north woods gal
01-13-2017, 01:04 PM
Been riding both old and new snow bikes, this week, on our local snow packed roads, both for fun and to experience how far the bike world has changed with snow bikes.
http://i68.tinypic.com/2ps0qdi.jpg
First, the old. It's my 2008 Trek 8000 26" MTB, on the left. After fitting it with Kenda studded 26" MTB tires, it was state of the art in snow biking when I bought it, new, in 2008, to get me though two Chicago winters. No easy task, that, since it was my only means of transport in those days (as in no car). Did the job, though. Never missed a day of work because of the weather (my commute was 8 mikes, one way), even though those two winters had actually set a record for snowfall.
Now for the new. It's my recently purchased Norco (a Canadian bike brand) Sasquatch 1 fat bike (on the right in the pic, of course). It wears a set of Maxxis 26x4.6 tires. The relatively light overall weight of this bike, even with the front shock, coupled with the relatively smooth rolling, shallow tread tires makes the Norco an ideal bike for riding hard packed winter roads. Bought the bike with fast summer trail work in mind, but it's been great on the winter roads, too.
So how did they compare? Did 5 miles on each bike, same roads. Temp was 4 degrees, no wind.
The old skinny tired Trek actually did fine, as I knew it would, once I put my winter riding skills to work. Had to be careful to avoid going too fast on the downhills, but as long as I stayed on the hard stuff and, especially, avoided any ruts in the ice, no problems and as long as I feathered the brakes, no problem. Soft patches of snow or ruts, though, or braking too hard, got me a fishtailing and sometimes squirrelly steering bike. Not a big deal, because I ride bikes in the sand, too, in the summer months and that bike behavior is nothing new. Overall, riding the Trek on winter roads is very doable, assuming you know the risky spots and know how to react.
The fat bike just shrugged that all that stuff off, though. Totally amazing. I could ride the Norco without regard to any of those issues and totally relax, even going out of my way to find several inches of soft snow to play in. Totally amazed me how easy I could turn the fat bike and how much better those big tires grabbed when I hit the brakes. Wow! Really wanted to go crashing off the road and play in our now two feet of snow, riding in the cross country ski trials I had made earlier in the week, but riding in the deep stuff is another story.
Yup, it's winter and I'm having a blast riding my bikes. :)
http://i65.tinypic.com/nmkzmo.jpg
http://i68.tinypic.com/2ps0qdi.jpg
First, the old. It's my 2008 Trek 8000 26" MTB, on the left. After fitting it with Kenda studded 26" MTB tires, it was state of the art in snow biking when I bought it, new, in 2008, to get me though two Chicago winters. No easy task, that, since it was my only means of transport in those days (as in no car). Did the job, though. Never missed a day of work because of the weather (my commute was 8 mikes, one way), even though those two winters had actually set a record for snowfall.
Now for the new. It's my recently purchased Norco (a Canadian bike brand) Sasquatch 1 fat bike (on the right in the pic, of course). It wears a set of Maxxis 26x4.6 tires. The relatively light overall weight of this bike, even with the front shock, coupled with the relatively smooth rolling, shallow tread tires makes the Norco an ideal bike for riding hard packed winter roads. Bought the bike with fast summer trail work in mind, but it's been great on the winter roads, too.
So how did they compare? Did 5 miles on each bike, same roads. Temp was 4 degrees, no wind.
The old skinny tired Trek actually did fine, as I knew it would, once I put my winter riding skills to work. Had to be careful to avoid going too fast on the downhills, but as long as I stayed on the hard stuff and, especially, avoided any ruts in the ice, no problems and as long as I feathered the brakes, no problem. Soft patches of snow or ruts, though, or braking too hard, got me a fishtailing and sometimes squirrelly steering bike. Not a big deal, because I ride bikes in the sand, too, in the summer months and that bike behavior is nothing new. Overall, riding the Trek on winter roads is very doable, assuming you know the risky spots and know how to react.
The fat bike just shrugged that all that stuff off, though. Totally amazing. I could ride the Norco without regard to any of those issues and totally relax, even going out of my way to find several inches of soft snow to play in. Totally amazed me how easy I could turn the fat bike and how much better those big tires grabbed when I hit the brakes. Wow! Really wanted to go crashing off the road and play in our now two feet of snow, riding in the cross country ski trials I had made earlier in the week, but riding in the deep stuff is another story.
Yup, it's winter and I'm having a blast riding my bikes. :)
http://i65.tinypic.com/nmkzmo.jpg