brake pads are not broken in enough yet, but atm. they grab soft enough to provide smooth braking even from high speeds (I hope they don't become more grabby).
- The MT5 seems to be not much stronger than the MT4 (if at all). BUT it feels like it offers (way) wider modulation over the MT4.
All in all I really like them and honestly, my mechanical disc brakes felt way more dangerous because they didn't offer as much modulation which lead to easier lock-ups. I will probably follow your advice and get a 180mm rotor in the front in the future just in case I get to ride some long descents with hard braking.