Need recommendations for my first fat bike
#1
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Need recommendations for my first fat bike
Hey everyone. I want to get my first fat tire bike, somewhere between 3-4" with front forks, alum frame, hydraulic brakes and affordable.
I hoping that some of you know some great bikes at even greater prices.
I'm not brand loyal but don't want a Walmart special either.
Thanks
I hoping that some of you know some great bikes at even greater prices.
I'm not brand loyal but don't want a Walmart special either.
Thanks
Last edited by NYMXer; 12-15-15 at 07:32 PM.
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What's the budget? If you can afford it, the Fatback Rhino would be my first recommendation.
When it comes to fatbikes tires and wheels matter more than brakes. Decent fat tires will run you at least $100 a pop -and some cheap fatbikes come with absolutely atrocious tires.
When it comes to fatbikes tires and wheels matter more than brakes. Decent fat tires will run you at least $100 a pop -and some cheap fatbikes come with absolutely atrocious tires.
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I'd go with the Fatback Rhino, which would be similarly priced with better parts. But Fatback is local. I'd also look at the Rocky Mountain Blizzard in that price range.
I know people who have the Specialized Fatboy and are happy with it. I don't like Specialized as a brand, but they do make good bikes. I think they changed the rims this year, used to come with Specialized-branded DTSwiss rims they are something else now. Make sure they are tubeless compatible.
I know people who have the Specialized Fatboy and are happy with it. I don't like Specialized as a brand, but they do make good bikes. I think they changed the rims this year, used to come with Specialized-branded DTSwiss rims they are something else now. Make sure they are tubeless compatible.
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Thanks FrozenK for your advice.
I'm off today and looking to buy the Specialized from my LBS, unless others chime in with other suggestions
I'm off today and looking to buy the Specialized from my LBS, unless others chime in with other suggestions
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Salsa Bucksaw..
Salsa Cycles
Those fat undamped tires will bounce like a basket ball if you try for any speed going down hill....
gets real hairy. I got to ride that bucksaw,,wow It actually stayed on the ground, Imagine that !
Salsa Cycles
Those fat undamped tires will bounce like a basket ball if you try for any speed going down hill....
gets real hairy. I got to ride that bucksaw,,wow It actually stayed on the ground, Imagine that !
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Salsa Bucksaw..
Salsa Cycles
Those fat undamped tires will bounce like a basket ball if you try for any speed going down hill....
gets real hairy. I got to ride that bucksaw,,wow It actually stayed on the ground, Imagine that !
Salsa Cycles
Those fat undamped tires will bounce like a basket ball if you try for any speed going down hill....
gets real hairy. I got to ride that bucksaw,,wow It actually stayed on the ground, Imagine that !
#10
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https://biz179.inmotionhosting.com/~b...5/02/15005.jpg
Framed Bikes
https://www.framedbikes.com/minnesota-series-dealers/
they're not made in MN of course ..
Framed Bikes
https://www.framedbikes.com/minnesota-series-dealers/
they're not made in MN of course ..
Last edited by fietsbob; 12-17-15 at 06:32 PM.
#11
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#12
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I have been looking at the Framed bikes but the mechanical disc has prevented me from buying one. I will be riding this bike at a pretty high level and pace, so good brake modulation is important to me.
Thanks for the input, it is about what I am looking for and I might still get one.
Thanks for the input, it is about what I am looking for and I might still get one.
https://biz179.inmotionhosting.com/~b...5/02/15005.jpg
Framed Bikes
Minnesota Series Dealers | Framed Bikes
they're not made in MN of course ..
Framed Bikes
Minnesota Series Dealers | Framed Bikes
they're not made in MN of course ..
#13
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Fatboy Trail is what I am riding and loving. It is just a blast. I feel like its a great bang for the buck as it includes the Bluto which I dont feel is a necessity but it does a nice job in dampening the front end. I may change my mind BUT I think I like this bike enough that I am going to sell my Epic and simply ride the Fatboy Trail year round. If you have any specific questions please feel free to ask...
Thanks for the help, have fun on those trails. Ohio has some nice ones, esp northern Ohio, eastern too
#14
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I really like the Specialized and the deal at $2.900 from my LBS. IT has some good components and extra's (dropper seat) that I will use while riding. Really, the bike is complete enough as equipped for me so no add on extra's to pay for, other than maybe the saddle.
