All the reviews of the Jet 9 RDO start off with some cheap innuendo about how sexy the bike looks. I confess that I, too, was rolling Van Halen lyrics around in my head, trying to come up with a clever opening line about my college girlfriend or the neighbor's wife. But the more time I spent with this sultry carbon looker, the more I realized my lust for the newest Niner is more than skin deep.
Despite all its flash and splash, the Jet 9 is more Boy Scout than supermodel. My time in the Scouts was impressively short, but I still remember the Boy Scout Law: A Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful.... OK, I don't remember it all. But during an amazing ride at Annadel State Park near Santa Rosa, California – three hours of rock gardens, rolling singletrack and whippy-fast doubletrack – the Jet 9 RDO was all of those things. It's an obedient, point-me-in-the-direction-you-want-me-to-go kind of riding partner that simply will not let you down. Ever.
inside niner: big wheels, big payoff
Building Sweet Bikes, And a 'Business of the Future'The test bike Niner loaned me came loaded with top-shelf components. The Shimano XTR shifters, derailleurs and brakes were spot-on crisp, deftly registering every last-second shift and desperate death-grip squeeze of the levers. If you aren't running the new Shimano XTR Shadow Plus derailleur technology, you're missing a treat (and possibly a shift).
The American Classic MTB Race 29 tubeless wheels were wrapped with Schwalbe Racing Ralph tires. They rolled true and fast, with the Ralphs hooking up with greater frequency than guys on OKCupid. I've been slow to embrace the tubeless phenomenon, but these wheels had me rethinking my clincher allegiance. I put less and less air in the tires with every ride, and the less air I used, the better it rode. I never had a problem, regardless of the size of the rocks I attacked with this beast.

