Just a heads up on the Avid Exir brakes, I do have them and they are a bitch to bleed. You will need a special bleeding tool that you will have to buy separately. Also, I find it much harder to adjust the callipers from rubbing the brake disk compared to Shimano line of brakes. Finally, they uses real brake fluid witch is much harder to handle compared to mineral oil used by other brands. I will ditch my Avid brakes soon.
Karsten
I wouldn't recommend Elixir brakes either, I've had them, they are not great. Look at the Shimano Deore or SLX brakes, far better, use mineral oil, and will provide trouble free operation.
Thanks to both of you! The info I read before must have been out of date. Brake fluid is really messy stuff and mineral oil is so much easier to work with. Thanks for the heads up.
If you are not going off road then there is no need to look at a plus wheel/tire bike.
It's not that I'm not ever going to go off road, just that I've seen size info posted and basically 27.5+ is the same overall diameter (height) as 29ers so i want to avoid that.
I still think I'll be ok offroad given that a whole generation of riders somehow managed to brave it with skinny 26" wheels once upon a time
Just pick a 27.5 frame that you like and email Peter. Go to his website at www.xmcarbonspeed.com and you can contact him from there.
Look at some of the budget forks, Fusion forks are pretty good, or see if you can find a close out or clearance priced one on some of the big online bike stores like JensonUSA, Pricepoint, or Chain Reaction.
Thanks so much for both of these - I'll get in touch with peter and report back here. As for the forks, I'm hoping my timing might be good as we're right on the cusp of the new 2017 models being announced so maybe there's going to be new "old" stock up for grabs......
In my limited experience with regular and plus tires (I just built a set of 27.5+ wheels for my -057 frame 29er), what I notice most is better cornering- it feels like I can lean the bike over more before the tire rolls over or loses traction. Part of this is probably due to the wider rim, and part of it may also be due to differences in the tires, but there is a definite difference in cornering feel. The ride is a bit softer as well, due to lower air pressure. I think it is worth having the option, but since plus frames are the new thing now it may cost more that it's worth to you.
What did you hate about the 29er- Were the ones you tried all similar geometry? I have no complaints on the agility/handling of mine (I'm not a racer, so your mileage may vary). It's definitely bigger than my old 26er, but I don't see a negative on the trail.
The cornering thing is an interesting point - I'm really no looking to do 50mph down steep DH courses - I'm more a technical singletrack guy and it would be nice to have that extra grip in those sharp turns, but again, my beef is with the extra height of the wheels.
The bit I didn't like about the 29ers I've tried is that the wheels clearly felt disproportionate to the frame; The agility of quick/sharp turns were gone, technical maneuvering felt ever so slightly laborious. It was like like having road bike geometry on an MTB.
I really think that's a huge part of the 29er craze - I grew up on BMX's and graduated to MTB's so i was coming from small wheels. Road bikes always felt like this stiff incredibly fragile, blink-and-me-wrong-and-I'll-snap bikes. I think people who came from or use road bikes have no transition issue with going to 29ers, it feels natural to them, but for me coming from 26" it feels wrong.
I know this is probably going to get me flamed, but I honestly think everyone is drinking the coolaid regarding 29ers - I think the bike industry have done a great job of selling a new size of of bike to the masses and I keep seeing the same statement again and again: "It rolls over everything". I just don't see how a 1.5" difference suddenly makes it magically do that. My experience was that it's faster and smoother at speed, but it didn't suddenly empower me to roll over anything better than with a 27.5 or even a 26.
27.5 basically feels the same as a 26 and somehow to me, that is the size that suits MTB geometry, all things considered.