Ah, but who's to judge what a "true" mountain bike is?  As the late William 
Nealy pointed out in his book, "The Mountain Biking Way of Knowledge" (a 
must-own for every 'true' mountain biker), the Vietnamese have been riding 
bicycles on the Ho Chi Minh trail for decades... and I'm sure these were 
Flying Pidgeons, not StumpJumpers.

I say a bike is defined by how far you're willing to take it. I have a 
so-called mountain bike (that frankly sucks as an all-around or 
commuter)... it's geared too low and the geometry is best suited for rough 
terrain at slow speed, yet I'm sure there are people who ride this same 
bike to work... so does that NOT qualify it as a commuter???

I say ride the elephant through the forest... go shred on your Hunq.

Peace,
BB

On Thursday, December 5, 2013 8:43:18 AM UTC-5, Brian Campbell wrote:
>
> I was wondering if anyone was using their Hunq as a "true" mountain bike? 
> By which, I mean, no racks, fenders or bags.While it is a very versatile 
> frameset, does anyone use theirs only in off road scenarios? If yes,  what 
> are your thoughts on what it does well and maybe (shudder) what it does not 
> do well?
>

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