Every time we post a bike review on 国产吃瓜黑料, a dozen trolls on Facebook rush forward and assert that the product earned its eval because the company that produces it paid the magazine for coverage. Perhaps that鈥檚 the way it works at some . But at 国产吃瓜黑料, at least in our bike program, we choose the best bikes and cycling gear the good old-fashioned way: we ride the shit out of the stuff.
At the heart of that process is our annual bike test, which is coming up next week. It鈥檚 a simple concept: get a bunch of cyclists together, go somewhere warm, bring a lot of bikes, ride them all to find out which perform the best. Each day of testing, a dozen or more riders spin laps on just as many bikes,聽then fill out review聽forms. And each night, we sit around our big rental house, nurse our wounds, and debate聽which bikes deserve coverage. The bikes that garner the most favorable reviews are the ones that you鈥檒l read about this spring.聽

I started the test聽back in 2005 in Tucson, Arizona, and this year, after two seasons in Sedona, we鈥檙e taking the show back to the Old Pueblo. We鈥檒l miss the slick rock and easy access of up north, but the riding in Tucson is more diverse and the winter聽weather more reliable. For road riding, the one-way, closed-circuit circle through might just be the best test loop anywhere, and the 21-mile ascent of rates among the country鈥檚 most iconic hill climbs. The mountain biking is not as quantifiable and iconic as, say, Moab, but the loose-over-hard terrain, big jangling rocks, and cactus everywhere are optimal conditions for beating the bejeezus out of bikes鈥攊f mountain bikes make it down here, they鈥檒l make it anywhere. And this place has some of my favorite rides anywhere: the descent down , with rock gardens and big Sonoran Desert views, is perfect test grounds for all-mountain bikes, and south of town holds some of my favorite stretches of the Arizona Trail.
We also found two great partners in the city, with building the fleet of bikes聽and running shuttles and support. Homegrown is run by some old friends of ours who helped with testing last time we were in Tucson, and it is an incredible addition and resource. They have vehicles that can handle up to 20 bikes, offer quality rentals if you鈥檙e visiting but can鈥檛 bring your own ride, and, most importantly, will shuttle to far-off locations, including up Mt. Lemmon and down south to points on the Arizona Trail.聽
By the numbers, we鈥檙e making the test a bit smaller this year, with 25 road bikes and 25 mountain bikes. While I was able to slam through more bikes in past seasons, I started to feel like we weren鈥檛 spending enough time on each one to get a true, fair test. So I鈥檝e scaled it back a little聽in the name of quality over quantity. The more select group of bikes also means that going into the test, which officially starts in the middle of the month, I will have ridden pretty much all of them at least once. And I鈥檝e logged half a dozen rides on many of them.
Between all the time that I put on the bikes and the feedback from our testers, who run the gamut from recreational riders聽to ex-pro racers, we will put hundreds of miles on each bike to determine our top picks for 2018. And, importantly, every test ride is comparative, meaning I always try bikes back-to-back with other similar models. I can鈥檛 stress enough the importance of this point. You could take a spin on any bike in the test and you鈥檇 think it was pretty good. It鈥檚 not until you ride a handful of models one after the other that you really start to feel and understand the nuance of each one. The whole point is to be as impartial and comprehensive as possible so that readers can trust in our feedback.
We鈥檒l be reporting on some of the trends and new products from Tucson over the next couple of weeks, and we鈥檒l release our top picks and reviews in April and May. Tune in to see what鈥檚 hot and what鈥檚 not.