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This is what's wrong with The Industry™

jonKranked

Detective Dookie
Nov 10, 2005
85,828
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I honestly can't tell at this point if something has been lost in translation here or not.
If you're talking about the compression knobs (2vs1), that's not something that's being drilled then filled. It's a different component subassembly, shock body casing is the same.
 

Jm_

sled dog's bollocks
Jan 14, 2002
18,950
9,628
AK
Yeti SB100 is a good example of this, being marketed as a "downcountry bike" or "hardcore XC" bike that isn't just for racing, but does well on big descents, the "downhillers XC bike", blah blah.

So why don't they offer it with a build kit with a real shock, like a Float X2 or at least a DPX2, and fucking ideally, a CCDB in-line coil? WTF? I don't mean only, but at least as a "oh, BTW here's a build option with the shock the bike should have for the kind of riding we are promoting". Nope, they spec some shitty ass XC shock with dumb quick-range adjusters that go from "ok and blows through travel" to "harsh and good for the fireroad without bumps" to "WTF am I riding a suspension bike for?". The "LSC" on those is a joke and only works in one mode and you can't dial this thing in much, it's more of the "it's an XC bike and people don't care". Rebound is the same way. I understand at the far extreme of XC racing, there are compromises and the shocks aren't really functioning like they do for the majority of us, mainly being used to take the edge off downhill and run very very firm (lockout) most everywhere else. For the amateurs, it's somewhere in between, but again, with the advertising and supposed use of this bike, I can't understand why they wouldn't put the right freaking shock on it, except for what Toodles has brought up.

That's kind of related to my general "why do companies say F-you to air-shock riders?" and only spec stuff with adjustable high/low circuits on DH bikes? As if they are the only ones that want to optimize their damping and ride? It is really about maximizing profit and F-you to most riders and giving osmething that "kind of works most of the time". Thankfully we are a little better than the old days when they wold spec front shocks with no freaking damper, just elastomers: "here's a bike, it works at one speed, if you go faster, it'll suck balls, the rear shock will be ok, but your fork will be out of control". I understand limiting the damping adjustments to some extent, but this radical "here's a suspension piece with no damper!" should have NEVER left the drawing board. It just goes to show you "the industry" is more than happy to screw us over for a dollar or two.

And people still buy Specialized Brain shocks...
 
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Happymtb.fr

Turbo Monkey
Feb 9, 2016
1,913
1,268
SWE
Nope, they spec some shitty ass XC shock with dumb quick-range adjusters that go from "ok and blows through travel" to "harsh and good for the fireroad without bumps" to "WTF am I riding a suspension bike for?"
I had to quote that for later use! Very good description indeed

I never liked the rebound on small Fox shocks either...

Then the SB100 is marketed as a XC-something bike so that the second most important feature for the average buyer after travel length is weight. Hence the crippy shock...
 

rideit

Bob the Builder
Aug 24, 2004
23,294
11,464
In the cleavage of the Tetons
Yeti SB100 is a good example of this, being marketed as a "downcountry bike" or "hardcore XC" bike that isn't just for racing, but does well on big descents, the "downhillers XC bike", blah blah.

So why don't they offer it with a build kit with a real shock, like a Float X2 or at least a DPX2, and fucking ideally, a CCDB in-line coil? WTF? I don't mean only, but at least as a "oh, BTW here's a build option with the shock the bike should have for the kind of riding we are promoting". Nope, they spec some shitty ass XC shock with dumb quick-range adjusters that go from "ok and blows through travel" to "harsh and good for the fireroad without bumps" to "WTF am I riding a suspension bike for?". The "LSC" on those is a joke and only works in one mode and you can't dial this thing in much, it's more of the "it's an XC bike and people don't care". Rebound is the same way. I understand at the far extreme of XC racing, there are compromises and the shocks aren't really functioning like they do for the majority of us, mainly being used to take the edge off downhill and run very very firm (lockout) most everywhere else. For the amateurs, it's somewhere in between, but again, with the advertising and supposed use of this bike, I can't understand why they wouldn't put the right freaking shock on it, except for what Toodles has brought up.

