Page 1 of 3 1 2 3 LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 57
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Down In A Hole, Up in the Sky
    Posts
    35,439

    New School Geometry Back In Time...

    Some astute observations from another forum. I pretty much agree.

    “For whatever reason I have been thinking a lot about the history and progression of geometry. Short stems couldn't really work without wide bars. Wide bars really don't work with small clamping diameters. Long slack bikes really don't corner or climb well without a steep seat angle. Steep seat angles kind of suck without dropper posts. Super long bikes would be flexy or really heavy without carbon or really good hydroformed aluminium. So if you went back 20 years and built a bike with modern geometry, it would probably suck and you would want that twitchy and nervous bike that would try to kill you if you weren't paying attention.”
    Forum Cross Pollinator, gratuitously strident

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hell Track
    Posts
    13,907
    I sort of agree. All that stuff is logical, but it doesn't really explain why DH bikes had such shitty geo for so long.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2018
    Posts
    6,689

    New School Geometry Back In Time...

    In short, my theory is that without really high quality suspension you need a steep, twitchy, responsive bike because all the work is being done by the rider. As bike tech got better - suspension, tires, bigger wheels - you really now wanted the bike to do the work, so it all get slacker and wider.

    Or maybe we all just sucked back then. Could be.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    North Van
    Posts
    3,760
    Quote Originally Posted by beece View Post
    In short, my theory is that without really high quality suspension you need a steep, twitchy, responsive bike because all the work is being done by the rider. As bike tech got better - suspension, tires, bigger wheels - you really now wanted the bike to do the work, so it all get slacker and wider.

    Or maybe we all just sucked back then. Could be.
    After riding a hardtail with modern geometry, I disagree with your theory.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    8,339
    I've been saying the same as OP's quote minus the carbon/hydroformed aluminum and plus the fact that steeper seat angles pedal better outright. Oversized aluminum is far from new so longer has been an option, but it needed the other stuff--and riders (and tires) using more lean angle to accommodate it.

    I think there was also a minor impact from ditching the front derailleur, both because it tipped the scales for droppers and helped stabilize anti-squat so that people could actually notice bikes that pedal well. A lot of crap was foisted off on riders who couldn't really tell before (SpecialEd) and now with things coming together on so many fronts that's harder to do. Marketing was a big headwind.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Down In A Hole, Up in the Sky
    Posts
    35,439
    Ultimately, I view this as a giving thanks for where we are now type of thing. Imagine how good they will be in 20 years.
    I’ll be riding with an Oxygen/Nitrous tank mix on an ebike by then, though.
    Forum Cross Pollinator, gratuitously strident

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Access to Granlibakken
    Posts
    11,222
    All good comments above. One thing not mentioned is BB height. I’ve noticed mfgers are finally shipping complete bikes with shorter crankarms and nicely low BBs.

    There’s still relatively low awareness of the benefit of inherently larger BB drop with 29ers. Most of the blather focuses on the roll-over-chunk wagon wheel effect.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    in your second home, doing heroin
    Posts
    14,690
    Quote Originally Posted by frorider View Post
    There’s still relatively low awareness of the benefit of inherently larger BB drop with 29ers. Most of the blather focuses on the roll-over-chunk wagon wheel effect.
    That's the only good thing about those abominations.


    As far as 'requirements' for decent geometry, that's a bunch of horse puckey. There were a few moto companies dabbling in bicycles 30 years ago that were just building moto geometry steel hardtails and horrendous erector set suspension designs. Riding literally with 32" moto bars as well. People aren't aware because companies weren't smart enough to just make that stuff so they weren't putting it under their pro riders. I'm talking dh pros here, not that hybrid road riding thing that passed as mountainbiking for so long.

    Tons of british hardtail welders these days are doing the same thing.
    Besides the comet that killed the dinosaurs nothing has destroyed a species faster than entitled white people.-ajp

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Mid-tomahawk
    Posts
    1,712
    Yeah, like 'woo and toast said, we had a blueprint for geo that didn't suck all along. DH bikes never needed steep seattube angles or any of that to work, the industry just had its head up its ass and was progressing mountain bike geo by making incremental changes, starting from a road bike.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    northern BC
    Posts
    31,001
    you didnt have to peddle a DH bike up hill either
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    North Vancouver
    Posts
    6,459
    Quote Originally Posted by HAB View Post
    Yeah, like 'woo and toast said, we had a blueprint for geo that didn't suck all along. DH bikes never needed steep seattube angles or any of that to work, the industry just had its head up its ass and was progressing mountain bike geo by making incremental changes, starting from a road bike.
    This.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Access to Granlibakken
    Posts
    11,222
    I am sorta bitter / bemused by all the bullshit bandaids some of us had to use over the years to try to kluge the geo we wanted. Eccentric eyelet reducers, small rear wheel, anglesets,etc. I remember several single pivot bikes like my old Gemini that immediately rode a thousand times better once you drilled a shock mount hole in a slacker location (and slammed seat all the way fwd). How the fuck did these large bike companies not have test mules with a few hole location options to try on the trail?

