WMB Suspension Demystified - Nmad
Transcription
WMB Suspension Demystified - Nmad
The TRUTh AbOUT LONG TRAVeL T AVeL SUSPENSION DEMYSTIFIED PART 3 Words: Guy Kesteven Photos: Callum Jelley How much power does suspension soak up? Would you actually be quicker without it? n our first two instalments we looked at what’s really going on inside your shocks, and then how to make these complex systems work for you. Now we pull back and examine suspension in general – specifically one of the chief bones of contention. Does suspension movement really rob you of power that could be going to the trail? And if so, how much ‘efficiency’ are you losing? Are you in fact better off on a hardtail? We mixed science, sweat and three bikes – zero, mid and long travel – with a bloody great rocky hill, Strava and an HRM to find out. i The theory On a smooth surface – such as Tarmac – a rigid frame is clearly the most efficient device. There’s no point wasting energy bouncing a bike up and down instead of driving it forwards if there’s nothing to test the travel on the way back down the hill. In the early days of mountain bike suspension – which included poor or nonexistent damping, no ‘platform’ systems to firm up pedalling, high weights and potentially large amounts of flex – there was a lot of bouncing going on. Full suspension has long been thought of as something to benefit descending only. 64 October WMB153.suss3.indd 64 9/9/13 10:33 AM Knowledge October 65 WMB153.suss3.indd 65 9/9/13 10:33 AM Knowledge “The Nomad’s complexly curved suspension arc drives over blocks and scree with easy contempt” But once you add the far more sophisticated suspension of 2013 to rough, technical climbs, does that popular idea still stand up? Can the extra traction and energy-saving smoothness of full suspension beat the traditional ‘efficiency’ of a hardtail on a real-world trail? We already know full suss bikes can descend quicker for any given level of control, but wanted to find out if they’re really so far behind on the climbs, too. The test We took a tough climb – a 900m avalanche of fixed blocks and loose rocks – and three types of bike. These are a 130mm hardtail, a 130mm full susser and a 160mm full susser (see right for more details), all from Santa Cruz. Bike weights are within a pound of each other, and the rider each time is the same – me, Guy Kesteven. And this is a climb I’m familiar with, to avoid times changing due to me learning the hill. There’s justification for launching any of the three bikes at our challenge first, but eventually we decide to leave the theoretically more efficient and fractionally lighter hardtail till last, and use the bump-absorbing traction of the Blocks and loose rocks added to the test climb challenge Nomad to cope with unseen obstacles first. LONG TRAVEL FULL SUSSER The big carbon beast gets off to a bad start. The loose, rocky, ridged doubletrack start is a line-choice and traction challenge at the best of times, but I’m still gutted when the rear shock (which I’m running fully open) sinks and lets the front end lift under power. Suddenly I’m sideways across the trail, foot down and swearing furiously just 10m from the start… The Nomad feels slightly soft as I grunt the big ring along the flatter, smoother pull towards the next big challenge. At 300m the trail channels into a steep 1:5 to 1:4 gully that’s always wet and full of big, loose boulders. It’s normally a case of dropping to the inner ring, snaking round as many of the really big rocks as possible, then making a 66 October WMB153.suss3.indd 66 9/9/13 10:34 AM The bikes We borrowed sample bikes from Stif in Summerbridge (www.stif.co.uk) just south of our target climb, choosing 26in-wheeled machines for circumferential consistency across the 0-160mm travel range. Knowledge The efficienT hardTail We rode the versatile Santa Cruz Chameleon R hardtail (£2949) in its most basic complete build, but upgraded to a Fox 32 Float CTD 130mm fork. Weight 28.6lb The big, bouncy full susser Our long-travel bike is the all-singing, all-moshing 160mm Santa Cruz Nomad Carbon XT (£6235). Kashima gives ultimate smoothness to the Fox shocks at both ends. Weight 29.7lb lunge across a couple of unavoidable blocks onto a thin, smooth offcamber slope on the left. The Nomad swallows the rocks without a hiccup – but then I make a dumb choice. Rather than trusting what it just told me about rocks not being a problem, I try to keep it high on the side of the gully, but steering wander and wet mud spins the back wheel. Cue more swearing as I scoot back across onto the firmer footing of the rocks. Being clipped in and crushing the pedals, the Santa Cruz’s complexly curved suspension arc drives over both blocks and loose scree with easy contempt. A short, flatter section