Pinnacle MTB Spec - Any good for £150??

Pinnacle MTB Spec - Any good for £150??

Author
Discussion

cobra kid

Original Poster:

4,971 posts

241 months

Friday 15th March
quotequote all
Morning all,

I'm looking to buy a bike to sample the hobby to see if I can get back into it. I'm almost 50 and creaking a bit! It's for pottering around the trails of Sheffield with my son.

This is available near me for £150. How does that sound as a starter?

Pinnacle iroko. Mountain bike. Size L frame. 26” wheels. 27 speed. All shimano deore gearing. Original bars stem and grips. Rockshox recon silver tk solo air forks. Original seat post. Avenir seat. Shimano hollowtech crank. Mavic x117 wheels on shimano hubs. Centre lock brake discs. Meroca hydraulic brakes. Brand new kenda tyres. Bikes in absolutely mint condition like brand new. And everything works as it should.

dirtbiker

1,201 posts

167 months

Friday 15th March
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The only bit in the spec that would concern me is the Meroca brakes - it's not a brand I've heard of.

Otherwise, I think you could do a lot worse for £150 as an intro bike.

lufbramatt

5,360 posts

135 months

Thursday 21st March
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Magura brakes maybe?

TGCOTF-dewey

5,250 posts

56 months

Thursday 21st March
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OP... I've ridden Sheffield and it has some incredible... and also technical... Trails.

As a pub bike, it'll be fine and appears good value, but a far better option would be to go a trail centre, and hire a modern geometry trail bike.

This will be a far more representative, and enjoyable, experience.

272BHP

5,146 posts

237 months

Friday 22nd March
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Some strange replies here.

The OP is interested in dipping his toe in and pottering around and can find what was a 1000 pound bike in excellent condition for 150 quid?

The bike has excellent spec, certainly better than anything I would consider if I was to dip my toe into mountain biking.

Snap it up!

trails

3,796 posts

150 months

Friday 22nd March
quotequote all
cobra kid said:
Morning all,

I'm looking to buy a bike to sample the hobby to see if I can get back into it. I'm almost 50 and creaking a bit! It's for pottering around the trails of Sheffield with my son.

This is available near me for £150. How does that sound as a starter?

Pinnacle iroko. Mountain bike. Size L frame. 26” wheels. 27 speed. All shimano deore gearing. Original bars stem and grips. Rockshox recon silver tk solo air forks. Original seat post. Avenir seat. Shimano hollowtech crank. Mavic x117 wheels on shimano hubs. Centre lock brake discs. Meroca hydraulic brakes. Brand new kenda tyres. Bikes in absolutely mint condition like brand new. And everything works as it should.
It will allow you to potter, but it's old and a far cry from the contemporary mtb bike experience...IMHO you will get a couple of rides on it and realise it's a bit shonky, unstable and you want something that will feel much nicer to ride. I'm 52 this year and very much appreciate the stability and competence a modern bike provides, genuine game changers that make the experience far more enjoyable smile

trails

3,796 posts

150 months

Friday 22nd March
quotequote all
Although having said that, if it's something like this, I have seen far scarier things at the trails smile



MrBen.911

516 posts

119 months

Friday 22nd March
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trails said:
IMHO you will get a couple of rides on it and realise it's a bit shonky, unstable and you want something that will feel much nicer to ride.
I don't think he would. You would, because you are used to a good modern bike, but if you are somebody dipping your toe in, you're not going to be used to anything modern and will find something like the suggested bike perfectly good.

If he gets into it, the £150 bike can probably be sold on for the same money and something better purchased. Seems perfect to me.

TGCOTF-dewey

5,250 posts

56 months

Friday 22nd March
quotequote all
272BHP said:
Some strange replies here.

The OP is interested in dipping his toe in and pottering around and can find what was a 1000 pound bike in excellent condition for 150 quid?

The bike has excellent spec, certainly better than anything I would consider if I was to dip my toe into mountain biking.

Snap it up!
Not sure why you think the replies are strange?

Even a bargain costs money if it's the wrong tool for the job... Then it becomes expensive.

Riding an outdated xc bike around the Sheffield trails is just as likely to put you off rather than give you the bug.

The OP wants to sample MTB to see whether he can get back into it. For this, a better option is to sample what modern MTB has to offer, i.e. go to a trail centre and rent one for a fraction of the cost. The difference between an old xc bike and a modern trail bike is literally night and day experience wise. On the former, as a novice, you'll be questioning your decision to get out of bed... On the latter, you may also have similar questions, but will be laughing whilst you do it.

Objectively a very cheap bike for the condition though.

trails

3,796 posts

150 months

Friday 22nd March
quotequote all
MrBen.911 said:
trails said:
IMHO you will get a couple of rides on it and realise it's a bit shonky, unstable and you want something that will feel much nicer to ride.
I don't think he would. You would, because you are used to a good modern bike, but if you are somebody dipping your toe in, you're not going to be used to anything modern and will find something like the suggested bike perfectly good.

If he gets into it, the £150 bike can probably be sold on for the same money and something better purchased. Seems perfect to me.
Nah, I went from BMX through a series of 26" MTBs which I did not enjoy...than I rode my first 650b (in 2018!) and it was a game changer, even for someone with little to no MTB knowledge/experience.

But I can see it may work for some, hence my second post smile

Ian974

2,949 posts

200 months

Saturday 6th April
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Although I'm now a convert to an e-bike, I got going with riding again after around 10 or so years off it in 2021 and got started with my old 2005 or so norco hardtail. Had great fun with it and found the new e-bike to be a game changer.
Going back to the norco now, it feels awful to ride in comparison to something modern, but doesn't change that I loved the thing while it was my only bike.
If it looks like a good piece of kit, give it a go!

President Merkin

3,171 posts

20 months

Saturday 6th April
quotequote all
TGCOTF-dewey said:
Not sure why you think the replies are strange?

Even a bargain costs money if it's the wrong tool for the job... Then it becomes expensive.

Riding an outdated xc bike around the Sheffield trails is just as likely to put you off rather than give you the bug.

The OP wants to sample MTB to see whether he can get back into it. For this, a better option is to sample what modern MTB has to offer, i.e. go to a trail centre and rent one for a fraction of the cost. The difference between an old xc bike and a modern trail bike is literally night and day experience wise. On the former, as a novice, you'll be questioning your decision to get out of bed... On the latter, you may also have similar questions, but will be laughing whilst you do it.

Objectively a very cheap bike for the condition though.
I don't know man, I think you're comimg down on the harsh side too. Apart from the Ali Express brakes, the spec on that looks fine for a first try whip. Bike Radar rated it too.