Being the only Mountain Bike Racer that I am aware of on BeeX, both cross country and downhill, I'd like to share MaliA's guide to riding up hills:
Riding up hills is where you make the time up. Riding up hill saps everyone's energy and for a long time. This is your chance to make it happen, and for them to really suffer. Starting last from the race grid , I made it up to 6th overall due to my ability to get a bike up a hill faster than the 39 people in front of me over 3 laps of a wet, greasy 9 mile course.
"How did you do this?" I hear you ask. Let me explain.
The trick to tackling hills is to start off with in the correct gear. You want to hit the very beginning of the hill with as much momentum as possible. This means speed. Physics dictates this. Also, take on a whole lot of water before you hit one, as you don't want thirst distracting you.
If you are running a 3x8 drivetrain, then this makes things a lot easier. Shifting down from the front cogs is a pain in the arse, and requires you to ease off pedalling to shift from the middle to the inner ring, avoid this, as much as you can. So, shift down into the inner ring before the climb, and go for the smaller cogs. So You want something like 1x8 just before the terrain goes uphill. Many people forget that total chain length across different ratios is often the same.
As you hit the slope, if it is offroad, shift your weight backwards slightly, this unweights the front wheel, and lets to cross roots and holes a lot more easily. Shift down the gears to keep your cadence up, as momentum is everything, if you stop pedalling, then you stop climbing. Look ahead to see if you need to get out of the saddle to power up shorter steeper inclines, but sit down again, as standing up wastes energy if it is a longer climb. The back wheel gives you the traction you need, so keep the weight on it as and when it is needed.
Gravity isn't your friend in this sort of situation, but cadence is, if you can't keep the pedals turning, shift down a cog, or stand up until you get the momentum back and sit down again. Shift before the problem arises, though. Just don't forget that the climb is hurting the other person a whole lot more than it is hurting you, as you've read my words and you've already got 4 more cogs to shift down to, they probably haven't, and you've got that edge, as you are going to beat them going up by such a margin, it won't matter if they can make it up going downhill.
When you do pass them, don't look back, just keep going on. The next gear change to keep the cadence is more important than how far back you are dropping them by. Anyone can pass anyone else on the flat or downhill, going up is where it counts.
On road, cadence is the king, just keep it up and use the gears, stand up to power through those shorter, steeper inclines.
Downhill? Just don't fucking crash, you made all that time going up, so don't worry about going down. Use it to spin up and clear the lactic acid from the climb and grab a breather, take a water bottle swig then look forward to the next climb.
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Mr Chris wrote: MaliA isn't just the best thing on the internet - he's the best thing ever.
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