
Also, I’m not looking for an excuse to buy yet another bike but if a full suspension bike would help then I’d consider it. Thanks.
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
I did it the old fashioned way of riding stuff till i found my limit via a horrible bone breaking crash .So what’s the best way to learn, how did you learn
The thing you need to remember Phil is that a weight shift still occurs. However, it's controlled by the bike reacting to the terrain. That has the benefit of it been dynamic which has a bigger effect than the slow one we generally tend to instigate.Contrary to Stu's advice I would say that sitting on the rear wheel is a way of dealing with the steep stuff.
I'll do (try) and do a picture as hat tends to help explain things. It's a simple concept yet it's also difficult to grasp and possibly the single one thing that I used to spend most time explaining.On super steep ( Skiddaw scree descent is about 25 %*) what sre you advising here stu ?
Sometimes its so steep i cannot see any other option
I also dont see how the bike can control my weight shift - what donyou mean here ?
Pretty much Andy.Do the same principles apply regardless of terrain?
Pretty much. One way to think about it is to try and keep your head at a constant distance above the ground. That means you can't ride with rigid legs (we'll assume you are heading downhill and so coasting and not pedalling) as every change in the surface will cause your head to move. So the first thing is to have bent arms and legs so that they can act as suspension - the front wheel rises over a bump so you increase the bend. (That's very simplistic - it's not just a case of having bent legs but also bending at the hip and moving your body slightly so that your CofG remains over the BB). A good analogy would be the old French ski instructors saying "Bend zee knees!", it's not the bending of the knees that increases control but the moving forward of your CofG that you counteract by bending your knees.
ThanksI'll do (try) and do a picture
Thanks v much for this Stu. I would always hang bottom back and push down the bars. Worked OK but always a tense operation (and not very comfy in the lactate building dept). It's gonna help indeed as I have a repeat descent to do many many times...Bearbonesnorm wrote: ↑Sat Jun 08, 2024 5:07 pm Might help, might not![]()
It's about the ability to pivot around the BB - hence maintaining a loose / relaxed grip, not holding the saddle with your knees and most certainly not sitting down. All those things 'lock' you to the bike and prevent relative movement between you and it. Aim to remain stood fairly 'tall' with knees slightly bent ... much more than that and it'll become an SAS stress position. Let the bike do the thinking and put you where it needs you to be.
You're always (just about always) aiming to have your mass through the pedals and into the bottom bracket. This makes the bike stable but as you might deduct from the drawing, hanging your arse off the back will shift your mass behind the BB and to a degree 'lock' you in position again. Once that happens then our not inconsiderable mass can act as a pendulum on rough terrain. Sometimes that effect will escalate until we get thrown off or grab the brakes ... the result tends to be the same either way.
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That's how I'd tackle it too. So I'm not doing too bad. Just need to relax more over constant DH terrain. I can manage a slab/rock or two. But when it becomes lots of rocks all over I get slightly overwhelmed. Thanks the pic...Lazarus wrote: ↑Sat Jun 08, 2024 10:01 pm Ok ( and cheers stu) I think we are all on the same page but just describing different steepness. So this pic (from bike ride today @ PaulE ) shows both weight /rear well back and weight over BB. i assume we all see that as fine for that and madness/ not advised on less steep stuff, which I assume stu often saw when coaching ?
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I'd be walking or riding the chicken line.
But that is how I would tackle such a thing