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subject: From The Street To The Dusty Trails, Comparing Road Bikes To The Diamondback Response Mountain Bike [print this page]


Bike riding is an awesomely great way to get in shape, it is also a wonderful way to experience nature and get out of the house. There are a few things to consider before you get started. First, decide where you are going to be riding. If you're more interested in speed, you may want to think about purchasing a road bike. If you're more inclined to the dusty, grittier side of biking, you might want to pick a mountain bike, such as the diamondback response.

Are you going to ride mostly on even steady ground? If so, a road bike will work nicely. If you'd rather bounce around some trails, a mountain bike is the practical choice.

If you try to make your way through an irregular landscape on a road bike, you will most likely have a much harder time. Trail bike's are built with tough suspensions allowing greater ease and maneuverability in difficult areas. They are multifaceted machines, that grant you access to a number of different riding surfaces.

These days you can find all kinds of different lightweight off-road bikes to fit your riding needs, that was not the case thirty to forty years ago. You are easily able to interchange the wider tires of the mountain bike for the thinner tires used in street riding. When you want to ride off-road just switch the tires back.

There are different types of suspensions for a trail bike. Hard-tail (only front suspension) bikes, take a lot less effort to pedal. They're usually cheaper, easier to care for and springing over dirt piles is a lot simpler. Bikes with front and rear suspension tend to cost more and are better for fierce and heavy riding over really tedious terrain.

There is a hard-tail suspension bike known as the diamondback response. It has built up a pretty positive reputation among people who have ridden this bike. A lot of good reviews have been left. People seem to like the fact that the frame is obtainable in three different sizes (fourteen inch) extra small, (sixteen inch) small, (twenty two inch) extra large. If you're looking for a relatively affordable, durable bike to ride on the street or on the trails you might want to consider giving a diamondback response a try. This kind of activity is free, fun and might even turn you into a leaner, more fit version of yourself!

by: Bill Lawson




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