    And for taller riders, for years the industry basically said Here try this long ass stem rather than Hey it’s trivially easy to offer you a 500 mm reach aluminum frame so here you go.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hell Track
    Posts
    13,907
    If some major company produced a bike with modern geo and a 500mm reach in 1999, no one would've bought it. As much as that bike makes sense now, it took incremental steps for the money-spending public to embrace it.

    Mondraker has been doing something akin to modern geometry for at least 5 years, but it's not like those things have been flying off the shelves. Same could be said for the original GG Megatrail - cult following, but didn't really enjoy wider acceptance.

    To some extent, the speed-ification of trails probably contributed too. It's a lot easier for the average joey to enjoy their 1300mm wheelbase on the latest, greatest flow trail that doesn't have any slow, awkward tech in it.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Mid-tomahawk
    Posts
    1,712
    Quote Originally Posted by toast2266 View Post
    If some major company produced a bike with modern geo and a 500mm reach in 1999, no one would've bought it. As much as that bike makes sense now, it took incremental steps for the money-spending public to embrace it.
    Totally. Also, a 500mm reach slapped on a 1999 bike would have sucked. You do need to pair it with a slacker head angle, steeper seat tube angle, etc for all the modern trends to come together and actually work.

    All I meant was that dirt bikes have been a better model to base mountain bike geo on for as long as mountain bikes have been a thing.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hell Track
    Posts
    13,907
    Quote Originally Posted by HAB View Post

    All I meant was that dirt bikes have been a better model to base mountain bike geo on for as long as mountain bikes have been a thing.
    But even the dirt bike companies didn't know that. Honda threw a shitload of money at the G-Cross program, but as best I can tell, that bike still had pretty typical geo numbers for 2004.

  16. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Mid-tomahawk
    Posts
    1,712
    Quote Originally Posted by toast2266 View Post
    But even the dirt bike companies didn't know that. Honda threw a shitload of money at the G-Cross program, but as best I can tell, that bike still had pretty typical geo numbers for 2004.
    I think it was a little bit ahead of its time, but you're certainly right that it wasn't close to being up to modern standards. Of course, it's hard to know exactly, it's not like there's a geo chart for those things out in the wild.

    My first "head up ass" comment was more harsh than I really meant it to be. Hindsight is 20/20 and when you're used to things being a certain way it can be hard to look past it. But I do think it's interesting to imagine a parallel universe where mountain bikes developed more from stripping down dirt bikes and making them pedal. I get why it didn't actually go like that, but it's fun to think about.

  17. #17
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Hell Track
    Posts
    13,907
    Quote Originally Posted by HAB View Post
    I think it was a little bit ahead of its time, but you're certainly right that it wasn't close to being up to modern standards. Of course, it's hard to know exactly, it's not like there's a geo chart for those things out in the wild.

    My first "head up ass" comment was more harsh than I really meant it to be. Hindsight is 20/20 and when you're used to things being a certain way it can be hard to look past it. But I do think it's interesting to imagine a parallel universe where mountain bikes developed more from stripping down dirt bikes and making them pedal. I get why it didn't actually go like that, but it's fun to think about.
    Definitely.

    And it is pretty interesting that worthwhile geometry didn't develop earlier. It's easy to blame it on the evolution of mountain bikes from road biking. But there were plenty of guys that had a moto background that were designing bikes fairly early on. Mert Lawwill, Jeff Steber, Doug Bradbury (sort of), etc. - those guys weren't coming at it from a road racing perspective. But even while a guy like Steber was re-imagining DH tires with heavy influence from the motorized world, his DH bike was still running a 66 degree head angle and super short reach / wheelbase numbers. And that was a bike that was at the progressive end of the spectrum.

