
http://mattercycles.com/collections/bik ... s/ghostcat
looks like a lot of fun.
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Err, the preston sold badly because when you went downhill the J profile of the fork travel meant it dived at the worst possible time.Pyro wrote:It might just be the angle it's shot from, but I'm with the 'that's gopping' crowd.
And James, aesthetics obviously aren't just for steel road bikes, or the Whyte PRST-1 would have sold better...
I'd just like to re-paint itAnyway. I'd like a spin on it
I think that belt drives on bicycles are worth pursuing. After all, regular chains snap too and if belt drives can cope with large capacity 1,340 litre Harley Davidson motorcycles chucking out huge amounts of torque at irregular intervals (v twin) then i'm sure reliable belt drives for bicycles can be produced.JohnClimber wrote:Belt drive on a bike that can go off road avoid, avoid, avoid at all costs....... unless you only ride on tarmac.
Is that a recent development John - yours I presume?JohnClimber wrote:Belt drive on a bike that can go off road avoid, avoid, avoid at all costs....... unless you only ride on tarmac.
I have the prototype Travers built up with it and rode it for 350+ miles on dry summer trails off road, fire roads and tarmac.Ian wrote:Is that a recent development John - yours I presume?JohnClimber wrote:Belt drive on a bike that can go off road avoid, avoid, avoid at all costs....... unless you only ride on tarmac.
How many miles has it done?