* Minus-Bikes = MTBs that can't fit proper MTB tires.
MTBs today are so under-tired it's getting tired.
Remarkably, road bikers have been adjusting faster to wide tires than MTBers lately! Strange isn't it? Thing is, road bike riding conditions are more controllable. On road bikes it's simpler to measure things and thus prove that wider tires are faster (despite feeling slower).
When you think about it... the perceived- vs real- speed paradox didn’t really start to crumble until we had widespread use of power meters. Suddenly we had tools to quantify speed vs. input, and gradually tire widths started climbing up. Meanwhile, our built-in speed sensors (ears, eyes and sensory nerves) interpret a harsh/unstable ride as a fast one.
"It FEELS fast, so it must BE fast"
On MTBs there are many variables at play. Bumps, jumps, skids, slides... So, despite logic telling us MTBs would benefit more than road bikes from bumping up tire sizes, the difficulty of quantifying things has made the bike industry lean back into the old "it FEELS fast, so it must BE fast".
Comparisons of a wide range of MTB tire widths have also been hard to do. As most MTBs simply cannot fit a wide range of tire widths.
Isn't FUN the reason we are riding bikes?
By now, most cyclists know that wider tires roll faster, especially as surfaces get rougher, and their increased grip enables you to descend faster. These speed gains have to outweigh the higher air resistance and added weight of the wider tires. However, for MTBs, rolling speed and descending grip are generally an order of magnitude more important than aerodynamic gains or a very slight weight penalty in tires. Plus, descending faster with more grip is more fun! And isn't fun the reason we are riding bikes in the first place?
26” XC/Trail bike. Anyone?
We've had a similar debate before. Does anybody remember 26" MTBs? It took a decade or so for 29ers to eliminate them. Nowadays, pretty much everybody would agree that a 29er is simply faster than a 26er. But 26ers did indeed feel more "snappy", and therefore it took us several years to admit to ourselves that our built-in speed sensors were wrong.
Plus-Bikes killed big tire MTBs
So much resources are being thrown at making XC/Trail bikes fast nowadays. But why are they still so skinny? We think a big part of the problem lies with the Plus-Bikes (2.8" - 3.2") of a decade ago or so. In some ways, these well-intended bikes ruined the reputation of wider MTB tires. They were generally not designed to be race-winning machines, instead they were designed to be casual semi-Fat-Bikes, or in some cases lower-end MTBs intended for less skilled riders, or in other cases hardtails that had the extra tire width to compensate for the lack of rear suspension.
The common misconception was that all the confidence-inspiring grip of the wider tires would fit beginners well, but surely they wouldn't be fast! Because, how could they? Since the bikes didn't vibrate, shake, bounce and rattle around as fast bikes should. Hence, these bikes were generally not built for all-out-speed. They didn't have top-end race-light full-suspension frames, they didn't have top-end wheels and parts and they didn't have speed-focused tires.
Plus-Bikes weren't the best version of themselves, and thus ruined the reputation of wider tires for MTBs for the decade that would follow.
End of an era
Lauf Elja is here to put an end to the era of under-tired MTBs.
The Elja frame fits 2.8" 29er tires, with abundant space for the elements! There is room for up to 3.0" with the required space for the elements.
Not a Minus-Bike, not a Plus-Bike.
Elja is a Mountain Bike.