Anne,
Don't despair!  This is EXACTLY the experience I had on my Krampus, but now 
it's sorted and he'd climb a telephone pole if I had the legs. I think it's 
the front end-- it's really slack-- and the way there is mucho weight on 
the back wheel.  While the "All-Mountain" geometry IS great for going down 
hills, it has the drawback of a "wander-y" front-end going uphill.  Long 
story short-- I got a longer stem, flipped it (downward), and dropped it 
down until I got the balance of downhill and uphill handling 
characteristics I wanted.  I also moved my saddle forward a bit.  The basic 
idea was to move weight forward and down w/o losing too much downhill 
awesomeness.  My stem was stock 70 mm and I'm now riding a 100.  I kept the 
same degree of rise as the original (7 degrees?) and then moved the stem 
down a spacer at a time until I liked it.  I also read somewhere that Grant 
thought that longer chain stays helped w/ climbing, so I moved the wheel 
back in the dropout, but I moved it back because I like the way it turns 
better with shorter stays. Anyway, I think with a little tweaking you can 
get it to feel the way you like.  All the best,
Nils

On Friday, April 25, 2014 9:27:22 PM UTC-6, Anne Paulson wrote:
>
>  
> I'm a big fan of low, low gears. I have them on both my Atlantises; my 
> Roadeo has pretty low gears too considering I never carry much on it. 
> People always say to me, "I don't want lower gears because then I couldn't 
> balance." I never understood that. I don't have a bit of problem riding at 
> 2.5 mph for long periods of time when I'm climbing something ridiculously 
> steep on one of my Rivendell bikes.
>
> But now I understand. I thought when I bought my new Surly Krampus 
> mountain bike I'd be able to climb even steeper dirt roads than I now can 
> climb on my Atlanti. I thought, I have an absurdly low gear on the Krampus 
> (15.6 inches, something like that), I have all the traction in the world, I 
> can climb anything.
>
> But no. I'm finding that I climb *worse* on the Krampus. It's frustrating. 
> There are dirt sections that I have no trouble on with the Atlantis, with 
> smooth tires, that I can't climb on the Krampus with the knobbies.
>
> What's going on here? Front-end geometry? Wheel weight? Bottom bracket 
> height? I'm beginning to think I should have bought the Surly ECR (like 
> several people recommended) instead of the Krampus. Or maybe I just need to 
> learn how to climb on this new bike.
>
> On the other hand, when I bought the bike I also thought I'd be able to go 
> down steep trails that I'm afraid to descend on the Atlantis, and that has 
> proved to be true. My husband took one look at my new bike and said, Wow, 
> you have better traction on that than you have on foot. When I apply the 
> brakes on a steep downhill, the bike *slows down* instead of skidding.
>
> -- 
> -- Anne Paulson
>
> It isn't a contest. Enjoy the ride. 
>
>  
>

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