Rocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Instinct C90 Carbon (2021)
$8,99900$14,99900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Element C70 Carbon XCO (2020)
$6,49900$8,99900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Element A30 Alloy (2023)
From $3,59900$3,99900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Altitude C99 Carbon 29 (2021)
$9,99900$16,99900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Altitude C70 Carbon 27.5 (2021)
$8,29900$10,89900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Altitude C90 Carbon 27.5 (2021)
$9,99900$14,99900Unit price /UnavailableRocky Mountain
Rocky Mountain Altitude A30 Alloy 29 (2023)
$3,49900$4,79900Unit price /Unavailable
Suspension Travel.
Suspension travel is the most important thing you've gotta understand.
The basics:
It's how much the front suspension moves (or travels).
For the rear, it's how much the rear wheel moves (or travels) not how much the rear shock compresses.
For example:
Rocky Mountain's Instinct has 140mm of rear wheel travel. But the shock actually travels by 52mm (called the shock stroke).
Also:
More suspension is not better. Less suspension is not better.
The dual-suspension mountain bike you choose has to have suspension travel that is appropriate for the riding you plan to do and the feel you want.
For riders who want the most responsive feel, bikes like the Giant Anthem with 100mm of rear wheel travel are going to suit.
At the other extreme:
For riders who want the most stability for high-speed technical trails, bikes like the Rocky Mountain Altitude will have 160mm of rear wheel travel.
If you want a bit of both:
A trail bike with 140mm to 150mm of rear wheel travel will skilfully balance out both extremes.
A simple thought:
Adding more rear wheel travel, adds more stability for rougher trails.
And takes away some responsiveness.
For new riders.
Read this if you've never owned a dual-suspension mountain bike before.
New riders need to consider what dual-suspension mountain bike is appropriate for them now.
And is this dually still going to be the right bike as you progress (and become a better rider) into the future.
Plus:
Is this bike suitable for all the trails that I ride 80% of the time?
And will it still handle the occasions where I want to ride outside of my comfort zone?
To save you thinking and searching time, here's the answer for (most) new riders:
A trail bike.
A trail bike is a type of dual-suspension mountain bike that is calm at speed over rough terrain.
It will inspire confidence because the bike isolates you from the terrain.
You don't feel the trail as much because the suspension is doing most of the work.
For riders upgrading from a dual-suspension MTB.
Chances are that if you're upgrading, you have the fundamental skills of mountain biking and foundational bike fitness.
You're probably searching for that next level of grip, ergonomics, stability and confidence.
This is where you've gotta decide:
Do you want more suspension travel?
Knowing that you're going to gain more stability and confidence. But risk losing low-speed response.
Do you like the feel of the bike you already have?
If yes (depending on the age of your bike), the component upgrades on the modern version of your bike could be enough to gain you the feel you're after.