Mountain Bike Sizing

Mountain Bike Sizing

Selecting The Right Size Mountain Bike

MTB SelectionMountain bikes come in all sizes and configurations just as us humans do. Matching mountain bike riders, whether beginners or seasoned riders, can be bewildering and sometimes, tricky.

Different Configurations of Mountain Bikes

There are multiple types of mountain bikes: hardtail, softail, rigid; the different wheels sizes: 20 inches all the way to 29 inches and there are the frames that come in different sizes and forms such as mens, womens, unisex and youth (just to name a few).

Human Element

On the human side, there beginners and experienced riders; occasional weekend forest trails; weekend hard core mountain bike parks and the competitors, downhillers and jumpers. There’s also tall people, short people, “lithe” people and “rotund” people. All kinds that wish to experience the freedom and enjoyment that a mountain bike represents.

MTB Sizing and Selection Guide Intent

This Mountain Bike Sizing and Selecting guide is aimed at beginner to intermediate riders. There are websites and calculators that take just about everything into account including rider ability and type of mountain bike riding. I have given the URLs of some of these more specific calculators at the end of this article.
The intent here is to give an indication of the size of frame most applicable to the beginner to intermediate riders for the majority of general road, forest and trail riding with some dedicated park riding as well.

Simple Human Measurements Needed Before We Start

Your Height measured from the floor to top of your head
Inseam Height measured from the floor to your upper inside leg/pelvis

Mountain Bike Measurements

What Mountain Bike Components Our Human Shape Influence

Mountain Bike Frame

The frame is a key component influenced by body sizes. It is also partially influenced whether you choose hardtail or soft tail, full mountain bike or hybrid and other choices so it doesn’t always mean you need to always follow any chart verbatim.

The line between mens, womens and unisex frames is becoming somewhat blurred. It is best is to have an idea of your riding intent and try a few of the different frame and wheel size combinations (including whether you choose soft and hardtail suspensions too).

Mountain Bike Wheel Diameter

Rolling resistance is lower with the larger diameter wheels. Mounting effort is higher for shorter people; especially with a larger frame and wheel size combinations. Tall people will feel vulnerable in the gnarly stuff if on a mountain bike with small wheels (say 26”) and a large frame (say 20” or above). This is from personal experience (see below) !

Mountain Bike Seat Height

Most mountain bikes these days have generous seat adjustment. This makes frame size selection slightly less critical than it once was. For most power riding, set your seat so that there is a slight angle at your knee in the pedal fully down position. You may need a second person to look side on for you while you lean against a wall. You may need to adjust this on the run depending on the (steepness of the) terrain and the power you need.

Mountain Bike Frame Selection Table

Your HeightYour InseamMountain Bike Frame Size
4’11” to 5’3”Less than 29.5”13 to 15 inch frame
5’3” to 5’7”29.5” to 31.5”15 to 17 inch frame
5’7” to 5’11”31.5” to 33”17 to 19 inch frame
5’11” to 6’2” 33” to 35” 19 to 21 inch frame
6’2” to 6”4” 35” to 37”21 to 23 inch frame
Over 6’4” Over 37” 23 inch frame larger

Hacks To Use The MTB Selection Table

Depending on wheel size and your height to leg relative sizes, you may need to go up or down a frame size or 2. For larger wheel diameters, go down a frame size. For smaller wheel diameters, go up a frame size. The numbers given are not hard and fast. Your intended type of mountain bike riding also influences frame selection. There is some overlap. As already mentioned, most mountain bikes today have plenty of adjustment on seat height so frame size is not as critical these days.

As an illustration, I’m a bit over 5’11” tall with a 33” inseam and do a combination of forestry trails and dedicated mountain bike park obstacles. For 2 of my hardtail bikes, I have a 20-inch frame for my 26” wheeled MTB and an 18-inch frame for my 29er. My softail 29er is also an 18 inch frame but a 17” frame would have worked just as well.

More Advice On Selecting your Mountain Bike

More information can be found at Amazon’s Bike Buying Guide

There are many other great guides selecting frame sizes:

For more Mountain Bikes: Search for Mountain Bikes on Amazon

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Happy reading and MTB riding, Chris and the Mountain Bike Advice Team

Camping With Your Mountain Bike

Camping With Your Mountain Bike

Can I go Camping With My Mountain Bike?

Going camping with your mountain bike and a few friends in our great wilderness can be one of the truly great thrills of a lifetime. The exhilaration of traversing some magnificent country and setting up camp at the end of an amazing day of mountain bike riding is really possible BUT preparation and planning is the key. The changing weather everywhere (especially the north-west) and everything from our scorching Arizona deserts to our Rocky Mountain peaks will test our level of preparedness.

