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Review #11 – Salsa Mamasita

Long Term Review of Salsa’s super-fast 29er hard tail, the Mamasita

Salsa Mamasita on back country trail

The Salsa Mamasita is a capable back country explorer and XC racer

Review by:

Scott Schekman

Photos by: Scott Schekman and Randy King

Now that I have been riding my Salsa Mamasita for more than a year, it is time for a long term review. My Mamasita is built up pretty much as a race/play 29er hard tail with a ROCK SHOX REBA Race 29″ fork, RACE FACE Deus crankset, Stan’s 355 rims laced to a DT Swiss 240 front & Stans ZTR rear hub, Easton Monkeylite XC bar, SRAM X-9 triggers and rear derailleur and Hope Mini disc brakes. This build is average in weight at 24.5 lbs, but that works for me and I didn’t have to cash in my IRA to build it. New Mamasita frames are available online for about $750; complete bikes for less than $2,000.

This size small frame is made of Scandium/aluminum alloy with carbon seat stays. I have read of various advantages of Scandium alloys, but not being a metalurgist, I don’t actually know what is fact or not.  The Mamasita’s geometry is fairly standard for a 29er hardtail frame [See chart].

Salsa Mamasita

The Salsa Mamasita features clean lines and rider-friendly geometry

So far I have raced the Mamasita in two mountain-X races and the epic Shenandoah 100. All my other rides have been local trail rides at Candlers/Liberty mountain, Danville, VA’s Anglers Ridge, Bedford, VA’s Falling Creek Park or Roanoke, VA’s Carvins Cove. The Mamasita rock ‘n’ rolled through all of this terrain variety that included log hopping, rock gardens, swoopy smooth singletrack and typical east coast-roots, rocks, tree limbs, technical climbs and fast descents.

Geometry chart for Salsa MamasitaRiding this bike is like riding a small self-powered rocket. All the pedaling energy seems to transform immediately into forward motion. This bike will climb like a scared cat! I seem to favor technical difficult climbs, especially the kind most people only like to ride down. [Editor's note: He's not kidding!] The “Mama” excels at this.  I do run the Reba at 100mm travel which means I have to keep some weight forward on steeps to keep the front end down, but like on any bike, the rider has to learn how to distribute his weight to the bike’s advantage.

Descending is a flat out rush; this bike will go faster than my brain will let it. I have never yet missed full suspension on the downhills. It might be the combination of wagon wheels and carbon stays or just the geometry, but this is the fastest XC bike I have ridden yet. The only time I notice any limitations is when I am trying to keep a smooth cadence on choppy (roots and small rocks) flat ground. This is probably a disadvantage of any 29er hard tail. It tends to kick me off the saddle some, which disrupts my pedaling so I installed a USE suspension seat post which helps – but is still no substitute for rear suspension.

Salsa Mamasita

The carbon seatstays and big wheels soften up the ride a bit on this rocket-fast hard tail

All in all, the Salsa Mamasita is a blast to ride or race. It is a screaming fast descender, a mountain goat climber, nimble and quick without any twitchiness in steering control. The Mamasita rider feels confident and in control climbing up or blazing down the mountain. The Salsa Mamasita is definitely worth a closer look for XC and epic racers and big mountain riders – as long as you’re not a downhill-only rider, or into frequent jumping or drops bigger than two feet.

Salsa Mamasita Take-awaysSalsa Mamasita Vital Stats

©2010 Big Mountain Riding

  1. mike fitch
    December 10th, 2010 at 14:02 | #1

    Hi, Thanks for the review! I am considering this bike after 19 years on my stumpjumper (still going strong if you don’t count the rust flowing from the seat stays!). Would it be possible to get a detailed build list for what you used? I am way out-of-date on components and have never even had a front shock! So, I need a little bit of a starting point to build up a frame!

    Mike

    • randyking
      December 11th, 2010 at 15:21 | #2

      Mike, here is the build list although I would recommend you just buy a complete bike-it’s cheaper since you are starting from scratch. You would have to find a used or leftover Mamasita frame as Salsa is not producing this frame in the coming year.
      Hope mini mono brakes
      Easton monkeylite handlebar
      Sette stem
      Thomson masterpiece or USE suspension seatpost
      Vetta saddle
      Sram X9 shifters
      Sram X9 short rear derailleur
      XTR front derailleur
      Raceface deus crankset
      Stans 355 rims with DT 240 front and Stans ZTR rear hubs
      Rockshox Reba fork
      Continental mountain king tires
      I think that’s it.
      -Scott

  1. December 20th, 2010 at 23:53 | #1
  2. April 1st, 2011 at 12:15 | #2