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EB18: Mountain Bike Trends – Adjustable geometry & suspension; Aggressive XC

2019 mountain bikes get more adjustable geometry to fit different tire and wheel sizes and let you tune the bike to your local trails and riding style
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For many riders, the modern 120mm trail bike is a great blend of XC efficiency, speed and aggressive capability. Which is why many XC bikes are adopting similar head angles. But as things get more aggressive, finding the right bike to handle all manner of trails can be tricky. There’s a reason why some brands make their bikes with lower BBs and slacker angles while others keep things just a bit more upright. It’s because trails are different from coast to coast, north to south, and everywhere in between. What works in one place on one day may not be ideal at the next.

And that’s why more and more brands are building adjustable travel, geometry, tire and wheel sizes, and more options into their frames for 2019.

The Bold Unplugged enduro bike lets you change the geometry
Bold gives you a whopping four different positions for their rear pivot, which changes angles and BB height.

Bold, Scott, Ghost, NS Bikes, and others all have chips, inserts, mounts and other designs that let you tweak the geometry and, sometimes, even to fit different wheel and tire sizes inside the bike.

2018 Ghost FRAMR enduro mountain bike with adjustable travel
The 2019 Ghost FRAMR lets you flip the lower shock mount and swap in different length shocks to change the travel.

Over the past few years we’ve seen an increase in the number of bikes offering flip chips (like the Scott shown at top of this post) that allow for slight tweaks to the seat- and head tube angles and bottom bracket heights.

The NS Bikes Define 29er lets you swap the lower shock mount and shock to change travel, or just rotate it to change BB height.

What’s become more prevalent is the option to change one of the shock mounts and replace the rear shock with one using a different length and/or stroke to change the travel. Both the Ghost FRAMR and NS Bikes Define do just that, and we suspect we’ll be seeing more of this in the future.

Scott’s Genius and the Cannondale Trigger have offered adjustable travel for years, both using modified shocks that limit travel via air volume and other internal changes. All of these systems have the added benefit of adjusting the geometry to fit the travel length…getting slacker as things go longer.

NS Bike’s new Define 29er lets you change the reach and effective top tube length.

Many gravity bikes have offered adjustable angle headsets for years, and now we’re seeing options in mid-travel bikes (like the Bold Unplugged). The NS Bikes Define takes a different approach, giving you 10mm of reach adjust by moving the steerer tube fore or aft.

The goal of all this? To make one single bike more adaptable to different types of terrain and riders, helping both brands and riders narrow down their quiver.

XC bikes get tougher, Trail bikes get lighter

The 2019 Canyon Lux

All of the adjustable travel, adjustable geo bikes we’ve seen so far sit in the 130-180mm travel range, clearly aimed at more aggressive riders. But what if you want to race XC and still get rowdy with your friends during the off season? Modern XC bikes are giving you less and less reason to buy a proper Trail bike. And vice versa. Either way, almost every full suspension bike now comes with dropper post routing. From there, it’s just a matter of picking which type of riding you’ll do most.

The new Cannondale F-Si shows that even hardtails can tame tough trails. The Scalpel is even better.

Recent race bike introductions from Cannondale, Canyon and others all use longer reach and slacker head angles to keep the bike steady at speed and on the descents. Those are generally paired with steeper seat angles, short rear center and shorter fork offset measurements to provide snappy handling and efficient climbing. Honestly, it seems like almost every brand is refining their mountain bike geometries to get closer to these new standards…because they work. These combinations really do create a fantastic balance of precision, stability and control at all speeds.

niner rkt9 rdo gloss orange to match fox 34 step cast 120mm mountain bike suspension fork
The latest Niner RKT spec’s the Fox 34 SC lightweight 120mm fork

Or, if you’re into trail riding but want to do the occasional race, a new breed of lighter trail bikes are race ready. A lot of brands, like Pivot, Niner and Specialized, are putting 120mm forks on their 90-100mm travel “race” bikes. Doing so makes them more capable, but does tweak the geometry and slow down handling just a bit. The nice thing is, much like swapping in a different rear shock size, you can always sub in a 100mm fork for race days and pure XC.

