Your elbows don't bend? Grin. I don't mean to be incredulous here. I 
genuinely want to understand. I realize the elbow bending requires bending 
and strength in the wrist. I just know that too often people think they 
need more cushioning, when in fact they would benefit from less to build 
strength and flexibility. Not always. Dependis on your specifics.

With abandon,
Patrick 

On Tuesday, February 18, 2014 6:27:36 PM UTC-7, EricP wrote:
>
> I'll be an outlier.  If I were to buy a mountain bike (i.e. a purpose 
> designed bike for mainly single and double track, then it would have front 
> suspension.  My hands have been damaged over the years and the only way I 
> could ever do "serious" mountain biking is with suspension.
>
> That said, I now have a Surly Ogre with 2.3 inch wide tires that I am 
> hoping will be more forgiving.  Don't plan to ride it on anything rougher 
> than some double track trails, though.
>
> Eric Platt
> St. Paul, MN
>
>
> On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 6:14 PM, RJM <crccp...@gmail.com <javascript:>>wrote:
>
>> My old mountain bike is a 1996 Specialized Stumpjumper M2 frame with a 
>> front suspension fork and 26" wheels...canti brakes. The bike is in pieces 
>> now because the suspension fork finally gave up. I rode that bike so much, 
>> light, nimble, and just a good time.  I would like to get a new fork for it 
>> but just haven't thought enough about it. I just haven't been doing enough 
>> trail riding to build up a dedicated mountain bike now. I would like to. 
>>
>> My ideal mountain bike would be a Rivendell custom mountain mixte with 
>> 650b wheels and bombadil/hunqapillar tire clearance. A hunqapillar would 
>> work too...and the headbadge is awesome. Something like that will probably 
>> be my third Rivendell. 
>>
>> I don't think suspension is all that for the riding I do or would do if I 
>> got out into the singletrack more. I know plenty of people who tear up the 
>> trails using dual suspended bikes and they do ride fast....it just isn't 
>> for me. I'm now just a little too old to be getting into the kind of 
>> crashes I used to get into...too long to heal properly. I'm just a slower 
>> rider who likes technical stuff, but likes to do it on my own time. 
>>
>> On Tuesday, February 18, 2014 11:48:15 AM UTC-6, David Stein wrote:
>>
>>> New to the group. Have a Hunq on order. I've seen a number of threads 
>>> dancing around this topic (including the recent 'Hunqapillar as a true 
>>> mountain bike' thread). Wanted to ask the question a different way, how 
>>> many mountain bikes do you own, what are they, and when do you decide to 
>>> take which bike out?
>>>
>>> I just got into mountain biking/trail riding after years of road riding 
>>> (Bay Area, mostly fire roads for now, some single track). I suck at it. 
>>> Trying to get better. Salsa El Mariachi with front suspension. 
>>> My interest is in exploring mostly, not necessarily going fast or 
>>> racing, but that being said I haven't met a downhill that hasn't resulted 
>>> in a crash or three (including the demo ride in Shell Ridge I took the Hunq 
>>> on). When I ordered the Hunq the idea was to use it as an all-rounder (mix 
>>> of fire roads, light trails, city riding, commuting) and my Salsa El 
>>> Mariachi 29er to take on more technical terrain and single track. But after 
>>> another couple more harrowing rides, I decided the Salsa wasn't for me and 
>>> sold it (I think it was the 29er wheel size that I didn't like, I am short 
>>> and it wasn't nimble enough, though maybe it was the general geometry of 
>>> the frame). So now, I'm left with the choice of running the Hunq as my only 
>>> mountain bike with two sets of wheels (2.1 smart sams on one and 1.75 green 
>>> guards on another), or using the Salsa money to buy an additional 
>>> singletrack specific bike with front suspension (and using in conjunction 
>>> with the Hunq, the ole N+1). Curious to what other people are doing. 
>>>
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