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Yeti 303 Carbon

Wa-Aw

Monkey
Jul 30, 2010
354
0
Philippines
Any rumors of a DH bike on the Switch pivot tech? Maybe an RDH replacement?

Or maybe even better, a 303WC, with an eccentric main pivot (and one chainstay). :D
 

John P.

Turbo Monkey
Sep 24, 2001
1,170
0
Golden, CO
As we've said all along, we develop bikes and technology with a very specific purpose in mind. Switch Technology works very well for the performance characteristics we were looking to achieve with a trail/all mountain bike. The 303/Rail technology works very well for what we were trying to achieve for a DH bike (a look at the speed trap results from the last two years at PMB will demonstrate this pretty clearly).

FYI,

JP
 

General Lee

Turbo Monkey
Oct 16, 2003
2,860
0
The 802
As we've said all along, we develop bikes and technology with a very specific purpose in mind. Switch Technology works very well for the performance characteristics we were looking to achieve with a trail/all mountain bike. The 303/Rail technology works very well for what we were trying to achieve for a DH bike (a look at the speed trap results from the last two years at PMB will demonstrate this pretty clearly).

FYI,

JP

You have to admit that's not exactly what comes to mind when most people think about DH bike performance. But I'd bet it's not too long before those 3 guys give you a way better plug for the 303. Great to see the Yeti DH team reloaded with talent.
 

William42

fork ways
Jul 31, 2007
3,926
671
man, I guess we just don't see eye to eye on bikes lee, I love straightline monstertruckin over harsh terrain.
 

jonKranked

Detective Dookie
Nov 10, 2005
86,005
24,550
media blackout
As we've said all along, we develop bikes and technology with a very specific purpose in mind. Switch Technology works very well for the performance characteristics we were looking to achieve with a trail/all mountain bike. The 303/Rail technology works very well for what we were trying to achieve for a DH bike (a look at the speed trap results from the last two years at PMB will demonstrate this pretty clearly).

FYI,

JP
JP - where can one find said speed trap results?
 

General Lee

Turbo Monkey
Oct 16, 2003
2,860
0
The 802
man, I guess we just don't see eye to eye on bikes lee, I love straightline monstertruckin over harsh terrain.
Who doesn't. But that's not exactly the best description of the RSA speedtrap (or most any WC speedtrap for that matter). Unless Yeti has figured out a way to fabricate Jared's legs into the frame.

I much prefer the speed trap that covers the entire track.
 

bdamschen

Turbo Monkey
Nov 28, 2005
3,377
156
Spreckels, CA
Who doesn't. But that's not exactly the best description of the RSA speedtrap (or most any WC speedtrap for that matter). Unless Yeti has figured out a way to fabricate Jared's legs into the frame.

I much prefer the speed trap that covers the entire track.
...because Yeti has figured out how to fabricate Jared's legs AND bike handling skills into the frame?
 

John P.

Turbo Monkey
Sep 24, 2001
1,170
0
Golden, CO
I can't speak for other tracks, but the speed trap at PMB is at the end of a long, straight, steep, rocky section. It's a pretty good equalizer, because most of the riders at the WC level can let go of the brakes in that section and let their bike do its thing. Basically, it takes a lot of the skill and fitness level of the rider out of the equation and just measures how well a bike can absorb bumps and go fast. We've been pretty happy with the results.

JP
 

General Lee

Turbo Monkey
Oct 16, 2003
2,860
0
The 802
It's a pretty substantial piece of marketing and imaginary thinking to attribute speed trap speeds to frame design. If the traps took skill/fitness out of the equation, then everyone on similar frames and suspension would be going the same speed. They're not. As for the reported speeds, you have to wonder their accuracy when a one-armed Al Bond can go 2.5mph faster than the worlds best.

Moral of the story: Break your shoulder and buy a Nukeproof
 

kickstand

Turbo Monkey
Sep 18, 2009
3,441
392
Fenton, MI
doesn't matter what bike I'm on, my traps speeds are limited by the small size of my balls a lot more so than by my bikes ability to absorb bumps
 

John P.

Turbo Monkey
Sep 24, 2001
1,170
0
Golden, CO
It's a pretty substantial piece of marketing and imaginary thinking to attribute speed trap speeds to frame design. If the traps took skill/fitness out of the equation, then everyone on similar frames and suspension would be going the same speed. They're not. As for the reported speeds, you have to wonder their accuracy when a one-armed Al Bond can go 2.5mph faster than the worlds best.

Moral of the story: Break your shoulder and buy a Nukeproof
I think the statement I made may have been interpreted more generally than I intended.