You will also need a reliable MTB too so no budget mountain bike going to cut it once you’ve loaded it up with your food, water, spares and gear.

camping with your mtb

High Quality Mountain Bikes and Camping Gear

Travelling light with high quality, layered gear is essential. You will be carrying all of your food, clothing, bedding, spares, water and a form of communication. The use of panniers specifically made for mountain bikes makes the job of packing all this stuff in easier and keeps the center of gravity as low as possible.

The Best Camping Gear

The type of gear we here at Mountain Bike Advice carry when we go camping include:

  • tents
  • all weather layered clothing
  • bed mat
  • sleeping bag
  • packaged and dried food
  • fresh vegetables and fruits
  • plenty of water
  • tubes and tire repair kits
  • first aid kit

For more information on camping and hiking gear, click here: Search For Camping & Hiking Gear

 

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Dual Suspension Or Front Only Suspension?

Dual Suspension Or Front Only Suspension?

Dual Versus Front Only Suspension

mountain bike comparisonsIs Dual Suspension better than front only Suspension ? The answer is “yes” and “no” !

 

However, before going into detail, let’s get a few definitions out of the way first.

Dual Suspension

Full suspension mountain bikeDual Suspension mountain bike is another phrase for Full Suspension or Softail Suspension mountain bike where both the front and rear wheels benefit from compliant suspension (thus where the “softail” comes from).

Front Only Suspension

Softail mountain bikeFront Only Suspension mountain bike is also known as Hardtail Suspension mountain bike (or just Hardtail MountainBike) where the front wheel has compliant suspension but the rear wheel is rigidly attached to the mountain bike frame (get the “hardtail” now?).

Rigid suspension mountain bikeRigid Suspension

While we’re at it, a Rigid Suspension Mountain Bike has no suspension at all (ouch !).

So, to start answering the question which is “better”, it is really “horses for courses” with “fors and against” for both types of suspension. However, before you say “I knew you were going to say that” or “what a cop-out”, read on!

 

The “Fors and Againsts” Case for Dual Suspension/Full Suspension Mountain Bike

For Against
• better, more comfortable and safer ride
• enables the rider to tackle more gnarly terrain
• Tackle terrain faster, harder and smoother
• Wow factor
• Cost (beware cheap full MTBs !!)
• Robustness
• Reliability
• Needs more maintenance
• Safety (if a cheap/low end MTB)
• Slight weight penalty
• Can get loose and unsteady at speed (need to lock suspension up)
• Can get “tail flick” going over logs and rocks

The “Fors and Againsts” case for Front Only Suspension Mountain Bike

ForAgainst
• Cheaper to manufacture and build
• Less moving parts
• A few pounds lighter (generally)
• More robust
• More reliable
• Less Maintenance
• simple to maintain and simple to fix
• less pivot points, stresses, lubrication points, springs and dampers and less stuff to bust
• Easier to ride on faster, smoother terrain (more road feel)
• Harsher ride (but much better than rigid suspension)
• Need to go slower when the going gets rough and tough
• Rider gets more fatigued more quickly
• Rattles other bike components loose
• Definitely feel the landings!

Hardtail or Softail Mountain Bike Suspension?

The MTB suspension you choose is largely governed by the type of riding you do (or are thinking of doing), how often you are riding, how much you can afford and how serious you are about the sport.

At Mountain Bike Advice, we would never advocate a cheap full suspension mountain bike as there are too many compromises. You are balancing:

  • Price
  • Quality
  • Performance
  • Reliability
  • Durability
  • Safety
  • Fun

There was never going to be an outright winner here. There’s no doubt a full suspension mountain bike will take you across gnarly terrain faster in more comfort but there’s more moving parts and a weight penalty. Comparing apples with apples, there’s a cost penalty too. A hardtail or front-only suspension mountain bike tends to be cheaper, more robust, require less maintenance and although (a good one) will cover the same terrain as a softail, you’ll feel every bump and do it slower.

In the hoping of making sense of all this, I have 2 hardtail and 1 softail mountain bikes. The sort of terrain, the level of intensity I reckon will be required and the speeds I will be travelling at dictate which mountain bike I take on any particular day.

If I had to get off the fence and make a recommendation, for those a little strapped for cash who want the best value bike out there, I’d recommend you buy the most expensive hardtail “brand” mountain bike with the largest diameter wheels you can afford. You won’t regret it (until you can afford a more expensive softail mountain bike, that is 😊 !).

Happy trails ! Chris

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