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11 Comments

  1. It’s pretty dated and on 26 inchers. looks like it’s been rode hard. like most of the women I attract.

  2. Previous_Lock3889 on

    For a park bike, I don’t see why it wouldnt be a good bike. Good enough to make it fun, cheap enough to not be upset when it dies. They used to send it down the mountains back when it came out.

    Maintenance will be a concern. Try her out!

  3. Bridgestone14 on

    I think so. Doesn’t look too bad off. Been thinking of an Aurum my self for a park bike. Please 26 inch wheels are more fun to jump and turn.

  4. Rakadaka8331 on

    All about those dampers. Are they working, does support exsist?

    DH with blown suspension is pretty worthless.

  5. cheezeyflamingo on

    I’d say go for it but don’t dump too much money if it starts to not be worth it. but to start doing downhill often before crashing a brand new bike it seems great

  6. Specialist-Mud-291 on

    If the bike is good and nothing is broken, it’s a sweet bike for freeride and park laps. Just don’t hit super technical pro lines at full speed since it’s a 26in, then you should be good.

  7. Inevitable-Snow827 on

    Seems sick, dont be surprised of issues with frame bearings though!!

  8. Just take a look at the geo chart and decide if it works for you. 63 degree head angle means it will do fine in the steeps. 421 reach is short but will make for a playfull ride. How tall are you?

  9. 0pp0site0fbatman on

    I have the same bike with a better build, and I would not expect $750 cad for it. Maybe I should sell haha.

    I will say this for the bike. It still shreds. My locals in the last 10 years have been Kickinghorse, Whistler, and now Mt. Ste. Anne. Not much this bike can’t tackle still. Being a whistler bike, you know that bike has seen some shit, but in my experience, Whistler bikes are decently maintained.

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