Thursday, December 19, 2013

Fat bike season....

 The season of fat bikes are upon us. The snow is here (although as I write this, it will be gone for the weekend). But rest assured, this is the Cleveland area, and it will be back, and this is in part why this post is getting written.

There has come a ‘new’ bike craze that is happening now. It’s the fat bike. I put the word new in quotations, because it’s been around for quite some time being used in races in Alaska.

They have grown quite a bit in popularity over the last few years as Surly has made them a staple in their production line. Other companies have seen the fat bike popularity, and have followed suit. In our line, not only do we carry Surly for your fat bike needs, we also carry the Kona Wo & Moots FrosTi (special order only). More on the differences in a moment.

Why would one buy a fat bike? These bikes excel in snow and winter riding. The size of the tires starts at 26x3.8 and can go to 4.8”.  The wider the tire the less tire pressure (anywhere from 8psi-20psi), less tire pressure means better traction. These are able to float over a lot of different kind of terrain. Snow is the big one, but sand, gravel, roots, rocks, etc. are handled just as well with the wider tire.

So this line of bikes is not limiting at all. You are able to ride fat bikes all year long. There are those that are ditching their mtn bikes, and just riding these all over the place all year long. With the big and wide tires, put that together with the low psi; and the bike will absorb much of the trail. In a sense, the tire becomes your suspension.

One of the apprehensions with fat bikes is the question of handling. How do they handle? The answer is simple; just like any other mtn bike. They are however, harder to get to high speeds because of the tires, but you’re not picking one up for speed. Once you are able to ride one, you realize the ease of the maneuverability of the bike.

I recently picked up a Surly Pug Ops & was able to take it out on a local mtn bike trail before all the snow hit, and it handled just as well as any other mtn bike, except I was not concerned with taking the ‘right lines’ or rolling over a rock or root wrong. I just went, and let the bike do the rest. It will

just power through and over anything you put in its way. The gearing is low enough where climbing is not an issue.

The differences between what we carry are as follows:

The big one is frame material. Surly deals in 4120 cro-moly steel. The tubes are designed for the frame. They are not taking regular tubes that would be used for other mtn bikes and ‘making them work.’ You have a higher bb, like you would find on a mtn bike; which gives you ample clearance over objects.  The way Surly set up the geometry is that it is able to be ridden off road just as well as an all day grind or day out exploring the winter wonderland, trail, or whatever nature may throw at you.

The Kona Wo is set up similar to the Surly line as far as geometry goes. They do have a different cockpit out of the box, and is made of aluminum. The aluminum will save you some weight (my Pug Ops comes in at 34 lbs), and will stiffen up the ride a bit. Both have 2x10 drivetrains.

And if you know Moots; the FrosTi is, you guessed it, Ti. Moots only does a limited run of these frames, so if you want one, you have to get on the list early. They do the frame, we’ll do the rest.


So feel free to stop on in and talk to us about getting fat….