Re:
I've heard of more Kona's snapping at the dropouts than Zaskar breaks. Rarely see American-Zaskar breaks period. My ex-mechanic gave me a little lecture 7 years ago, about my 96 GT Zaskar. He said, with a little condescending grin, "This is,
Old equipment...you still ride this?" I told him, with pride, "Yeah, it gets ridden hard, even
abused." Then he launches on about how, "the aluminum frame will fail very soon usually after about 10 years blah blah blah." I shut him out with a scowl and stopped paying attention. He is no longer my mechanic. My new mechanic, a hick from Alabama, doesn't give foolish lectures. He keeps to himself and gets the job done. When he first saw my bike, he said, "That is a Killer bike Bro!" And guess what? That same old 96 Zaskar is still as mean as it was back then. It gets ridden hard, every weekend, for the most part. Hard turns, jumps, crashes, hasn't broken yet. This frame is nearly bulletproof. Sometimes I do group rides with people on their 2014 29er-Fox Fork-full-suspension Carbon-Fiber----->Made in China $5,000+ bikes. They get their ass kicked up the hill every time. On flat sections of the trail I just blow right by them. The expression on their faces is priceless. Plus, their Fox Forks are in the shop, having $200+ repairs nearly every other month. Anyway you have one man here who can
Stand by the durability of the 1990-2001, American-made GT Zaskar.