That's Dean the Sardine, he lives in my living room! He's from a surfboard that is on my wall that has a massive fish with pineapples in the background. I thought I would stick him on the bike and teach Dean how to fly!

Casey uses a standard SRAM XO DH carbon crank, a 36t chainring, and an MRP guide for retention. She is also using Shimano's new Saint clip-in pedal with four pins extended for traction.

Nearly every component that isn't from SRAM is from Trek's sister component brand, Bontrager. Casey opts for the Line30DH wheelset.

Casey uses the Mino-link in the lower setting for the Rotorua downhill race.

Bontrager's handlebar and direct mount DH stem are finished off with a "McGazza Forever" top cap, in memory of the big man who helped build the original CWX Slopestyle course in Rotorua, NZ.

SRAM's Code RSC brakes with 200mm rotors take care of stopping duties with McGazza lock on grips to match the stem's top cap.

Casey Brown's latest Trek Session is her first customized bike, and she is stoked on it. She designed the paintwork herself and it is fresh out of Trek's Project-One custom paint shop in Wisconsin. Paint aside, Casey's bike is a run of the mill off-the-shelf bike with SRAM suppling most of the moving parts, while Bontrager takes care of the components, wheels, and tires.Casey rides a stock, small-size frame. She tends to run a stiffer suspension setup than some riders, with 74psi in the Boxxer fork and two bottomless tokens. Rebound is -8 clicks from closed and compression is -14.The SuperDeluxe shock uses a 350lbs spring. Casey says she switches her setup for different terrains – her bike for this weekend's downhill race is much softer and faster than the setup she's sending big gaps on at the FEST Series.