anthonyyule wrote:istoo wrote:dammit missed the topic!
i resisted going 29 last year after giant announced they were dropping the size to focus on 650b/27.5. I am quite tall and do prefer down to up so stuck with my little wheels, but the clown wheeled bikes do behave well coming down on some trails. its not better or worse, just different. Depends a lot on local trials etc. also to a degree on your physical build, specifically your height. bigger wheels suit a taller rider and certain terrain. But as stated already go demo two back to back if you can. depending where you live there are demo days in the trail centres a few times a year.
Not necssarily true. My race bike is a Santa Cruz Tallby LTc (29er) and I wouldnt race anything else. Im only 5' 5" - and it could be argued that I look a little comical on it (like a young loon riding his new birthday bike thats going to last him for the next 10 years), but I love it. As I am smaller I have less physical bulk to carry around and so the slight weight penalty of the large bike is negated. Having said that as it is running carbon hoops/ carbon frame/ carbon cranks and carbon bars there really isnt much weight left in the bike anyway
I ride with guys (and girls) with all sorts of permutation of bike nowadays. hardtail/ full-suss and in all wheel sizes. We are all just as quick up and downhill and we all have great fun. No such thing as bike envy either as we all made our own bike decisions based on a myriad of different factors (mine was quality/ weight and colour!). What I would say is that I get less tired on the 29er thsan i do on either my Cannondale Trigger Black (27.5) or Specialized Epic Marathon (26"). I can ride longer on it without fatique. I have friends who always use their 29ers for long distance trekking. I also have a friend who swears by his hardtail - and only swaps onto his full-suss during endurance races and wants a break from the punishment during the overnight stints.
horses for courses - have fun!
I should have put the no better no worse bit at the start, half a bottle of tanquery later... I have had this discussion for years, no resolve, its just different. It has been had before though Gary Fisher tried to introduce it in the 90s at the same time cannondale tried to go with 24 in rear wheels. Tried them all, its just different. I guess my frustration is mountain bikes have hit a sweet spot, every 3 years or so i would replace bikes and the next one would be an evolutionary step forward, but that has really slowed in the last 3-4 years. i.e. the technology and designs are pretty much there, the improvements slightly lesser, but the sport is now massive. market helps too... Wheel sizes, i don't disagree, but nobody was really complaining they weren't good enough. The level of technological advancement has allowed the industry to try different configurations, its just different, horses for courses call it what you will. arguable subjective. Can see it in the endure series as well, podium filled with different wheel sizes.
Let me put it another way, there isn't a wrong choice in the wheel sizes, its predominantly a personal decision but there are some small nuances between the wheels sizes. try both and see what you prefer! The compromises are minor, but they have slight biases towards different types of riding. 26 suits me, but i am the other end of the scale, 6ft 3 and 95 kgs, so we are both on wrong bikes
I will say that giant are the biggest manufacturer by a mile, they are focused on 27.5 aka 650b,
http://www.bikemag.com/gear/news-giant- ... with-27-5/
Does it matter for the OP, probably not just another set of choices, opinions etc.
Spending more than you planned... of course, what happens when you say i am not spending anything on the elise... hmmm?
Just getting out to ride is the first bit, if you get a bike that suits your riding and builds confidence i have seen some pals get back into biking again in a big way. Don't worry so much about buying the most expensive one you can, some genuinely magic bikes for your budget. if you grow to enjoy it weekends away with pals, good kit, dirt school, or mtb abroad are good uses of budget in my eyes

Welcome to money put land
