This weekend was sweet. Saturday was a nice day at the shop, steady and smooth. Everyone working, but under control. Not so busy that we can't really take care of people the way we want to, yet busy enough to keep us from standing around.
Then came Sunday. With expected temperatures in the high-90's and a lot of miles to log on the trails, I stocked up with a ton of fluids. My bike was set to only carry two bottles, but I had two more Iron Cycles bottles as well as 1 liter of water and 32oz of Gatorade in my car.
I set out with Derrick who was riding his new Niner Jet9 RDO. This was only his second or third ride on it, and having a new baby at home his training has been limited, but once the trails get twisty that dude is fast. He's been raving about the Jet9 RDO and how fast it is in rough stuff, but watching him carve was impressive.
Within a couple of miles I knew I couldn't take his lines. My Air9 RDO is sick-fast, but it won't eat up the bumps the same way his Jet9 RDO will, so I have to duck and weave a lot more where Derrick can just point and shoot.
We ran into Ted Burger and David Pilotto about 20 minutes in and did some miles with them. Cemetary Loop and heading North-East with those guys was a blast.
After we had knocked out an hour, we shot back to the car for more fluid. We ran into one of Derrick's friends who gave us a nice tour of some new trails I haven't seen before, then we hit Swallow Cliffs. 8 miles of gravel with a few nice climbs. We hammered those, rode a few more miles, then it was time for Derrick to depart.
Back to the cars and we have over 3 hours done. I make my way over to Speedway for a refill on water and Gatorade as well as some Gummy-Savers. I'm feeling not so bad, and head back to the trails. Another 12-14 miles and it's time to get off the trails. I start to really feel it on the climbs and catch a glimpse of some goosebumps. Not good. Too much heat, and even though I have gotten about 120-140 oz o fluids in, I'm not sure I have gotten enough.
Just shy of 60 total miles, 50 of it on single-track, and I'm cashed. Here's the cockpit that was staring at me for about 5 hours:
I'm loving this Air9 RDO. Coming off of the EMD9, the bottom bracket stiffness doesn't seem like a huge jump, but front-end stiffness is noticeably better. The frame is also significantly lighter, something like 550g lighter (1780g for the EMD9, 1230g for the Air9 RDO, both weights include all hardware).
A real nice, in-depth review is coming sooner rather than later on the Air9 RDO, stay tuned....
Showing posts with label twenty nine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label twenty nine. Show all posts
Monday, May 28, 2012
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Niner EMD9 w/ 2012 Shimano XT
This one was a pleasure to build, because well, it's mine. I previously had built an EMD9 but it's since been sold. I loved the frame enough that I just replaced it with an identical one.
For the first time for me, I decided to build it with a Shimano build kit. I spent some time chatting with some mountain biking friends who do some "real" riding, you know, in the mountains. The consensus was easy to gather: Shimano XT brakes are the best. I heard from many of them that XTR works just as well, but at a far higher cost.
Since I was going with XT brakes, I stuck with the full XT kit. Shifters, derailleurs, cranks, chain, and cassette are all XT. The fork is a Niner carbon unit, bars and post are also Niner carbon, the post is the RDO version. The stem is ole faithful, a 130mm Thomson X4.
Wheels were hand built Stan's NoTubes Crest laced to DT Swiss 240s 6-bolt disc hubs with DT Swiss Revolution spokes 3x and DT Swiss ProLoc brass nipples.
Price as built? $3700 out the door for a pure-bred race bike.
For the first time for me, I decided to build it with a Shimano build kit. I spent some time chatting with some mountain biking friends who do some "real" riding, you know, in the mountains. The consensus was easy to gather: Shimano XT brakes are the best. I heard from many of them that XTR works just as well, but at a far higher cost.
Since I was going with XT brakes, I stuck with the full XT kit. Shifters, derailleurs, cranks, chain, and cassette are all XT. The fork is a Niner carbon unit, bars and post are also Niner carbon, the post is the RDO version. The stem is ole faithful, a 130mm Thomson X4.
Wheels were hand built Stan's NoTubes Crest laced to DT Swiss 240s 6-bolt disc hubs with DT Swiss Revolution spokes 3x and DT Swiss ProLoc brass nipples.
Price as built? $3700 out the door for a pure-bred race bike.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)