That's kind of related to my general "why do companies say F-you to air-shock riders?" and only spec stuff with adjustable high/low circuits on DH bikes? As if they are the only ones that want to optimize their damping and ride? It is really about maximizing profit and F-you to most riders and giving osmething that "kind of works most of the time". Thankfully we are a little better than the old days when they wold spec front shocks with no freaking damper, just elastomers: "here's a bike, it works at one speed, if you go faster, it'll suck balls, the rear shock will be ok, but your fork will be out of control". I understand limiting the damping adjustments to some extent, but this radical "here's a suspension piece with no damper!" should have NEVER left the drawing board. It just goes to show you "the industry" is more than happy to screw us over for a dollar or two.

And people still buy Specialized Brain shocks...
Thanks a bunch, now I am engaging in Lizard Think about fitting an X2 or DPX2 on my new ride...
 

Jm_

sled dog's bollocks
Jan 14, 2002
18,950
9,628
AK
Thanks a bunch, now I am engaging in Lizard Think about fitting an X2 or DPX2 on my new ride...
Don't get me wrong, I like the concept of the bike, I think there's some merit, but then at the very least, have some build options that reflect this.
 

jonKranked

Detective Dookie
Nov 10, 2005
85,828
24,405
media blackout
Yeti SB100 is a good example of this, being marketed as a "downcountry bike" or "hardcore XC" bike that isn't just for racing, but does well on big descents, the "downhillers XC bike", blah blah.

So why don't they offer it with a build kit with a real shock, like a Float X2 or at least a DPX2, and fucking ideally, a CCDB in-line coil? WTF? I don't mean only, but at least as a "oh, BTW here's a build option with the shock the bike should have for the kind of riding we are promoting". Nope, they spec some shitty ass XC shock with dumb quick-range adjusters that go from "ok and blows through travel" to "harsh and good for the fireroad without bumps" to "WTF am I riding a suspension bike for?". The "LSC" on those is a joke and only works in one mode and you can't dial this thing in much, it's more of the "it's an XC bike and people don't care". Rebound is the same way. I understand at the far extreme of XC racing, there are compromises and the shocks aren't really functioning like they do for the majority of us, mainly being used to take the edge off downhill and run very very firm (lockout) most everywhere else. For the amateurs, it's somewhere in between, but again, with the advertising and supposed use of this bike, I can't understand why they wouldn't put the right freaking shock on it, except for what Toodles has brought up.

That's kind of related to my general "why do companies say F-you to air-shock riders?" and only spec stuff with adjustable high/low circuits on DH bikes? As if they are the only ones that want to optimize their damping and ride? It is really about maximizing profit and F-you to most riders and giving osmething that "kind of works most of the time". Thankfully we are a little better than the old days when they wold spec front shocks with no freaking damper, just elastomers: "here's a bike, it works at one speed, if you go faster, it'll suck balls, the rear shock will be ok, but your fork will be out of control". I understand limiting the damping adjustments to some extent, but this radical "here's a suspension piece with no damper!" should have NEVER left the drawing board. It just goes to show you "the industry" is more than happy to screw us over for a dollar or two.

And people still buy Specialized Brain shocks...
that's been a problem for shocks on XC bikes as long as shocks have been on XC bikes. the DT swiss on my scott spark is 3 way lock out, no compression adjustment. and it's pretty much hot garbage.
 

Bikael Molton

goofy for life
Jun 9, 2003
4,019
1,154
El Lay
The SB100 is a silly bike for those of us who ride mountain bikes in the mountains. Just ignore the full-court press from Yetis marketing dept, as no one will be talking about that bike 6 months from now.
 
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Jm_

sled dog's bollocks
Jan 14, 2002
18,950
9,628
AK
that's been a problem for shocks on XC bikes as long as shocks have been on XC bikes. the DT swiss on my scott spark is 3 way lock out, no compression adjustment. and it's pretty much hot garbage.
I agree, but with the Yeti being marketed this way, one would expect they'd allow the option. I agree this is a bigger issue where it's just like "F-you, here's a 3-position adjuster and rebound and you'll only be able to run it on open-blow-through-the-travel setting because it'll jackhammer otherwise". I think the SB100 just brings it more to the extreme. They are trying to do something different, a more aggressive short travel bike, but not following through.
 

rockofullr

confused
Jun 11, 2009
7,342
924
East Bay, Cali
The SB100 is just a silly bike for those of us who ride mountain bikes in the mountains. Just ignore the full-court press from Yetis marketing dept, as no one will be talking about that bike 6 months from now.
I rode it. It's fucking sick.

