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Rocky Mountain Altitude Powerplay Carbon 70

Co-developing their own motor has freed Rocky Mountain from the usual geometry and frame architecture constraints, and allowed them to make the Altitude Powerplay the same shape as its non-powered sibling. This makes it unusual in the e-bike market. The frame The compact frame combines a carbon fibre front triangle with an aluminium four-bar rear end. It hides the battery in its down tube and the motor behind the cranks. While most e-bikes have long back ends, the shape of the motor has enabled Rocky Mountain to keep the chainstay length down to a tiny 426mm. Up front, the ‘RIDE-9’ chip in the lower shock mount lets you choose between nine possible geometries. The medium frame can be adjusted to provide 452mm to 464mm of reach and a head angle of between 65 and 66.1 degrees. The kit The motor is the highlight here, partly because it allows ‘normal’ geometry, but also because of how incredibly reactive it is to pedalling inputs.As you rotate the cranks, the chain is drawn ov...

Rocky Mountain Instinct

Rocky Mountain have some of the most drool-worthy bikes out there. The new Instinct 90 BC Edition offers up 29in Stan’s Flow Mk3 rims wrapped in massive 2.5in (f) and 2.4in (r) Maxxis rubber. A Fox 36 Performance Elite fork and DPX2 shock take care of bump-eating duties and control the 160mm of front and 155mm of rear travel (non-BC versions get 140mm at both ends). The geometry isn’t the most radical out there but it’s on par with many of the top bikes in the category. It’ll set you back a cool $8250.

Rocky Mountain Altitude 770 MSL bike

The market for capable, 6-inch-travel trail bikes is as jammed as an L.A. freeway on a Friday afternoon. So what does it take to rise above the fray? Enter the Rocky Mountain Altitude.