Or, use something like the new Fox 34 SC or Rockshox SID 120mm lightweight trail forks to add travel and slacken the head angle on your current XC bike. Both have room for bigger tires, (27.5×2.8 or 29×2.6 for the Fox), so you can add extra rubber up front, too.

It still amazes us how much better bikes get every year. And now that we’re gaining more adjustability in our bikes, it means more ways to use the ones we have (or will soon have). The idea of being able to take our favorite rig and swap a couple parts to give it new life on new terrain is might appealing, as is the ability to dial its performance and fit exactly to our  bodies and trails.

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Jason Etter
Jason Etter
5 years ago

Or you just get 3-4 bikes. 🙂

boom
boom
5 years ago

Dude, trek has been doing adjustable geometry with a chip for years now. This is nothing new

Gillis
Gillis
5 years ago
Reply to  boom

He acknowledges it’s not new, but it’s now a trend that more and more are adopting and across a broader range of bikes.

gringo
gringo
5 years ago
Reply to  boom

Wow, good thing @Boom is here to tell us whats happening in the bike business.

Mark
Mark
5 years ago

Is anyone making flip chips that aren’t bilaterally symmetric?

That way they could get one set to do four different positions: “normal,” flipped 180 degrees, swapped left to right, and swapped and flipped.

Gillis
Gillis
5 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Rocky Mountain has their Ride9 chip. It’s a square in a square, so you can do incremental adjustments. There may be others, but I don’t of any.

Sunny
Sunny
5 years ago

More proprietary crap to break on your bike.. And waiting for manufacture to send the parts or making regular bike shop visits. Speaking from experience with Scott Spark.

Mechanic
Mechanic
5 years ago
Reply to  Sunny

What broke on your bike and what are you waiting for?

Danie Van Tonder
Danie Van Tonder
5 years ago

Why not mention Rocky mountain with the ride-9 chip?

LovetheBike
LovetheBike
5 years ago

Aggressive XC could be such a good market but most companies are missing the mark. The only company I see really hitting it head on is Unno with the Horn: https://www.unno.com/horn/

But, as $5.5k EU for the frame and only 50 produced a year, it’s not really an option. But, the reason I point to it is because it’s nearly 200g lighter than the Scott Spark RC 900, but has a DW-Link rear suspension design (the Turner Czar 100mm dw-link frame is nearly 1.5lb heavier than the Unno), which just plain out performs other rear suspension designs, except for maybe the Giant Anthem, but then that has a near 70deg hta and is more than 400g heavier and has tire width limitations. The Unno Horn has a 67 degree head tube angle and is made to take up to 3.4″ tires. When you put a 100mm fork at 67 degrees and pair that fork with 30mm internal width rims with 3.35″ tires, the fork is going to perform better on descents without the weight penalty… though it’s easy enough to toss a 120mm Fox 34 stepcast fork on any of these frames.

Luvthebike
Luvthebike
5 years ago

Aggressive XC could be such a good market but most companies are missing the mark. The only company I see really hitting it head on is Unno with the Horn: https://www.unno.com/horn/

But, as $5.5k EU for the frame and only 50 produced a year, it’s not really an option. But, the reason I point to it is because it’s nearly 200g lighter than the Scott Spark RC 900, but has a DW-Link rear suspension design (the Turner Czar 100mm dw-link frame is nearly 1.5lb heavier than the Unno), which just plain out performs other rear suspension designs, except for maybe the Giant Anthem, but then that has a near 70deg hta and is more than 400g heavier and has tire width limitations. The Unno Horn has a 67 degree head tube angle and is made to take up to 3.4″ tires. When you put a 100mm fork at 67 degrees and pair that fork with 30mm internal width rims with 3.35″ tires, the fork is going to perform better on descents without the weight penalty… though it’s easy enough to toss a 120mm Fox 34 stepcast fork on any of these frames.

Lucas
Lucas
4 years ago

The average rider has no clue how to set up suspension, let alone play with geometry.

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