I must say that this bike yields a very different ride than my other MTB bikes. Typically, I am fond of a shorter stem and longer toptube. Soma has taken the XC road with this frame design. With a 71deg head tube angle and 73deg seat tube, my 577mm effective top tube length left me feeling short in the cockpit. My only option was a hideous 120mm stem in my parts bin. This length has put me a very racey position, but I still very comfortable and stable. I chose the Medium frame with the tip I would need a longer post. This info instantly reminded me of Niner's design, which helps with standover height. SO is typically not an issue for 650B wheels.
Soma shipped the frameset along with a Ensho Limited black sparkle saddle, as well as their ultra wide Odin Bar.
I capped off the bars with some Thick and Zesty cork tape. I figured some 'alt-bars' deserved some an 'alt-grip'. This is my first experience with bars tape for and MTB. We'll see how it holds up for me.
I'll report back once I have logged some decent trail time on this production 650B frameset.
Kudos to Soma for jumping on board so avidly!
Nicely chosen H2O boss reinforcements for the 2 sets on the frame.
Both sets are on the downtube, one on top, one on the underside.
VICIOUS CYCLES
Children of the Revolution 650B Rim
- 32 Hole
- Eyeletted
- Disc Specific
- Retail at $40
I purchased 5 of these rims before seeing them. Carl at Vicious gave me a heads up when he was on his way to NAHBS, and I placed my pre-order with him on his cell phone and in his van packed with Vicious gear. The link above shows a cross section of the rim. This isn't a relabeled Alex rim, or a Sun rim with a different name. I haven't seen this design rolled in a 27.5" version. I'm not sure who is making these for Vicious, but they have chosen a nice rim to call their own. It is nicely priced for home wheelbuilders out there. I have built 4 of the rims so far, and they build nice: round and true, very easily. The seams aren't perfect, but most aren't. It's almost not mentioning since it is a disc specific rim.
www.viciouscycles.com
9 comments:
It almost seems Soma Overcompensated with the B-Side geometry to me.
Quite possibly. But, if you compare the B Side's angles to Soma's Groove or 4One5, it is EXTREMELY close... Even still, I'm giving it a shot. Any attempt helps the cause. Every company has a little-bit different theory for geometry. Soma used a more compact MTB in mind for the B Side. This will be a nice rigid, single speed, XC machine. Keep checking back for trail side images.
That 2.1 looks like there isn't a ton of room back there- though I realize that the wheel pretty far forward in the drop outs. I think the bike looks really great, if one can look past the color matched fork. I'll be really interested in what you have to say about it and hear a few comments on the nevegals, as I like mine.
Maybe they didnt overcompensate - just a different scheme of sizing.
I'd rate their large as most other brands medium size frame if going by effective top tube lengths.
I'd like to see a frame similar to this price point with vertical droputs. That'd be money for me.
Might be a good bike for drop bars then?
I forgot to ask how much the bike weighs in at...
This might be a dumb question, but what about 650b tubes?
26" tubes work just fine...little tight, but they stretch and do the job without issue.
More importantly, how's the Soma B-side ride?
you really need to start using a spell check dude
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