reloads the legs for some treacherous S-bends with their mix of rounded slabs, loose cobbles and a steep-stepped top. Knowing the bike’s strengths now, I hold it as straight as possible, keep power delivery smooth and let the suspension suck up the The Trail-ready middle ground The alloy Santa Cruz Blur TR XT (£4909) gets slackish, lowish trail angles, Shimano XT-kit and an upgraded Kashima-Fox shock and fork. It rocks 130mm up front and 125mm at the rear. Weight 29.6lb October 67 WMB153.suss3.indd 67 9/9/13 10:34 AM Knowledge “The slightly more supportive character of the Blur’s shorter suspension keeps things more controlled” stoppers. I heave onto the moor top with a riding time of 7:36 and a stopped time of 0:20 – so a total of seven minutes and 56 seconds. My average heart rate is 151bpm, and my average output stands at 170 Watts. The wider bars of the Blur TR helped on the climbs too… SHORT TRAVEL FULL SUSSER Next it’s the 125mm rear, 130mm front Blur TR. The slightly more supportive character of the shorter suspension – plus noticeably wider bars – keeps things straighter and more controlled up the first section. The next flatter section still feels like a trudge with second-attempt legs, but there’s enough travel to cope with bigger rocks, and I learn from my last mistake and put my faith in the suspension. With only a The direct-driving hardtail feels the fastest up the hill, but does the clock agree? brief swerve onto the soft side, I drop back into the rocks as soon as possible… By the time I reach the S-bends I’m still dab-free, but breathing hard. Then idiot disaster strikes! I spin the rear wheel on a big smooth slab I hadn’t even registered as a potential issue. I’m back-pedalling immediately and storm the final section, thoroughly enjoying the mix of poised pedalling and blithe ignorance to lumps and steps. The lack of significant stops has pushed my heart rate slightly higher to 158bpm, but average wattage is close to the previous run at 173W. There’s no doubt the shortertravel TR is faster at just 7:25 for the climb, and it felt easier too. THE HARDTAIL A pinch flat before we even start means the Chameleon gets off to a really bad start, despite a tiptoe pace. Tube replaced, pressure restored and riding position tweaked to mimic the other bikes, I roll onto the climb with the direct-drive advantage clear in the first few meters. I’m really having to move about to nurse it over the bigger lumps without losing traction though, and it’s a big relief to lurch onto the smoother intermediate section without dabbing. There’s no suspension bob when pedalling out of the saddle towards the gully, but the rear tyre is rimming out despite a reasonable pressure. I’m trying to be smooth but the pedal The eNGiNe Tester Guy Kesteven has been pitting himself against Scar House climb for over two decades. We based testing on an average sub-maximal 150bpm effort level, recorded via Strava’s Premium app on an iPhone 4 with Wahoo Blue SC heart rate belt, for segment comparison and nominal wattage data. 68 October WMB153.suss3.indd 68 9/9/13 10:34 AM Knowledge The hiLL In Moor Lane is a 900m long, 92m-elevation climb running south east from Scar House reservoir up to Middlesmoor top in Nidderdale, North Yorkshire. 1 in 10 doesn’t sound too bad, but it peaks at steeper than 1 in 3 in places, and the often loose, cobble or block-rock surface is a gruelling test of traction, torque and tenacity. Frankly, you’re having a damn good day if you clean it at all, whatever bike you’re on. stroke is really choking on every rock, so I switch high and risk the smooth but muddy line. It pays off, just, and I lunge over the rocks at the top. There’s a quick respite before the S-bends, but while my breathing might not be so strained, my balance and traction-finding skills are working overtime – I’m pedalling squares trying to lever the rear wheel up and over lumps. Given the number of near-miss moments I’m not surprised when it finally hangs up too hard to get moving again on the rocky, steppy The high BB of the long-travel bike actually helped it climb in some spots final furlong. With momentum lost it’s a real struggle to find enough smooth-rolling space to get going again, and I stumble the last 100m. The end result is 7:54 of riding, 0.25 stopped for a total climb of eight minutes and 19 seconds. My heart rate is lower at 148bpm, as is my average power output at 165W. The results The fact the hardtail was so much slower, but also lower for power output, was a genuine shock. The Chameleon felt the fastest and hardest, and that’s probably because every rough section was a real struggle. Cross-referencing the runs, the time lost even in the first section was a real surprise, with the gully and then the final section all