I meant to say that on this particular track with this particular trap placement (at the end of a long, straight, rocky, steep section), I feel that it's a pretty good indicator of how well a bike absorbs bumps and how fast it allows a rider to go over that type of terrain. If there's another way to measure this type of thing with this few variables over this many types of bikes, I'm not aware of it.

Will statistical anomalies exist? No doubt. But when the same bike finishes at the top of this particular test 2 years in a row under 3 different riders, that seems like more than a coincidence to me.

Are there other factors that go into making a bike go fast over an entire race or multiple races in a season? Of course. The rider is probably the biggest variable, but the bike's ability to corner, efficiently pedal, etc. etc. etc. are all huge as well.

I'm not trying to offer any 'imaginary marketing'; just making a very specific statement about a very specific set of criteria.

JP
 

norbar

KESSLER PROBLEM. Just cause
Jun 7, 2007
11,369
1,605
Warsaw :/
John I think a statement that a bike can make you faster is very unpopular on the interwebz lately. True hardcore riders tend to follow the opinion that you could win in a shopping cart. Also in case of speedtraps parts and overall bike setup also play a role.

At the same time my riding experiance sure suggests that some bikes are noticably faster over the rough than others. I'd be really curious to see a speed test of different frames with the same setup and same rider. I wonder what the differances are and how they transfer to the final course time. At the same time I have to say plowish bikes don't seem to win often but again it has to do more with the riders.



btw. I have an idea - can you do a comparison like the one i mentioned between the new 303 and the 303R ?
 
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General Lee

Turbo Monkey
Oct 16, 2003
2,860
0
The 802
I think the statement I made may have been interpreted more generally than I intended.

I meant to say that on this particular track with this particular trap placement (at the end of a long, straight, rocky, steep section), I feel that it's a pretty good indicator of how well a bike absorbs bumps and how fast it allows a rider to go over that type of terrain. If there's another way to measure this type of thing with this few variables over this many types of bikes, I'm not aware of it.


Will statistical anomalies exist? No doubt. But when the same bike finishes at the top of this particular test 2 years in a row under 3 different riders, that seems like more than a coincidence to me.

Are there other factors that go into making a bike go fast over an entire race or multiple races in a season? Of course. The rider is probably the biggest variable, but the bike's ability to corner, efficiently pedal, etc. etc. etc. are all huge as well.

I'm not trying to offer any 'imaginary marketing'; just making a very specific statement about a very specific set of criteria.

JP
So rough and rocky that a one-armed man pulled 2.5mph on everyone?
 

Owennn

Monkey
Mar 10, 2009
128
1
I think the statement I made may have been interpreted more generally than I intended.

I meant to say that on this particular track with this particular trap placement (at the end of a long, straight, rocky, steep section), I feel that it's a pretty good indicator of how well a bike absorbs bumps and how fast it allows a rider to go over that type of terrain.
So if we use your logic a bit, because the World Cup last year was won on a Trek Session, should we all go buy one of those since it demonstrated its ability (nothing to do with the rider, weather, insert your own variable here etc) to perform over a larger cross section of tracks?
 

norbar

KESSLER PROBLEM. Just cause
Jun 7, 2007
11,369
1,605
Warsaw :/
So if we use your logic a bit, because the World Cup last year was won on a Trek Session, should we all go buy one of those since it demonstrated its ability (nothing to do with the rider, weather, insert your own variable here etc) to perform over a larger cross section of tracks?
Larger cross section of a track = more variables. I think you missed his point. Not to mention I've seen people claim more plowy frames are slower in corners which in turn may be slower all along the track (though it's just speculation and I won't suggest either way is true unless I see some proper tests on that)

I have to say 3 different riders getting great speedtraps time on that frame may be a coincidence but it is interesting.
 

Full Trucker

Frikkin newb!!!
Feb 26, 2003
10,554
7,647
Exit, CO
So if we use your logic a bit, because the World Cup last year was won on a Trek Session, should we all go buy one of those since it demonstrated its ability (nothing to do with the rider, weather, insert your own variable here etc) to perform over a larger cross section of tracks?
Every marketing department of every bicycle company that has ever green-lighted the salary of a top WC rider is saying exactly this, or something like it. Not just Trek, not just Yeti, not just Specialized or Giant or Fox or SRAM or whoever. Having wins on your equipment sells product, period.

This isn't some deep dark secret, or at least I wasn't aware that it was? :D



I think you missed his point.
^^^Oh, and also this.








