Singletracks Mountain Bike News, Reviews, MTB Trails and Community › Protected: Forums › Mountain Bike Forum › Old expensive Vs modern cheaper
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September 12, 2022 at 09:15 #632247
Hi folks. First time poster.
Looking at full sus bikes, and considering used ones for price reasons.
Someone close to me is selling a rocky mountain thunderbolt BC edition. It’s a 2015 and still looks modern. Found a glowing review by John fisch on this site, and I can’t help wondering how it would stand up to modern bikes of the same price (12-1500 pound). Another bike I’ve looked at over the years is the Whyte t130. Every version has smashed the reviews, and now the 2018/19 versions are in my budget.
Question is, bikes like this, that still look modern (albeit less aggro than modern trail bikes), do they still ride well? They look less like monster trucks which is good for me.. but how would they compare in a head to head with a 1200 pound new mtb from today?
The kind of riding I care about is long days over whatever terrain is in the way. Mountains, single-track, rocks, roots, groomed or natural trails. I love long climbs, amazing views, and then dropping the seat and riding it like a bmx on the way down. Plus I live in the UK so has to cope with mud.
Can a 5/10 year old bike with “modern” standards (boost, through axles, tapered steerer for example) still cut it. Can that thunderbolt or t130 be the one bike to ride on all rides?
I’d love opinions from riders with experience of older vs modern. Id love John fisch to comment if he had an opinion.
<p style=”text-align: right;”>Cheers.</p> -
September 12, 2022 at 15:36 #632302
Yes. As long it has the components and geometry you like, it’s a no-brainer.
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December 2, 2022 at 09:36 #637533
If you like how it feels and rides, why not. It should be more than capable of performing well, even if it’s from 2015
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December 5, 2022 at 15:12 #637805
Whyte T130. Newer and what you like and in your budget. I ride 2017 and 2018 hardtails. Both great and capable. The 2018 is still very similar to current models. The 2017 could use a degree or two of slack. My observation is there was a bigger jumps in making bikes substantially slacker from 2015-2018. The newer 2018 will probably be plenty capable for what you want. Bonus is it is the make and model you have been looking at already.
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