If I had $$ for a n+1 bike I'd consider it. It absolutely shreds on mellow trails.
 

jonKranked

Detective Dookie
Nov 10, 2005
85,828
24,405
media blackout
I agree, but with the Yeti being marketed this way, one would expect they'd allow the option. I agree this is a bigger issue where it's just like "F-you, here's a 3-position adjuster and rebound and you'll only be able to run it on open-blow-through-the-travel setting because it'll jackhammer otherwise". I think the SB100 just brings it more to the extreme. They are trying to do something different, a more aggressive short travel bike, but not following through.
agreed. i like the idea of down country (but not the name). but i think its gonna take more to properly execute re: the suspension.

the problem with every xc bike (real xc bike) is that xc riders don't know how to setup suspension. the majority of the ones i've encountered pretty much just dial compression has firm as it goes so it rides "like a hardtail"
 

slimshady

¡Mira, una ardilla!
what the eff is a down country?
I think Argentina (my country) would be a good example. Our poor peso has been under devaluation for three years straight. our current government has subscribed over ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY BILLION DOLLARS in debt (and used about a third of that to flee their own fortunes to tax havens), and the domestic economy is going down like two porn actresses on a lesbian flick.
 

toodles

ridiculously corgi proportioned
Aug 24, 2004
5,497
4,743
Australia
The SB100 is a silly bike for those of us who ride mountain bikes in the mountains. Just ignore the full-court press from Yetis marketing dept, as no one will be talking about that bike 6 months from now.
Not that I'd drop that much money, but I'm keen for a shorter travel aggressive trail bike since my girl stole my Scout. The enduro rig is overkill for the faster flowy stuff and long backcountry missions, but I hate XC bike handling and geo. The SB100, Smuggler, Scout, etc are all fun little bikes for when you don't want to be over-biked. If they made a carbon version of the new Scout that would be my preference (playful sized wheels and all), but short travel bikes with good angles are rad.
 

rideit

Bob the Builder
Aug 24, 2004
23,294
11,464
In the cleavage of the Tetons
Yeah, here 65-70% of our terrain is more or less buff monster climbs, with fairly buff descents. I have been vastly overbiked on my Altitude (150/160) and simply don’t need to carry that much more weight around. You really feel it when you are out for 5-7 hours. Short travel bikes are also poppier/more playful on mellower terrain...I have the bigger bike when the objectives get rowdier.
 
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toodles

ridiculously corgi proportioned
Aug 24, 2004
5,497
4,743
Australia
Reviews putting wheelsize down as a con. Not everyone wants 27.5, not everyone wants 29. Its not a con if it is a feature for some and its clearly integral to the way the bike was intended to be used.
 

lobsterCT

Monkey
Jun 23, 2015
278
414
I think Argentina (my country) would be a good example. Our poor peso has been under devaluation for three years straight. our current government has subscribed over ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY BILLION DOLLARS in debt (and used about a third of that to flee their own fortunes to tax havens), and the domestic economy is going down like two porn actresses on a lesbian flick.
That sucks man. I know smart guys like you who have lived it, know the absurdity of central banks and fiat currency. Us Americans are starting to get a glimpse of the problem, but we are more in the slow boil stage.
 

slimshady

¡Mira, una ardilla!
That sucks man. I know smart guys like you who have lived it, know the absurdity of central banks and fiat currency. Us Americans are starting to get a glimpse of the problem, but we are more in the slow boil stage.
Back in the 80s we were the test tube cases for most of the stuff you guys are going through nowadays. The worst part of being an Argentinian is knowing the guys on top want the populace to remain poor, and only export soybeans, a bit of meat, and oil. Not so long ago, we had a helluva program to develop a microsat/cubesat satellite launcher. We developed a jet fighter trainer from scratch. And we even sent a geostationary communications satellite up, completely designed here. But they still want us to be "the barn of the world". Oh, and a second order tax haven, if the laws they are pushing for do get approved.

Yet the mofos claim all the responsibility for the country's demise is from the poor people.

Sorry for the steam venting. And thanks so much for taking the time to tell us a wonderful story, in a wonderful manner. As others said you have some diamond in the rough there.

/RANT.
 
Back in the 80s we were the test tube cases for most of the stuff you guys are going through nowadays. The worst part of being an Argentinian is knowing the guys on top want the populace to remain poor, and only export soybeans, a bit of meat, and oil. Not so long ago, we had a helluva program to develop a microsat/cubesat satellite launcher. We developed a jet fighter trainer from scratch. And we even sent a geostationary communications satellite up, completely designed here. But they still want us to be "the barn of the world". Oh, and a second order tax haven, if the laws they are pushing for do get approved.

