26 ain't dead - but darned difficult to get intensive care

The installed base of 26" is too large globally to kill stuff off. Shimano even still makes a 7 speed hub. There will be less choice, but nothing disastrous.
Exal for one offers a choice of rims. Purchasing may have to move away from CRC/Wiggle to more speciaist retailers like Spa or SJS.

It's irritating that I can't find much choice in 26" 1.7 semi-slicks, but I'll live.
 
What rims were you running with 35mm internal width? I might have some trials rims in 26" that wide, and long ago I had Arrow racing DHX rims. The DHX more so, but both are basically boat anchors.

You could get 45mm internal Surly 26" rims for super cheap right before all the industry shortages, as they were discontinuing most/all 26" stuff.
 
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many thanks - I was looking for wtb asyms in 35 internal - and they are ALL gone. Everywhere. They are 545grms a piece, which is pretty good. And they're strong too - at least the 27.5 and 29 versions I also have are strong...
 
I don't think 26 inch is going anywhere soon, and eventually high end 26 inch will come back - but probably at a price that'll make your eyes water (especially if manufactured at short runs/by boutique companies).

At the other end of the market, there's likely decades worth of demand for low/middling 26 inch stuff as there are simply too many of them out there.

Probably best to baby what you have for now and/or swap out for the easily replaceable in the secondhand market.
 
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Rwn - it sure is. I have a few Hope Fortus30 in 26 and they are tough as old boots but grief now pricey (90:00) and rather boat-anchor-y. Nice though. The old Tech35s are lovely rims, and I have assumed that the Fortus are the same pattern rim just re-named?
 
Greencat - yep I think you are right - it will be short-run big-bucks specialist items. I have a habit of getting TrueWheels to build me a wheelset, in some unique hub-rim combination, want a duplicate set in the event of casing a back wheel or pretezelling a front, and then never damaging anything, having an expensive set of wheels in the workshop, thinking they are a wasted opportunity, so building a new bike around them, and so on ad infinitum....
 
Ive bought up nos rims, hubs, tyres and chainrings, along with hanging onto enough replacement parts to keep my bikes going (12 pairs of top quality canti blocks for £8.00 etc). The rest (30 years worth)i sold up recently and the money will see me through anything else i need for the rest of my cycling life!

26" dead? Well yes, im sure the industry wants that, but having ridden Dorris's £1500 scott 29er, errrrr, whats the point again......its like a barge in a dinghy race. Just dont get it, especially if your going from a nimble, small 26".

And before anybody says im not comparing like for like, ive got the same year, same spec, just in 26" as a daily chuck about, dont care what happens to it, rock crasher.
 
Now that sounds like foresight! I think rims are going to be a real pain...

I bought an excess of rubber way back, and that’s been useful. They are fickle though, with some compounds killing themselves slowly in storage, while others sit there asleep and nice waiting to wake again. IRC seem to be excellent, and come out supple and new, even after 20 years in the dark. WTB varies, and develops deep cracks. Ritchey all over the place, with some falling to bits like a zombie in daylight, while others develop tiny tiny cracks, and others are fine. Good old Schwalbe still know that people need a variety of 26 rubber...

And regarding 29 650b/27.5 26....we run all three. When I am footling around doing distance or swooping on simple loamy tracks, 26 is fine, if not better. Jumps and pump track - 26.

A 2.5 up front and 2.3 in the back gives me a very stable and easy platform. It’s notable though, that on washboard tracks, I am slower than others on 29. The science explains why. But doing Alpine DH, I want 27.5 or 29, and modern geometry.

When about to run a section with a large drop-off, rutted run out, then a ditch and rooty segment - then 26 is SCARY!!! So that’s when a 29 with 170 on the front and 160 at the back comes in right handy....

Mountain biking has changed since the 1990s - hugely - and I am going to write about that in the mags soon. The whole approach and attitude has shifted. We used to be 26 and leave no trace...now it’s 29 down dedicated trails dug out of the hillside. If you don’t get air and a whip in then you are NOBODY. Hence the woods being full of diggers now. But Friday Fails on Pinkbike shows how weird some of it is - people doing things which they do not have the skills to do. Collarbone, collarbone, wrist, collarbone, shoulder separation, concussion, collar bone. It’s all a bit silly.
 
I think people now expect to be able to do really silly stuff and get away with it! Chuck it crashing off a cliff in Utah....certainly sir, wont even know you have done it!

BITD, jumping off things with no suspension at all, no option but 26" and expecting NOT to get away with it, were all commonplace.

I never got up the courage to go much more than 10" sheer drop ( we used the local golf course who kindly provided manicured grass take off and landing pads for us) from the back of the driving platform thingies they have. (Dont understand or own a set of golf bats as you can tell).

Whilst i completly ununderstand the nice situation of having yours skills bolstered by technology............where's the fun in that.

Give me a bsa goldstar over an r1 anyday for a big smile, a feeling of being alive and having your life in YOUR hands......not the technology.
 
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