Thanks for the help, have fun on those trails. Ohio has some nice ones, esp northern Ohio, eastern too
Thanks for the help, have fun on those trails. Ohio has some nice ones, esp northern Ohio, eastern too
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#15
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$2,900 isn't exactly an "affordable first fat bike". At least to me.
I just bought this one:
Save up to 60% off new Fat Bikes Motobecane 2015 Boris The Evil Brut Sprung Shimano XT, Rockshox Equipped Fat Bikes, Mountain Bikes
Brand new model, came out last week, meets all of your specs for $1,000 less than what you'd pay elsewhere for a similar bike. I can see by your sig that you're not BD averse, their fat bikes are very popular over at mtbr.
I just bought this one:
Save up to 60% off new Fat Bikes Motobecane 2015 Boris The Evil Brut Sprung Shimano XT, Rockshox Equipped Fat Bikes, Mountain Bikes
Brand new model, came out last week, meets all of your specs for $1,000 less than what you'd pay elsewhere for a similar bike. I can see by your sig that you're not BD averse, their fat bikes are very popular over at mtbr.
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#19
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Specialized Bicycle Components
#20
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That is a heck of a deal!! I would look closely at how important it is to you to support a local bike shop that I assume helps promote cycling and trails in your community and how important having a local dealer is as far as customer support and warranty support. I will say that Specialized stands behind their products 100%
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#22
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I tend to agree and might be able to post pics tomorrow, wish me luck!
Thanks peeps, I appreciate the input
Thanks peeps, I appreciate the input
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I have been riding fatbikes since 2008, I have never experienced what you describe. Most of my fatbike riding is in the winter but even on dirt trails, or when snow gets packed and/or icy I have never felt the tires "bounce like a basketball." That seems like a symptom of running way too high pressures -and a regular bike with too high pressure will have the same problem. Fatbikes aren't all that different from hardtails. Just heavier and gripper wheels.
But I ride pretty fast going down,, and we played with psi's till we found a sweet spot.
A little too much and bouncy bouncy,,, not quite enough and steering goes out the window,,that was pure terror..
we settled in the 12 to 13 psi range I think..
The Hard tail bike's rear tire barely touched the ground going down fast no matter what we did. It rode fine at sane speeds But I'm not too smart,, 'ADD' and all that. I didn't like it at all.
The Bucksaw,, now that was traction and control, pick a tall gear and pedal all the way down,
eyes tearing from the wind, white knuckle fear, possible death at the G-out, That was a fun ride I tell ya.
This one with the heavy wheel mass being damped both moving up and down we could run 15 psi for a much more controlled ride. But with no snow in my future I saw no need to have to pull such a heavy wheeled bike around,,my climbs were already real lung busters, getting 4" tires and wheels up the hill was not fun at all. I was just too glued to the ground.
Maybe It was lack of skill, I will admit my time of fatties is very limited.
But from my experience,,IMO fat bikes are nothing like Hard tails, not even close..
The Bike I'm drooling over,, my 'N+1' fix is this one:
I don't need a true fatty as I don't ever see snow. I want a mid fat because I have lots of sand and loose stuff..
I started on fast 2.1 wide tires, now on chunky 2.35" and am faster with no precieved increase in rolling resistance.
I think 2.8" would be a great thing ...
Last edited by osco53; 11-29-16 at 06:32 AM.
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And that's your problem. The only time I use 15psi is to sit tubeless tires. Most of the time I'm below 10psi. And that "it may work for you but I ride faster than you" jab, sorry but no. That doesn't work either.
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From what I've read and talked with fat bike owners, tire pressure can totally change a bike's handling and ride quality. Most people set the tires between 6-9 PSI, some as low as 4 PSI, but no one ever mentioned that they go over 10.
It would seem logical to me that more PSI in the tires would induce the rebound effect osco53 was talking about. make no mistake, fat tire bikes can go fast, but as with anything, proper set up will deliver a more confident inspiring ride.
Part of the reason I want front forks is to make sure the front tire maintains contact with the ground.
It would seem logical to me that more PSI in the tires would induce the rebound effect osco53 was talking about. make no mistake, fat tire bikes can go fast, but as with anything, proper set up will deliver a more confident inspiring ride.
Part of the reason I want front forks is to make sure the front tire maintains contact with the ground.