Yet the mofos claim all the responsibility for the country's demise is from the poor people.

Sorry for the steam venting. And thanks so much for taking the time to tell us a wonderful story, in a wonderful manner. As others said you have some diamond in the rough there.

/RANT.
I presume that you are familiar with Operation Condor and all that...
 

slimshady

¡Mira, una ardilla!
I presume that you are familiar with Operation Condor and all that...
.

Too painfully familiar...

I have a missing uncle. The military Junta took him away and we never heard back from him. And my mother had to flee to the South of the country and hide for a couple of months while I was in her womb, all because they were listed in the Socialist Party's roster. Had she stayed in Buenos Aires, she'd followed my uncle's demise.

The most obscene part of our recent history is having the same mofos who ran the economic circus back then, running it now.
 
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.

Too painfully familiar...

I have a missing uncle. The military Junta took him away and we never heard back from him. And my mother had to flee to the South of the country and hide for a couple of months while I was in her womb, all because they were listed in the Socialist Party's roster. Had she stayed in Buenos Aires, she'd followed my uncle's demise.

The most obscene part of our recent history is having the same mofos who ran the economic circus back then, running it now.
Yeah,I watched that transition with sadness. Corporations own us all. In '11 I started riding with a woman from Argentina, which made me for the first time pay attention to the tragic cycles of latinoamericano politics, which I still follow and try to understand.
 

mykel

closer to Periwinkle
Apr 19, 2013
5,097
3,817
sw ontario canada
T
Yeah,I watched that transition with sadness. Corporations own us all. In '11 I started riding with a woman from Argentina, which made me for the first time pay attention to the tragic cycles of latinoamericano politics, which I still follow and try to understand.
The same for me with friends in Cuba.
They see their poor little island, then they see superpower China with favored nation trading status, but who is also communist, has a shitty record and is an actual direct military threat to any and all US interests no matter where in the world.
The one thing they do see very clearly though is the corporate power and how its tentacles infect government, bending it too its will. With the exception of the loudmouths in S Florida (Fuck why is it always Florida?) they really don't get why there has not been a concerted effort to "open" the market and try to exploit them. Not that they want exploiting mind, but just access to the worlds markets.
 

lobsterCT

Monkey
Jun 23, 2015
278
414
Yeah,I watched that transition with sadness. Corporations own us all. In '11 I started riding with a woman from Argentina, which made me for the first time pay attention to the tragic cycles of latinoamericano politics, which I still follow and try to understand.
T


The same for me with friends in Cuba.
They see their poor little island, then they see superpower China with favored nation trading status, but who is also communist, has a shitty record and is an actual direct military threat to any and all US interests no matter where in the world.
The one thing they do see very clearly though is the corporate power and how its tentacles infect government, bending it too its will. With the exception of the loudmouths in S Florida (Fuck why is it always Florida?) they really don't get why there has not been a concerted effort to "open" the market and try to exploit them. Not that they want exploiting mind, but just access to the worlds markets.

If your vans a rockin, and the IMF comes a knockin, roll up the windows and lock the doors. Those loans are the small pox laced blankets of yesteryear that the US govt game to the American Indians.

China has picked up on the scam, and they are going places like Africa and Pahkistan/India (can't remember which one, close to each other but very different places) and making loans the countries will never be able to pay back. Makes them dependent, and allows China to seize productive assets and resources that are put up as collateral for such loans.

There are a myriad of facets to the central bank scam and the destruction they leave in their wake with their boom and bust cycles, and we would need 100 threads to look at them all. Check out Princes of Yenn on youtube to get an idea of how the process works. Its a bit hyperbolic in some aspects but gives a big picture look examining the lost generation in Japan.
 

slimshady

¡Mira, una ardilla!
If your vans a rockin, and the IMF comes a knockin, roll up the windows and lock the doors. Those loans are the small pox laced blankets of yesteryear that the US govt game to the American Indians.
Our government knew this pretty well in advance. The IMF isn't an institution hoping to boost country development, it's actually the other way around. They would lend you money, but on draconian conditions which would ultimately lead to a broken internal market and an increase in poverty. Even you guys up north depended on government led initiatives to come out of the subprime mortgage crisis. We have been dealing with their policies for 50 years now, and the bastards in charge would come back simply because they KNOW adhering to the IMF regime would increase the gap between them and the rest of the population.