Cove Stiffee Build or move on?

tjdixon911
tjdixon911 Posts: 110
edited May 2010 in MTB general
Hi I recently purchased a 2005 Cove Stiffee frame to build up whilst I waited for a warranty issue to go through on my Hustler, the fact is I like the Stiffee alot and am thinking of keeping it to build up gradually, but, I'm not sure it'll be suitable for what I want or it will be so good I'll end up using it instead of the Hustler....

Any way the frame is a 19" and I am just over 6ft, before I bought it I was thinking of buying something to use locally on BMX tracks, and genneral hacking about woods / learning to jump etc on, is this going to be suitable or should I be looking for something else? I'd imagine a slightly smaller frame would be better but is it going to make that much difference?

If I should change it, I'd maybe look for an off the shelf bike but if I built it I would maybe look to do so on a budget..... anyway, it'd need to be good enough to do a few miles on too.

So suggestions please.

Any help much appreciated.

Comments

  • peter413
    peter413 Posts: 5,120
    Get some light but strong wheels like hope hoops with stans rims, a decent drivetrain that isn't going to break and is reliable, a comfy saddle that isn't to big and some travel adjust forks and you will be laughing.

    Was considering buying a stiffee myself but decided to get an on one 456 for a lot less money (I still don't have that much to spend on the 456 :roll: )
  • vengeance111
    vengeance111 Posts: 137
    im gettin a 456 as well :D
    im putting some marzochi 44 rlo on it
  • peter413
    peter413 Posts: 5,120
    im gettin a 456 as well :D
    im putting some marzochi 44 rlo on it

    I'm putting my current Fox F100's on but will be getting some (hopefully) Fox 36 Talas'
  • vengeance111
    vengeance111 Posts: 137
    cool, i havent got enough money to get 'fox' forks at the moment :cry:
  • covelove
    covelove Posts: 209
    if you are using it for all round hacking it might be a bit on the heavy side (depending on the build) but i would definitely recommend it for jumping or hard trail riding! it just wants to take off at any opportunity!
    does my tail look hard in this?

    cove stiffee

    orange 222
  • tjdixon911
    tjdixon911 Posts: 110
    covelove wrote:
    if you are using it for all round hacking it might be a bit on the heavy side (depending on the build) but i would definitely recommend it for jumping or hard trail riding! it just wants to take off at any opportunity!

    Thanks, I really do just want to use it to learn some skills on it, mainly jumping and manuals, I'm hoping that will then make me a better rider generally, my only concern is that I'll end up spending too much on it when I could go buy an off the shelf bike that may do the job better for less money. Or could I realistically do it all on the Hustler?
  • BG2000
    BG2000 Posts: 517
    tjdixon911 wrote:

    Any way the frame is a 19" and I am just over 6ft, before I bought it I was thinking of buying something to use locally on BMX tracks, and genneral hacking about woods / learning to jump etc on, is this going to be suitable or should I be looking for something else? I'd imagine a slightly smaller frame would be better but is it going to make that much difference?

    I've just replaced my Trek 8500 frame with a brand new 17.5" Stiffee. I'm exactly 6 ft tall.

    I have a 120mm stem and find the bars just about right, although they are a couple of inches closer than on my Trek using all the same bits. But when I hit the rough stuff the frame size feels perfect, although I wouldn't want it any smaller. I did look at the 19" size, but the top tube is only about 1cm longer, which you can easily make up with a different stem, or even the angle of your riser bars. So I don't think you need to bother with a 17.5" size, although the top tube does look much lower, giving the whole frame a more 'FR' look to it.

    So I reckon your frame sounds just the right size for you. What I like about the Stiffee is that it's bomb proof, and very stable, yet agile at the same time. So you can make it into a brilliant XC bike as I have, with fairly lightweight components as the frame only weighs about a pound more than a lightweight XC frame. Or you can give it super tough free ride components and throw it anywhere.

    It's worthy of the best components and I don't think it'll ever feel like a compromise choice, as in "maybe I should have got something more expensive" etc...unless of course you start considering a Hummer :shock:

    You've made a good choice, so I'm not surprised you want to keep it.
  • paul.skibum
    paul.skibum Posts: 4,068
    BG2000 wrote:
    I have a 120mm stem

    Seriously?! Is it 2001 again?

    I dunno about the sizing of that frame but the Stiffee is pretty much perfect for what you want to do on it - get a cheapish 130 fork second hand, basic groupset (deore sounds ideal) and piece the rest together off ebay and bingo - yeah it wont be that light but who cares - for hacking and crashing you odnt want light you want cheap!
    Closet jockey wheel pimp whore.
  • tjdixon911
    tjdixon911 Posts: 110
    BG2000 wrote:
    I have a 120mm stem

    Seriously?! Is it 2001 again?

    I dunno about the sizing of that frame but the Stiffee is pretty much perfect for what you want to do on it - get a cheapish 130 fork second hand, basic groupset (deore sounds ideal) and piece the rest together off ebay and bingo - yeah it wont be that light but who cares - for hacking and crashing you odnt want light you want cheap!

    I was thinking of maybe this fork http://www.evanscycles.com/products/roc ... 719#guides seems good value but don't know what they are like or if they are suitable for what I want....
  • paul.skibum
    paul.skibum Posts: 4,068
    Tora is supposed to be a good budget fork - Supersonic talks well of them - I went for the u turn recons on my SC Heckler - pretty good and weren't too pricey.
    Closet jockey wheel pimp whore.