SRAM sent through some information on some new brakes they’ve developed. X0 gets some refinements and a new 4-piston X0 Trail brake also emerges.
Introducing the new AVID X0 Trail and X0 ...
Thanks to Mtbr member “Ska” for this photo submission!
How often have you been out riding by yourself and thought, “Man…this would be an awesome shot, too bad I don’t have someone who can snap a photo of me riding with this great scenery!” Well, if you have the patience and time, using the self-timer feature on your camera can produce some amazing shots!
We have several great examples of what can come out of a camera with a self-timer. Sure, having a tripod helps but most of us don’t ride with one, so you may have to get creative with the shot setup. Getting the timing down takes patience and practice, some of the shots shown below and in the discussion thread took a dozen times are more to get right.
For more examples, tips and pointers on how to capture self-timer shots, check out the ...
The Giant Glory 0
World Championship Performance
The Giant Glory downhill race bike was thrown into the limelight last fall when team rider Danny Hart annihilated the field at the Downhill World Championship. At an event that is usually won by thousandths of a second, Danny and his Glory decimated the field by putting a demoralizing 11.6-second gap on the second-place finisher. Could the production version of the Giant Glory deliver the same performance and confidence that Danny’s bike possessed? There was only one way to find out, so we loaded the Giant Glory into Big Red and headed to Northstar-at-Tahoe for a downhill thrashing.
WHO IS IT MADE FOR?
The Giant Glory 0 is for downhill racing. It could be pressed into service as a bike-park bike, because it does not have the super-slack geometry of many downhill racers. But don’t be misled; this is not a bike that you will ever pedal up a mountain or take for a casual trail ride. It is a serious downhill race weapon.
WHAT IS IT MADE FROM?
The frame is constructed from Giant’s Aluxx-SL aluminum alloy and is a perfect example of modern metal work and tube manipulation. There are no welded gussets or, for that matter, straight tubes. All of the tubes are hydroformed to maximize strength and stiffness while cutting down on weight. The tube diameters are massive, giving the bike a mean, burly look. Giant’s dual-link Maestro suspension design delivers 8 inches of rear-wheel travel.
WHICH COMPONENTS STAND OUT?
The full-Shimano Saint group always provides performance eye candy. We were stoked to see a 7-inch brake rotor spec’ed on the rear. It saves a ...
For 2012, Avid has replaced the Elixir CR brake and it its place is the Avid Elixir 9. There are a variety of changes with these new brakes that are sure to please many riders. Details inside.
Available in Storm Grey Ano or Black Ano
MSRP: $226.00
To start, the Elixir 9 features an updated TaperBore system, carbon brake levers, a new two-piece caliper, as well as new HS1 rotors. There are a variety of other updates as well that are detailed below. Designed to work in multiple cycling categories, the Elixir 9 is intended for XC, Trail AM, and DH use.
The Caliper:
Two piston, two piece caliper, and top loading pads.
The adjustable banjo bolt to lets you reorient ...
One of the leading producers of Mountain Bikes has announced some new models for 2012. Trek Bikes has unveiled its 2012 collection of trail-ripping full suspension bikes to the media at its Ride Camp in Mayrhofen, Austria.
Included in this year’s line are two completely new models; the Trek Carbon Session 9.9 and a bike that Trek are putting into a new category, which they are calling Technical Trail Bikes, the new Trek Slash Mountain Bike. New technologies abound as Trek’s Fuel EX, Remedy, and Rumblefish bikes will now be equipped with DRCV Fox Forks, a new fork breakthrough spawned from Trek’s Southern California-based suspension lab’s development work with Fox Racing Shox.
Trek Session ...
Giant Bicycles are to bring the new OverDrive 2 front end, introduced at their road product launch last month, to mountain bikes for 2012, as well. The off-road version uses the same tapered head tube found on their current current mountain bikes, but with a new oversized, tapered steerer tube designed to work with 1¼in top and 1½in bottom bearing sizes.
The company say the bigger steerer tube gives up to 30 percent more torsional steering stiffness than the original 1⅛-1½in OverDrive system, resulting in sharper handling and improved cornering capabilities. Giant will offer a full range of new 1¼in stems to work with the OverDrive 2 design.
Giant's 6.7in-travel Reign X 0 outfitted with SRAM's X0 group
It's been developed as an open standard – meaning any company is free to use it – in conjunction with major suspension manufacturers including Fox Racing Shox, Marzocchi and RockShox. OverDrive 2 is included on a number of Giant’s 2012 cross-country, trail and all-mountain bikes. It can be adapted to fit current Giant models with tapered head tubes, but this involves swapping out the top bearing, headset cup, spacers, stem and fork.
Giant's 5in Trance X 1 with ...
The new 2012 Look 920 seems to have a polarizing effect due to nothing more than the head tube/stem assembly, but there’s so much more going on with the bike.
There are two frame variants based on size, plus a carbon upgrade kit that gives it a 50g lighter full carbon rocker, carbon seat post and carbon fiber DT Swiss rear shock. The frames differ near the seat tube/top tube junction. The XS and Small sizes have straight tubes meeting as you’d expect. The Medium and Large sizes have a molded, shapely top tube that flows upward into the seat tube much more gracefully, accentuated by the matte paint/carbon finish.
UPDATED: Corrected info about the frame ...
At the core of most of the changes sits the expansion of their established Dual Rate Control Valve (DRCV) rear shock technology to Fox forks on their top trail bike models. Oddly for such an important development, it’s not a visible change, but it's one that's opened the gates to a raft of significant changes across their 120- and 150mm-travel bikes.
The brainchild of Jose Gonzales, Trek’s California-based suspension guru, the DRCV system incorporates a second, smaller-volume air chamber to balance bigger hits and allow full travel. In its new application, this secondary chamber is housed within the fork's compression rod, overcoming space restraints.
Twin-chamber DRCV technology can now be found in the Fox forks fitted to some Trek ...
Let’s start with the Claymore. Cannondale first showed off this long-travel all-mountain rig more than a year ago, but various complications have meant it's been slow reaching UK shops. The delays are set to end though, and anyone who has the 2012 model on their Christmas wishlist shouldn’t be disappointed. Key to its design is the proprietary dual-mode Fox Dyad RT2 dual shock, which allows an instant switch from a bike that eats up the downhills into one better suited to cross-country riding and climbing.
A handlebar lever allows you to change from the ...
Specialized's latest redesign of the 30-year-old Stumpjumper is the biggest news for 2012, but they also have new carbon Camber and alloy Carve 29ers, as well as a new entry-level downhill rig, the Status, which is a replacement for the stalwart Big Hit model.
At their global mountain bike launch in Monterey, California the 'big S' also unveiled some key upgrades to the Epic full-suspension range and carbon Stumpjumper hardtails – the most significant change being a crown-mounted Fade adjuster for the SID Brain fork found on the S-Works, Expert and EVO R models.
Stumpjumper FSR
At its launch 30 years ago, the Stumpjumper was one of the first bikes ready to hit the trail right out of the box, ...



































































