Now for the exciting news: my first trail ride with this bike!
On Sunday I traveled out to SanTan Mountain Park to meet my coworkers for a ride (they were on their new Chinese carbon bikes as well). We met up at about 6:30 AM and the place was swimming with hikers all trying to beat the heat. We started at 85° and ended at about 102°. All totaled, I did about 30 miles.
My impressions are below. Let me preface this with the following: This is my first hardtail in a decade. This is also my first carbon anything. So many of my impressions are probably due to this being a completely different animal than my last bike and not necessarily due to the fact that it is a Chinese carbon bike.
CLIMBING: This bike climbs like a goat! Its actually the most noticeable thing about the bike that I observed on this ride. I was making great time on hills that were burdensome before. I'm certain some of this was due to new bike adrenaline and increased fitness (I've been training on the spin bikes and road bike a lot in the past month), but much of it was also due to a properly fitted hardtail with minimal weight. I was able to negotiate all hills I encountered with the exception of one which I had to hop off for a technical reason (lost traction near the top and spun out in some gravel). The 32T 42/10T XX1/X01 gearing was just fine. I wasn't looking for any higher or lower gears.
The short chainstays and the shorter ETT length (compared to my Giant) put me in a sweet spot to stand and power up hills. Besides the one spin out, it was sold and planted. And I was running pretty high pressure at ~25-27 psi. I think I will try 23-24 psi on the next ride. There are a few seated, ultra tight climbing switchbacks and I was able to power up them with ease. On the Giant, the long wheelbase would always swing me out wide and I'd run out of trail.
I was also really trying to power some of these climbs to see how much the bike would flex. Well, it doesn't. Any flex seems to be the tire on the rim. Besides that, the frame is stiff as hell and resists pedaling forces. The wheels seem the same. WAY, WAY, WAY stiffer (in terms of pedaling forces) than my Giant FS. I mean not even comparable really.
COMFORT/RIDE QUALITY: This is a fairly rocky trail and I will admit, the hardtail beat me up a bit. I have a lot of work to do to improve the lines I pick and to judge when to stand over an obstacle. My FS Anthem is more "comfortable", but also far more unwieldy than this bike. When I tried to focus on my lines and put together a smooth ride, I found the comfort level to be much improved. I suspect that on longer rides, as I get fatigued, I will get sloppy on my lines and standing technique and will get beat up more than on the FS. But the lack of "bobbing" and "bouncing" while pedaling on flats and climbs offset it, at least on this day. After 30 miles I wasn't dying to get off, and my back wasn't killing me.
I really can speak to the damping qualities of the carbon as compared to an aluminum or steel hardtail though as its been years since I've seriously ridden either. I can say that the carbon frame seems loader. Pebble strikes and such amplify throughout the frame. It's loud, but not alarming or anything. It's really just a strange... "hollow" feeling/sound. It doesn't feel "solid" like a metal frame, but I don't mean that in a negative way. It feels like plastic and I can see why riding a carbon bike might make some die-hards nervous as it sounds breakable.
The free coaster hub buzzes like angry bees on fast downhills. Very cool.
Overall, the bike is highly maneuverable compared to the Giant. I had zero issues getting it to go where I pointed it regardless of speed or traction. I am likely not as fast on the downhills yet. Perhaps I'll get more bold and feel out the bike a bit more. But I bet I'm damn close to where I used to be.
I'm hoping that with increased fitness and a more efficient climbing bike, I can make some good gains on the climbs. I may loose some time on the downhills, but I don't think those are what win races anyway (at least not the type I do). A climb is a long event in most rides. It might take you 20+ minutes. If you can improve your time by 10%, then you're saving a lot more time overall than if you improve our downhill time by 10% on a 2 minute descent. My strategy is to go a little harder on the climbs and use the descent to recover. I hope this bike will support that strategy.
I encountered three problems with the bike:
1) The brake line inside the downtube was LOUD. Thwack! over every bump. And the whole carbon frame acted as an amplifier. :unamused: I fixed this last night with about $0.10 worth of foam pushed into the down tube. It pins the brake line against the tube so that it can't hop around. Dead silent now even if I drop the bike from two feet in the air.
2) The headset loosened up some and was creaking from time to time. Last night I disassembled it and greased the contact points between the headset bearings and the frame/steerer tube. It seems silent now so we'll have to see how it does with trail abuse this week.
3) My seat post dropped about 0.5" over the course of the ride. Not enough that it impacted my riding, but it felt a bit "off". I will apply some more gritty carbon paste and retighten it and keep an eye on it.
Pictures:
I miss the comfort of the Giant Anthem over the rocky areas, but the efficiency of this bike is worth it. It will be nice to have both for whatever type of riding I'm feeling like. My wife seems to have forgotten about my promise to sell the Giant to build the Chiner.