Archives For August 2017

Testing…

August 27, 2017

I am fortunate to work at Endless biking, a mountain bike tour, lesson, and rental shop, that has a lot of different kind of bikes. The owners have allowed me to test those bikes to determine what I will be riding next year.

I have been a riding/racing a Rocky Mountain Slayer this year, and have really enjoyed it. It has 27.5 inch wheels, a 170mm travel fork and 165mm of travel in the rear. I can ride it anywhere, even in the bike park. It’s a pretty big bike with slack angles compared to some other Enduro race bikes, but it pedals pretty well and I have had some good results racing the BC Enduro Series this year.

What was sitting in front of me while I was thinking of this? Six Altitudes that I had recently built, two of which were my size and weren’t rented that day. So at 6:00, after I closed up the shop and asked permission, I got to work putting my 170mm fork from my Slayer onto the altitude, as well as my wheels so I didn’t potentially damage the almost new wheels that were already on the bike. I rode the bike with my fork around the parking lot and it instantly felt like a whole different bike than the one with the 160mm fork, which I rode back to back just bouncing around behind the shop.

That night, I took to the trails and after a couple warm up laps, I did some freelap timing, 5 Laps on a 1 minute trail. The bike felt amazing. It was so playful and light and seemed to accelerate a lot quicker than my Slayer when it was time to put the power down. Now I knew why the EWS guys had chosen it.

Endless Biking Altitude with a 170mm Fox 36

The next day, I did more freelap timing with my Slayer on the exact trail. The results were a bit shocking. I was 2-4 seconds quicker on a 1 minute trail on the altitude than I was on the Slayer, which I had been riding all year and felt extremely comfortable on.

What were the differences? As i mentioned before, the Altitude accelerates very quickly and is easy to throw around on the trail. The Slayer felt a lot closer to a DH bike bike. What was strange was, while testing the Slayer, I felt as if I couldn’t go any faster than my fastest time. I was relatively comfortable going that speed, but I felt like I had reached the limit of how much I could push it before sliding out in corners or crashing. With the altitude, I felt like I was more “on the edge”, but I felt like I could keep pushing and go faster if I did more laps.

Jesse Melamed’s EWS Winning Altitude With The 170mm Fox 36

My Slayer. 170mm Fox 36

Considering I’ve only spent a couple hour total with the Altitude and it’s already faster even without it being setup exactly as it would if it were mine, I was very impressed with the bike and I am seriously considering it for next year!

There’s an app called Strava that many mountain bikers used. It tracks your rides and shows you stats like distance, time, and elevation. It can also tell where and what trails you’ve been riding and has a leaderboard that tells you how fast you completed the trail compared to other people who use the app. If you are the fastest person to ride a certain trail, you are considered to have a KOM (king of the mountain) on that trail.

Racing Enduro this year, I’ve learned that there is a lot more than just downhill speed on the bike involved to be able to win. After racing my first one this year, and getting beat by a 15 and a 50 year old, I was baffled on what I was doing wrong. I realized you didn’t have to be good at just going downhill, there were also uphill or flat sections that you had to power your way through. My downhill speed wasn’t enough to make up for all the time on the technical climbs or tight awkward sections which I wasn’t used to.

Obviously fitness is a big part of it, and that’s something I need to work on. DH racing involves a lot of sprinting and recovering, which Is what I train for. Enduro requires a lot more endurance and being able to pedal for a much longer time, as well as sprint and recover. With all the snow this year, I wasn’t able to get out on long road rides. Sure, there’s the stationary bike at the gym, but I found it hard to find motivation to sit inside on a spin bike for 90 minutes watching other people lift weights. I didn’t think I needed to. But boy was I wrong…

With Strava, I am able to compare my times with the fastest local riders and it motivates me to put in effort on flatter or uphill sections of trail where I would usually relax or use as a transition to the next technical decent. If I want to put in good times on strava, I have to be fast everywhere, not just the downhill, just like enduro racing. Enduro racing is pretty much over for this year, but I hope to race a few more next year and after a winter of more endurance training, I’m hoping to see a huge improvement on my times.