significantly slower. With momentum lost, it didn’t even pull much time back on the 160mm Nomad on the flat. The rest of the day we play about trying to find the optimum climbing setups for each bike. Tyre pressure is dropped as low as we dare for less rattle and more traction on the Chameleon, but it’s still a skillintensive ride – and still slower than the others. In contrast we increase shock pressure and compression damping on the Nomad to stop wallow and keep the nose down, and it makes a big difference, closing the gap noticeably on the TR. In fact, at some points the extra travel and higher ground clearance get us over big steps more easily. Yet even this can’t compete with the ‘just right’ middle ground represented by the Santa Cruz Blur TR. Its low-slung, wide-bar character makes a far bigger difference to what is or isn’t rideable than suspension travel does, and it beats the firmed-up Nomad and the supposedly ‘efficient’ 70 October WMB153.suss3.indd 70 9/9/13 10:34 AM Knowledge TURN YOUR bOMbeR iNTO A CLiMbeR Whatever bike you run, you can tune it to climb better than ever. Here’s how What can you do? Look ahead to go straight and increase the time you have to react. Tear your eyes from close rocks, or you’ll stall as soon as you touch them. If there’s no compression lever, increase shock pressure in 5psi increments until obvious bounce is reduced. Try reducing pressure so tyres can conform to the surface – grip beats low rolling resistance. Concentrate on pedalling circles, pushing evenly all the way round – avoid stomping or pulsing. Choosing a gear midway between crazed spinning and knee-blowing grind will enable this, and let you feel for grip through your pedals. Slack angled, short-stem bikes wobble at low speeds, especially pointing uphill. Keep a big travel bike as straight as possible and let the suspension climb over lumps, rather than trying to dodge around and losing balance. For maximum power and traction, pull back and down on your bars, elbows low, to pull your weight down onto the back wheel. Kill excess bounce by adding low-speed compression (blue dial) or engaging ‘Trail’ on Fox CTD shocks. Don’t lock it out completely (or use ‘Climb’) on anything but totally smooth surfaces. October 71 WMB153.suss3.indd 71 9/9/13 10:34 AM Knowledge hOW We LeVeLLeD The FieLD “A hardtail just can’t put all that direct power down on challenging surfaces” Chameleon when sessioning any of our test climb’s tricky sections. Final reckoning All this makes the TR the clear choice for one last attempt at a full-power assault, just to check it wasn’t my dying legs that influenced the Chameleon’s disappointing time. The result? A clean run with no dabs and a 7:04 complete time, at 158bpm and 183W averages. It’s still an undoubtedly challenging run, but it’s way more controlled than it is on the Chameleon. In other words, sorted handling and a middling amount of WMB153.suss3.indd 72 With the climb dealt with there was the descent left to enjoy, before doing it all over again... suspension is king of the off-road hill. A hardtail just can’t put all that direct power down on challenging surfaces – so much so that even an ‘inefficient’ long-travel bike beats it. Our rudimentary trail lab proved that even six inches of travel can contest the climbs if it’s set up right. Perhaps we shouldn’t be so surprised, given the popularity and success of such ‘big’ bikes in enduro racing. It’s worth noting that we also took the Blur TR to within one second of the Strava KOM for the descent on the way back home too. Bottom line? For off-road climbing efficiency, overall speed and carefree descending fun, full suspension wins every time. WMB To make the test as much about suspension as possible, we equalled the rest of the metrics as much as we could. All three bikes are from the same brand, and ran on the same Maxxis High Roller 26x2.35in tyres. All were run at the same pressures for the initial timed runs. While the forks were inevitably different, gearing was identical on the suspension bikes, and the cockpits were similar too. The full sussers shared the same VPP2 suspension systems running at the same sag, albeit with different travel and linkage architecture. By using a lower-spec hardtail and a carbon framed long-travel bike we were able to get weights within a pound of each other without even ballasting them. The only disparity was price, which was irrelevant for this test. The other options We concentrated on equalling weight for ‘scientific’ reasons, but for most of us, direct price comparison is more relevant. If we’d equalized price with the Nomad C we’d have been riding a Highball carbon 29er with SRAM XX1 and ENVE carbon wheels (£6499) or a 2lb/900g lighter Blur TR Carbon frame with SRAM XX1 equipment. 9/9/13 10:34 AM