Dropper Seatpost

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Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
So many bikes now come with one as standard, and I've read so many reviews on them, I decided the kids could do without meat for a week or two and ordered a Rockshox Reverb to put on the Canyon I built last month.

Rather than spend the £250-£300 that UK outlets want for the item I saved 70 quid and ordered it from Germany (www.hibike.de) for £180.

It arrived today, perfect as I had a day off, and so it was duly fitted (piece of cake) and took it for a test ride. Wow! It makes life just so simple. I like to drop the seat out of the way for steep drops, and like to be at full height for climbing, roads and pedally bridleways. An inch or two down for lumpy flat bits with the option of anywhere up to 125mm drop. It performed very well, and it was so refreshing not to have to stop and change the saddle height as the terrain changed. I cannot believe how much better it makes the ride.
 

GrumpyGregry

Here for rides.
Please keep us informed during and after a UK winter.;)
 

VamP

Banned
Location
Cambs
A mate has one, and says he can't imagine riding an MTB without it now. No reliability issues after 2 winters yet.
 
I was talking to a couple of chaps at Llandegla last week who had Reverbs fitted and they couldn't praise them enough. The first Reverb, the one with the silver collar, has had a few teething problems but these appear to have been ironed out in the upgraded Mk2 version, the one with the black collar. Mounting the remote switch under the handlebar offers better protection from accidental knocks.

I'm getting one next month.
 
OP
OP
Cubist

Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
I was talking to a couple of chaps at Llandegla last week who had Reverbs fitted and they couldn't praise them enough. The first Reverb, the one with the silver collar, has had a few teething problems but these appear to have been ironed out in the upgraded Mk2 version, the one with the black collar. Mounting the remote switch under the handlebar offers better protection from accidental knocks.

I'm getting one next month.
Yep, mine's the 2012 black collar version, came complete with bleed kit and travel reducer collar. I ordered a RH kit and mounted it upside down between the left hand grip collar and shifter clamp (I run my SLX brakes inboard of the shifter). It's a fine fit, with just enough room to operate both main shifter trigger and the RS remote. The adjuster hides between the shifter housing and the brake reservoir.
 

Francesca

Well-Known Member
With that bargain you got it'll be in budget. Where did you ride at the weekend? Are you now undisputed Rad Queen of Gnarr?^_^
Hi Cubist - Gisburn last weekend and probably again this weekend! iam getting there...:whistle:
 

Friz

The more you ride, the less your ass will hurt.
Location
Ireland
I just don't fancy ANOTHER moving part on the bike.

Tis the same argument I've been using lately to talk myself out of getting one of these.In the meantime I've managed to clear almost all of my wishlist. The our fine Mr Cubist goes and posts this.

Now I want one again....
 
OP
OP
Cubist

Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
Tis the same argument I've been using lately to talk myself out of getting one of these.In the meantime I've managed to clear almost all of my wishlist. The our fine Mr Cubist goes and posts this.

Now I want one again....
I spent a long time convincing myself they were an unnecessary frippery, and it wasn't until now that my wishlist was exhausted. In the days of NOT wanting a Reverb the time spent adjusting the seat height between runs was time well spent, not too inconvenient etc etc, but between deciding I really wanted one and saving my pennies until I could get one that time wasted buggering about with quick release clamps, cleaning gritty mud out of seatcollars, not quite getting it right and wishing I could stop again seemed like a whole lot of precious riding time lost.

You want one, you know you do.
 
OP
OP
Cubist

Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
Bottom's Beck is the blue trail. It's a pretty interesting one though, great to bring your confidence along apparently. Drops are a great confidence booster. You can roll them until you realise how your bike actually wants to stay upright, then you can build your speed up and let the bike do what it wants to. After a while you actually start looking for little drops to play on. Body weight shifting is key though, to stop you going OTB!
 
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