Bionicon isn’t a household name here in the States (though they do have distribution here), but they’ve developed some pretty interesting technology over the years. The latest mighty morphing enduro wonder bike, the 2015 Bionicon Edison EVO, takes adjustability to new heights.
Featuring swappable rocker arms, seatstays, suspension parts and more, the frame lets you set it up with 160mm or 180mm of travel, 26″ or 27.5″ wheels, change suspension parts and adjust ride height and geometry…some of it on the fly. Oh, and it’s lighter than before. They say it’s their best ever bike.
At the heart of the bike is their Bionicon Effect travel adjust system. It pairs custom made forks and shocks with their pneumatic release button to let you instantly adjust the angles of the bike to suit climbing, descending or anything in between. It’s body weight activated, and works minimal effect on suspension performance thanks to their clever 2×2 fork air cartridges and an extending shock mount…
The travel and geometry adjustments happen by simply pushing this button and shifting your weight forward or backward. The button opens an air valve, letting air transfer from a chamber in the fork to the shock’s extending mount and vice versa. Put your weight over the bars and it’ll drop the fork and raise the rear end to help you climb.
The 2×2 cartridge gets its name from its dual positive air chambers. It’s a floating design, and you can fill each chamber separately to fine tune the feel and progression of the suspension. The upper chamber feeds the travel adjust hoses, too, while the bottom chamber is separate and only functions for the suspension.
The air is pushed from the forks upper chamber to the shock mount, which extends the mount to raise the rear end of the bike. Shock damping, spring rate and air pressure is unaffected, so its performance doesn’t change.
The seat and head angles get steeper, and the bottom bracket height also stays about the same, allowing better clearance than on bikes that are only lowering the fork.
The overall effect is that the fork is lower, the rear is higher and your body position is more neutral for climbing. That means less uncomfortable hunching to keep your weight forward.
The bike is built around that system, but they’ve made an adapter available to work with other shocks, too, including Cane Creek’s Double Barrel models. You’ll just lose the travel adjust.