Behind the scenes – 10 Enduro Race Bikes in Comparison
Which is the fastest enduro bike of 2018? To answer this question, we held our own race with the 10 most exciting enduro bikes in Finale Ligure. To find out which bike won, get free access to the latest ENDURO issue #030!
The 2017 Enduro World Series was more exciting than ever! The level continues to rise, as the times between the riders continue to fall. After more than 46 min. of full-on racing at the 6th stop of the EWS in the US, Sam Hill and Martin Maes were separated by a mere 4 seconds. The right equipment can certainly make all the difference here! That’s why we wanted to know what the fastest enduro bike of 2018 is. To find out, we flew to Finale Ligure with 10 bikes in our baggage and spent three days competing against each other on an EWS race stage to see which could set the fastest time. In the end, of all bikes, three proved to be consistently the fastest.
The test track
For the test track, we chose the Pino Morto trail (as we did for our 2014 EWS enduro bike group test). It includes everything that makes for a challenging race day: rock gardens, turns, flat sections, compressions, small jumps – all packed into a trail dropping 170 meters over one kilometre. A harder and longer test track might at first seem better to test the speed of a bike, but then the risk of rider errors would increase, and the rider’s fatigue would affect the results too much.
The timing
For the timing, only the best would do. Instead of relying on the Strava times on our smartphones, we used a professional transponder timekeeping setup from Sport Ident. This is the same system they use in the EWS and almost all enduro races around the world. A sensor activates the transponder within a radius of 1.5 meters. At which point the clock starts ticking. So it’s a flying start with enough distance from the start gate where the sensor is placed. Just before the end of the stage, a second sensor stops the timer. The data was then evaluated on a computer.
10 bikes, 4 riders, 3 days, 1 problem
Many will ask themselves: how is it possible to compare the bikes consistently? The answer is simple: it’s not 100% possible. Rider fatigue and learning the track, of course, plays a certain role. In order to determine the result as objectively and bias-free as possible, each of our experienced testers had several practice runs, picked the lines they thought would be fastest and decided where they would put in pedal strokes. Afterwards, each rider recorded two timed runs on each bike within their comfort zone, each in a different order. Thus, everyone had a different first and last bike.
The bikes
For this comparison, we chose only the most exciting bikes of the current and the upcoming season. The manufacturers were free to pimp the bikes however they wanted – an offer that brands like Canyon, SCOTT, and Specialized happily accepted, sending us heavily tuned bikes. Other manufacturers, such as Nukeproof, Pole, Lapierre, Rocky Mountain, Santa Cruz, and YT reckoned their stock bikes were good as is.
Bike | Price (* +Tuning) | Weight | Travel | Wheel size |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canyon Strive CF 9.0 Team | € 5,499* | 14.30 kg | 170/163 mm | 27,5″ |
Giant Reign Advanced 0 | € 6,999 | 13.56 kg | 160/160 mm | 27,5″ |
Lapierre Spicy Team Ultimate | € 5,299 | 13.71 kg | 170/170 mm | 27,5″ |
Nukeproof Mega 275 RS | € 4,200 | 14.04 kg | 170/165 mm | 27,5″ |
Pole EVOLINK 140 29 | € 5,600 | 14.30 kg | 150/140 mm | 29″ |
Rocky Mountain Altitude Carbon 90 | € 7,900 | 12.60 kg | 160/150 mm | 27,5″ |
Santa Cruz Hightower LT | € 9,899 | 12.80 kg | 150/150 mm | 29″ |
SCOTT Genius 900 Tuned 2018 | € 7,499* | 12.76 kg | 150/150 mm | 27,5″ |
Specialized S-Works Enduro 29 | € 8,699* | 12.30 kg | 160/160 mm | 29″ |
YT JEFFSY 27 CF Pro Race | € 4,499 | 12.20 kg | 160/160 mm | 27,5″ |
The results and the winner
Of course, we weren’t only looking for the fastest bike in this comparison, but also wanted to find out more about the handling characteristics of the various bikes. For this reason, we rode the bikes on other trails in Finale and on tours in Germany.
Which bike ultimately turned out to be the fastest and which offered the best overall package, we reveal in the October issue of ENDURO Mountain Bike Magazine. If you haven’t already got the app, you can download it for free in the iOS AppStore or Google Play Store to get free access to the latest issue.