I'm pretty sure that was the regular Gambler 10 with a SC fork, if this was the video you're thinking of...sweet i wonder if there is a minidh version with a singlecrownfor 2104 i recall seeing a video and one of the guys was ripping it up on what looked like a minidh gambler with a single crown fox 36 up front
I'm pretty sure that was the regular Gambler 10 with a SC fork, if this was the video you're thinking of...
SHAPERIDESHOOT Winter Edit
You probably did. There are a few riders and shop owners on the new frames or color samples. Did you see the blue and orange one and maybe a black and white one?I think I already saw these 2014 models in crans montana and morgins
That was Vincent Tupin in San Remo, Italy. It is a stock Gambler in the high bb setting with a +1° headset. Vincent is on a 40 now.no the vid i seen was a different one they where riding some killer single track in dry warmer weather , similar looking bike could be the same rider and bike
I only noticed the blue and green ones. Great tracks in Morgins btw (I think you built them) but hard to remember the lines and avoid the cows on the first time.You probably did. There are a few riders and shop owners on the new frames or color samples. Did you see the blue and orange one and maybe a black and white one?
Thanks! Morgins is the first spot I started building in Switzerland. The Gambler was heavily developed there.I only noticed the blue and green ones. Great tracks in Morgins btw (I think you built them) but hard to remember the lines and avoid the cows on the first time.
I'm 176cm so on the Scott size chart it looked like only the M was recommended, but I do like a bit of space in the top tube. I ride a mix of stuff really, tight rooty technical to Ft William and similar. Not been out to PDS for a few years but I'll need to get out again.How tall are you? Coming off an M Sunday you'll fit
both M/L Gambler (I've ridden all three) however neither will be the same. The M will have a ~1" longer wheelbase and shorter hand-foot distance (by about 12mm), while the L will have a ~2"+ (i.e. much) longer wheelbase and similar hand-foot distance (longer by about 6mm).
I would make the call depending on the tracks you ride - if it's fast open euro tracks without a lot of tight corners the L will be great, but if most of your riding isn't in the PDS then the M is probably better - unless you like / want to change to a bigger bike.
I think a Large would be good.I'm 176cm so on the Scott size chart it looked like only the M was recommended, but I do like a bit of space in the top tube. I ride a mix of stuff really, tight rooty technical to Ft William and similar. Not been out to PDS for a few years but I'll need to get out again.
Love the Sunday, I wont be any faster on another bike, but it is starting to show its age and if I do replace it its probably more cost effective to buy a full bike like the Gambler 30, YT Tues etc. around the £2.5k mark.
They should be but I wouldn't wait too long.Are the 2014s going to be any easier to get in the US? I went to a Scott dealer a couple months ago and they were sold out of almost every model.
SRAM press fit 92 works.So I can find a Sram PF 92. Will this work with the Gamblers 107 width BB?
no where can I find a Sram PF 107....only the Shimano.
Thanks for the help
They only different between PF92 and Shimano PF107 is the longer Sleeve.So I can find a Sram PF 92. Will this work with the Gamblers 107 width BB?
no where can I find a Sram PF 107....only the Shimano.
So if I understand correctly for a 85 kg rider one would want 350lbs spring rear and probably a green spring in the Fox 40?
For a 105 kg rider, one would want a 400lbs spring rear and a yellow in front?
Ben does that seem like a sane baseline? TF Tuned recommends funny numbers (350 for 105kg, which gives it 38% sag in practice).
For the record, what are stock springs in the Fox 40's for a Large Gambler 20?
Sorry to butt in the conversation, but what other companies do these headsets? Works components does them, but it's been out of stock for a while, and I'l like to try one out.There are some companies making offset headsets now that you could try if you don't want to buy a new frame, I believe with two external cups you can extend the front end approximately 11mm.