Old 04-10-05, 12:21 AM
  #7  
Raiyn
I drink your MILKSHAKE
 
Raiyn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: St. Petersburg, FL
Posts: 15,061

Bikes: 2003 Specialized Rockhopper FSR Comp, 1999 Specialized Hardrock Comp FS, 1971 Schwinn Varsity

Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 3 Times in 3 Posts
Originally Posted by Jeeper
I'm in the market for a new bike (400-500 dollar range), and test rode a few at my LBS today.
Thios is why we have the $500 MTB thread stickied
Originally Posted by Jeeper


What I noticed on all the bikes I rode (except the Tass, which is out of my price range), is that they all shifted like crap. Not so much the rear, those were all pretty good, but the fronts. On all the bikes I had to fidget with the shifter to get the front gears to shift right. Annoyed the crap out of me.
Could also be the LBS wrench's fault
Originally Posted by Jeeper

First one I rode was the Hardrock Sport Disc. First thing I noticed was that it weighs a ton. I guess this is to be expected at this price point. I also noticed that it seemed very noisy. I could feel this vibration coming through it, and it was making a noise like the chain was rubbing somewhere, but it didn't seem to be. I also noticed the front derailer tended to do what it wanted, it was very uncooperative. I thought the discs were cool till I rode it, then I realized that they didn't stop any better than standard brakes and were most likely a waste of money. Reading the boards here confirmed that. They wanted $439 for it.
Wow their wrench SUCKS. My $250 bikes run as quiet as the more expensive ones. I want the descisin to be based on the bikes merits not how crummy the thing is adjusted. There's no excuse for that. As for the discs again- that can be traced to poor wrenching.
Originally Posted by Jeeper

Then a I rode the Hardrock Sport with V-brakes. I thought it stopped BETTER than the disc version. It also seemed quieter and didn't have the wierd vibe the other one did. Still shifted lowsy though. They wanted $349 for it. I also felt (on both Sports) that the front fork was a little spongy, although it did have impressive travel.
At least they seem to be able to adjust V's correctly
Originally Posted by Jeeper

Next I rode the Hardrock Comp, and liked that one better.The Marzocchi fork felt better, and it shifted a little better, but still not to my liking. The red and black flamed paint job was killer though. This one was $549.
New LBS
Originally Posted by Jeeper

Then I rode the standard Rockhopper, at the bike store guy's suggestion. Seemed to shift a little better, but otherwise didn't do anything for me. $500 for this one.

I tried the Fisher Tass, mainly because I wanted to try out the Deore components. This one was 619, and shifted the best. Also had a better fork, and had a great ride. I also liked that all of the cables were run over the top tube. I DIDN'T like the color (I know, just being picky), the fact that it only came with 1.95 tires compared to 2.2 on the Specialized, and lastly, I'm not a Trek fan, and last I heard, Trek owned Fisher.
Tires can be changed
Originally Posted by Jeeper


This bad shifting, how do I fix it? Is it just something I need to live with at this price point?
Find a different shop
Originally Posted by Jeeper

Or is it possible that a great tune up would fix the shifting? Or maybe I should try and get the bike shop to upgrade the derailers/shifter for me at time of purchase?
.
There's no excuse for that. It sounds like the bikes were slapped together and the wrench never rode them. That's BS in my opinion. There's no reason things sould be RUBBING on a new bike. Totally inexcuseable
__________________
Raiyn is offline