Thanks for the comments.
For me there are no cons so far, but that's because I don't need to ride the Haibike on the street much, if ever. This is my first Plus bike, and now I know I would never get a Plus bike for an all around bike, I'd pick something I could put maybe 2.2" tires on.
It is a pig on the street! I often do two rides back to back, one bike and then the other. When I get off the Vado and get on the Haibike it's like getting out of a Porsche and jumping in a monster truck. My balance is actually off for a few minutes until I get adjusted. The only similarities are they have wheels and you can ride them, they are that different...
But, on the trails and anything rough it's an absolute beast. I put some Maxxis Chronicle 3" tires on it set up tubeless, and I run them at or under 20PSI (I weigh 240 lbs.). The tires and suspension just soak up everything. The steering takes some getting used to, and I think that difference is mostly the slacker geometry that I've never had before.
This bike, you just point it and go...
Here's the finished product. It's not been to a bike shop - I finally took the time to learn to adjust a derailleur correctly, and I set up the tubeless myself without a compressor. Changes I made:
- Maxxis Chronicle tires running tubeless
- Deity 50mm riser bars
- Ergon GP1 grips
- Specialized 75mm 24 degree stem
- WTB Saddle
- Crank Bothers Stamp pedals
- MudHugger front fender (had to order this from Europe)
- Haibike MRS adapter so I could add a bottle cage (
@mikegs430 you have to order this from Europe and it takes forever to get here, then it's a bit of a pain to install)
After an endless amount of tweaking it's finally done. I think. Really enjoying it and definitely recommend it if it fits your riding needs.