  18. #18
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    in your second home, doing heroin
    Posts
    14,690
    Quote Originally Posted by frorider View Post
    I am sorta bitter / bemused by all the bullshit bandaids some of us had to use over the years to try to kluge the geo we wanted. Eccentric eyelet reducers, small rear wheel, anglesets,etc. I remember several single pivot bikes like my old Gemini that immediately rode a thousand times better once you drilled a shock mount hole in a slacker location (and slammed seat all the way fwd).

    No way man! That was way better back then because the only people riding mountainbikes were people who gave a shit and really wanted to be there.


    Back in my day™ my lawn had fewer people on it!
    Besides the comet that killed the dinosaurs nothing has destroyed a species faster than entitled white people.-ajp

  19. #19
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Flavor Country
    Posts
    2,979
    Quote Originally Posted by toast2266 View Post

    To some extent, the speed-ification of trails probably contributed too. It's a lot easier for the average joey to enjoy their 1300mm wheelbase on the latest, greatest flow trail that doesn't have any slow, awkward tech in it.
    I can see this as well to some extent. Granted I grew up riding on the east coast and now live out west but most of the trails we used to ride in VA (mid-90's) were shitty ass old horse trails or torn up moto trails with lots of short, steep techy climbs and no flow for a mtn bike. Many of the bikes today would have been pointless on some of those trails. Well-designed, purpose-built mountain bike trails didn't exist back then.
    "They don't think it be like it is, but it do."

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Access to Granlibakken
    Posts
    11,222
    ^ yeah I know that’s the conventional wisdom but my direct experience has worked out differently. I actively seek out chunky old school trails that typically were hiker/equestrian built back in the day. My Modern Geo Trailduro (TM) sled has a 1250 mm WB vs the 1180 WB of a typical so-called Large or XL from 2016. I figured I’d keep my 2016 trailderpo for those tight hiking trails. Turns out nope, the longer sled rips the shit out of those non-flow trails uphill and down. Despite being nearly 3” longer.

    Look none of this geo stuff is rocket surgery. And that original 780 mm boobar came out loooong before current carbonz optimized 35 clamp stems existed. Your local bike shop ain’t staffed by Ph.D physicists fer crissakes. One good friend and esteemed bike mechanic told me, in the early disc brake days, that front rotors should be 160 and rear 200 because otherwise you’d endo.

    Similarly, there’s no real excuse for Intense bungling basic shock dynamics on the 951 back in the day, or for well funded brands not to use their R&D to build mules with modern geo ten years ago. Maybe it’s because I’m a jaded engineer but compared to the engr problems faced in other industries, much of this bike stuff—-especially the geo aspect—is not that difficult. But brobrah industries can be very conservative.

    Mondraker is a brand that is not only well established in yurp but owes its existence to the fact that the major brands just didn’t really use their R&D budgets for actual innovation. Just incremental changes.

    And differentiation sells. Sure you can speculate that if Special Ed had released the 2020 enduro in 2010, no one would’ve bought it, but in reality anyone demo’ing it would’ve crushed their local trail and word would get out.

    Like rockered skis bruh

  21. #21
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    in your second home, doing heroin
    Posts
    14,690
    Quote Originally Posted by frorider View Post
    I actively seek out chunky old school trails that typically were hiker/equestrian built back in the day.
    That reminds me.

    We need to have a serious discussion about tamba one of these days
    Besides the comet that killed the dinosaurs nothing has destroyed a species faster than entitled white people.-ajp

  22. #22
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Treading Water
    Posts
    6,707

    New School Geometry Back In Time...


    I feel like the whole topic is overplayed. Spend a weekend at a bike park or a Pisgah/Moab site and notice the odd guy out doing just fine on an old rig.
    Brakes have improved massively. Everything else is just a more refined version of the same old bike. You’re paying a mint for “just a little better”. $1k+ wheelset is the best example.


    Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
    However many are in a shit ton.

  23. #23
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Access to Granlibakken
    Posts
    11,222
    Quote Originally Posted by kidwoo View Post
    That reminds me.

    We need to have a serious discussion about tamba one of these days
    Yeah I know what you’ll probably say. And I won’t disagree.

  24. #24
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Mid-tomahawk
    Posts
    1,712
    Quote Originally Posted by frorider View Post
    Similarly, there’s no real excuse for Intense bungling basic shock dynamics on the 951
    MY GOD that bike sucked. Thanks for the PTSD flashback.

  25. #25
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    in your second home, doing heroin
    Posts
    14,690
    Let's be honest, there's really no excuse for intense still being a business.

    But then you have to remind yourself: "socal"

    Because socal.
    Besides the comet that killed the dinosaurs nothing has destroyed a species faster than entitled white people.-ajp

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •