Dont feel for a minute that unless you are a skills god that an eMtb isn’t for you.
No. I wasn't saying that at all. I was simply stating that mediocre riders don't *need* the latest bike or most extreme "enduro" geometry.
and from what I see out on the trails your average Emtb rider is about 25 years behind the current skills curve of a decent rider.
I just had to laugh because you are so spot on Gary... many of us can get carried away and fuss about this-and-that componentry spec and whatever frame geometry, which probably hardly even matters. A conundrum we're faced when too many good choices are on offer.
Another thing seldom mentioned... is that the tracks/trails we ride these days have also changed both in features and intensity as the leading end of the sport continues to evolve (and rightly so) over the last 40+ years when MTBiking formally started as a sport. Tis' been a long history since barrelling down plain Marin forest fire roads with make-shift cruiser bikes (with brakes that hardly work) to the RedBullish Xgames-esque standards we have today. Understandably, the bike designs have evolved along with it.
However, the reality is that anyone getting started on MTB still begins by riding a flat gravel road or dirt track occasionally being confronted by a jump which in reality is nothing more than a road bump. Children take to this easily, but many are only just discovering the sport and the catch-up skills gap if one aspires to get to the very top today is huge. The naturally gifted can make the transition, but the majority of us plateau somewhere in the middle (some higher, some lower). Nothing wrong with the middle ground... this is reality - not everyone who buys a set of golf clubs needs to be a Tiger Woods.
But the reality for bike manufacturers is another matter altogether, as it's impossible to build just one do-it-all bike for every individual placed somewhere within the present skills spectrum. Hence just about every single bike can either be too much or too little regarding anything for everyone. And for the unfamiliar, the process of simply choosing a bike these days has become so overly 'precise and exacting' that many stress over it. The huge eMTB price tags certainly doesn't help either.
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My grandsons are coming of age so I walked around our local BMX track for the first time recently (moved to a new city) and I couldn't see over the top of the majority of jumps (mostly 8 foot + tall). I remember taking my kids to a BMX track some 25 years ago - the the jumps back then were knee high with just one chest high 'killer' table top, not really killer these days. Such is the skills curve gap advancement within just one generation. Oddly enough, the current crop of BMX bikes haven't changed much at all? Anyway, it'll be good training ground for them if they ever wish to transition into MTBiking later on.