Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Preview: Mavic Crossmax SX 2012

After more than 2 years of use/abuse of my Sun Ringle Equalizer-29 rims, coupled with Hope Pro 2 hubs, I finally got some new wheels for my AM riding.
I decided to go for the Mavic Crossmax SX 2012, for several reasons; I have never been on straight-pull spokes before, and secondly I knew that Mavic has its AM line dialed when it comes to strengh.
Mavic has revised the Crossmax SX for 2012. Its gotten stronger by the use of a new rim extrusion, a new graphics package is in place as well. Other than that its known for its stiffness and strengh, albeit some hub issues, but ill get back to that in a moment.


The strongest and the best Mavic has to offer for AM riding.
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ITS-4 hub, loved and hated. Some people run these hubs without ever running into issues, other riders report of reliability issues. I hope that I fall into the first group of people.
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The Crossmax SX has a Maxtal rim, its 30% stronger than 6106 alloy, and tests has continuously shown that these rims has an immense strengh. The rims are even used for pro-level slopestyle, propably some of the most stressfull challenge you can pose a mtb rim.
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The spokes use a Zicral Alloy, its a very strong alloy of the 7075 series, with a strengh comparable to steel - just without the weight penalty. One interesting use for 7075 alloy is in the manufacture of M16 rifles for the military. Ok back on topic, so, im not a big fan of proprietary stuff, I actually often advocate against it, but the Zicral spokes didnt scare me away because of two things; they have a good rep for not breaking, and despite what some might say, replacement spokes are actually easy to get hold of, well for me anyway, as my LBS carries them.
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Front wheel, 826g.
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Rear Wheel, 937g
That makes for an actual total weight of: 1763g - pretty damn close to the claimed 1755g.
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So I allready had my first 11 hours of actual trail time on these hoops. My initial impressions are very positive. By switching to this wheelset I dropped a whopping 680 grams of the wheels (!). The wheels are stiff and responsive, In fact, im abit surprised as to how much more easy its actually become to roll my bike after the switch (well maybe all that talk about rotational weight was correct after all, heh)

The wheelset came standard with a 9x135 axle setup, so I had to convert it to a 12x135 to make it compatible with my bike. The problem was however that Mavic has done a really poor job of telling how to do that, I just knew it was possible. The included manual mentions nothing, and the online manual was very poor, so I had to google a bit, and after a little guessing and trial and error, I succeeded, its actually pretty simple, and I reckon I could do any conversion within 2-3 minutes.  A x12 convertion kit was included as well btw.

Will these rims, spokes and hubs take the beating of my countless sideways landings, and general riding, or will they fail big time with a bang coupled with a furious fireball.. Well time will tell, stick around as I do a complete review, right here, on All Mountain Next. (thanks to Drea for hooking me up with these wheels)
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Sunday, November 27, 2011

November Sun 2

Awesome november weather has allowed for even more sunny riding, im excited about that, as It really comes unexpected - great stuff.


Awesome shot, including some volume lighting, early morning. I got lucky.
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The new booster-drop makes you litterly go from 10kph, to about 40 kph in a single second.
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Another lucky shot, this time around I captured it in the evening.
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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

November Sun

Its actually been quite sunny recently, cold, but sunny. Grabbed my camera (adjusted it this time around), and shot some pics. What a great day af riding.

These trails where covered with snow last year at this time, happy to see its not like that this time around. Yet.
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Its not a foot-tap, if you don't touch the ground ; )
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Playing with the camera.
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Toying with a new small stepdown, on a longer descend section
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Thursday, November 17, 2011

November air Part 2/2

Second part of our air corrupted session.

Peter test riding the newly-angled stepup, landing is to the upper far left corner. He almost made it. If Peter cant, then I guess nobody can. Damn pesky step-ups.
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 Madsen going full throttle
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Plain vanilla style
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Peter litterly drops in the background.
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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

November air Part 1/2

Met up with some old mountain bike buddies recently, and we got ourself a whole day of riding. Spirits where high, wheather was cold, but we all managed to get by this day without any crashes or mechanical faults - kinda unusual when I ride with these guys - im not complaining tho' : ) Shot some pics with my new cam, but didnt notice that it was set at "auto-white-adjust" so the colors got a bit one-dimensional, well, lesson learned. Anyway, here are some of the riding we did:

First up is Peter.
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Kedde toying with a small, but fast section.
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Madsen (re)analysing this drop at the natural kicker. Landing is somewhere at the bottom of this pic.
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A bit camera shy, you have to be quick to catch whatever Peter does next. Riding a tree? Sure.
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Thursday, November 10, 2011

Video: Whistler Trail Riding

Finally had some time to edit some of the footage I shot in Whistler. I have loads of footage from Whistler Bikepark, but as of yet, I dont have an idea of what direction I want that video to go. So for now, I made this rather basic edit for the trail riding I did in the Whistler area. Btw, I wrote abit about Whistler trail riding, check it out here.

Be sure to check out the vid at youtube at 480p. For the embedded version:


Saturday, November 5, 2011

New Camera

I got fed up with my sluggish Olympus Tough 3000 camera, so I got myself a Casio EX-ZR10 - the big brother to my former Casio FC100 camera. The best thing about it? High-Speed.

It might look simple, put its crazy powerful for its size and price.


Tiny stepup. Raw edit. No sound. 240 FPS:

Expect to see some nice pics in the future, as well as more High Speed footage.