EDIT: To be fair to manufacturers, employing top-level riders does more than just provide marketing content to sell product. The testing and R&D feedback a company can get from it's top riders is instrumental in pushing the development of new product and technologies. (Which ALSO helps to sell products, come to think of it... :think:)
 
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Vrock

Linkage Design Blog
Aug 13, 2005
276
59
Spain
I think the statement I made may have been interpreted more generally than I intended.

I meant to say that on this particular track with this particular trap placement (at the end of a long, straight, rocky, steep section), I feel that it's a pretty good indicator of how well a bike absorbs bumps and how fast it allows a rider to go over that type of terrain. If there's another way to measure this type of thing with this few variables over this many types of bikes, I'm not aware of it.

JP
There is: computer simulation. It eliminates all the variables and gives you very interesting results.
 

Owennn

Monkey
Mar 10, 2009
128
1
Larger cross section of a track = more variables. I think you missed his point. Not to mention I've seen people claim more plowy frames are slower in corners which in turn may be slower all along the track (though it's just speculation and I won't suggest either way is true unless I see some proper tests on that)

I have to say 3 different riders getting great speedtraps time on that frame may be a coincidence but it is interesting.
No, John's point was that the Yeti is the best on a single straight in South Africa so the suspension must be awesome, while ignoring all other contributing variables to frame performance.

My point was that if we all do the same (ignore all variables) then you can make any old turd look good.
 
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William42

fork ways
Jul 31, 2007
3,926
671
yeah, fyck the fycktwats of this thread.

edit: john, I've always been of the opinion that yeti's were baddass, that they rode super well. I had three complaints with them in the past:

The early rail design required a sh1t ton of maint to keep it feeling as smooth as most other bikes on the market. Fixed with the RDH

The earlier 303 and the RDH were really heavy frames, which should be fixed with this carbon model.

And last, and biggest thing that held me back, is that they were too expensive and I couldn't afford one!

I like my session alot, but I probably will be unwilling to justify buying a new one at retail since I no longer work at a shop, and trek has gone full retard with their specs and prices (6K for a top of the line DH bike that comes with lower end house brand components, shock, tires, and wheels? pass.)

In about 2 years, I'll probably have broken my session, and be in a more financially stable state, and I'll be looking at a new bike. And I'll be giving that carbon DH bike you guys have in the pipes a good hard look.
 
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ronnyg801

Chimp
May 27, 2009
61
7
I am stoked that John P. is here, and other forums. I can't say the same for many other manufacturers.

What I take from the comment and stats is this, in a sport where there are so many variables it is important to track the limited data you can and attempt to use it to your advantage, whether thats fine tuning a fork or redesigning a frame. Yes this is a stretch but so is gathering data.

IF, I was Yeti R&D I would be stoked to see that the vision was working or at very least headed in the right direction.
 

Jeremy R

<b>x</b>
Nov 15, 2001
9,698
1,053
behind you with a snap pop
Plus, John P is one of us and is old school. I remember him before he had any industry job from way back in the day when he was recommending 24 inch 3.0 inch gazzalodi's for hucking at Plattekill.
Way back when DW was just a young dreamer that went by F1 Moto. ;)
 

'size

Turbo Monkey
May 30, 2007
2,000
338
AZ
i'm curious if john p. can elaborate on what aspect of the 303 wc design is the most crucial, or in yeti's mind what about it gives it the edge over other bikes in the scenario john p. is trumpeting here. not hating, just curious what the designers feel is so advantageous over other designs for 'straight line monster trucking' as i think another poster described it.
 

norbar

KESSLER PROBLEM. Just cause
Jun 7, 2007
11,369
1,605
Warsaw :/
No, John's point was that the Yeti is the best on a single straight in South Africa so the suspension must be awesome, while ignoring all other contributing variables to frame performance.

My point was that if we all do the same (ignore all variables) then you can make any old turd look good.
I think you might have imagined that part. He just commented on one advantage of their susp. I think he hopes everyone realizes that every susp design is a compromise so hide your rage boner and chill out.



btw. John is all that defending of yeti and stuff increasing the chances of yeti sending a test ride to our bike mag? ;)
 

Huck Banzai

Turbo Monkey
May 8, 2005
2,523
23
Transitory
"The name that jumps out most for me though is Richard Rude Jr. Not a name I'm familiar with but after a spot of Googling I now know he's better known as Richie Rude (great name fella...) and he's a 17 year old riding for the same Yeti Fox Shox Factory team as Jared Graves. He must have had a problem up top as his Split 1 put him only 64th but then he had an absolute stormer of a run after that posting the 11th fastest pedal of the day and 11th fastest bottom split to go 31st. A dark horse to watch out for this year?"


:rolleyes: