gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
Surely for people riding the modern bikes, with discs that work better and don't destroy your rims, suspension that allows you to cross rougher terrain, go further and faster, it is all about the ride?
I disagree, for me, it's not all about going faster, or going over rougher terrain. YMMV.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
Most of you seem to be guilty of severe prejudice and are lumping everyone who rides modern into the Red-Bull-North-Shore-X-Games category...
A fair point, well made.
However, there's this constant, reoccurring, insidious idea I see often, and a few times in this thread - the concept that having greater numbers participating is automatically a good thing - like it's some kind of axiom.
Actually I disagree - I don't buy that sheer weight of numbers and more and more people doing something is necessarily a good thing - often, it's not - it can result in being an something of a negative thing - either in corrupting the experience, or how it's perceived by the masses and the knock-on effect that has.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
Wouldn't you agree that more people on bikes is a good thing, regardless of their chosen influences?
Nope.
I'd concede that having more people get around using their own steam than automatically jumping in a car would be a good thing, but not just greater numbers on bikes.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
We ride retro, not because it's necessarily better, but because it satisifes in us a desire to return to a time when our lives were simpler and so were bicycles. The nostalgia that it evokes is no bad thing - yet consider someone whose golden years of cycling were 20 years before ours; they would regard what we're riding as new-fangled and un-needed. Are they right?
Yes.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
Yes.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
Not one jot.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
So you don't want to ride faster, that's fine by me. I have no problem with the speed that anyone else wants to pootle along at. Why do you have such an issue with anyone that wants to ride fast?
Personally, I couldn't care less - I'm just against the supposed axiom of that being able to go faster is a good thing.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
With all your indiscriminate prejudices, and Daily Mail-like views on what you think everybody else should be riding (so you don't want "suspension corrected geometry" or discs - fine, don't buy them then! No-one is forcing you to...), you are what's wrong with mountain biking, not the people riding dirt jumps, North Shore, drop-offs, or just good old trails on their hydroformed, disc-braked, "monstrosity".
What went wrong with mountain biking - like everything else that started off, gained popularity, became a craze, then diversified - is that it
did get very popular, than fractured off into various types of riding and bikes, then sooner or later the various "types" of mountain biking slowly die out, and actually, choice eventually evolves to being not really that much choice.
gradeAfailure":s0ot7dns said:
At least they seem to be enjoying themselves...!
Now that's just not very Hovis-bread-advert, is it.