Mountain Biking UK

Whyte S-150 S

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The S-150 is designed to use a fork with a reduced offset (42mm) – the idea being to calm the steering without dulling the bike’s nimbleness. Working alongside that to boost stability further are a slack 65.3-degree head angle, 435mm chainstays, a long 1,212mm wheelbase and a ground-huggingly low 333mm BB – which is why Whyte spec 170mm crank arms, to limit pedal strikes. With those angles and a generous reach (458.5mm on the medium), the S-150 feels surefooted and commanding from the outset.

While it’s still fun to throw around at slower speeds, it’s when the pace picks up that the geometry shines, particular­ly in high-speed, chattery turns, where there’s a calmness through the bar that really helps when you’re trying to hold a line. It carries speed well on flatter sections of trail and, providing it’s not too muddy for the shallow-treaded rear tyre, will claw its way up pretty much any climb you point it at. Here, you’ll appreciate the wide gear range, courtesy of a SRAM GX Eagle transmissi­on. We killed the rear mech early on but since replacing it have had no other problems.

Throw the S-150 into something really rough and it doesn’t feel as smooth or forgiving as some of the other big-wheelers on test, with a back end that’s not quite as composed or supportive and uses up its travel a little too eagerly at times. Adding a volume spacer to the shock helped with end-stroke progressio­n on bigger hits.

Because the S-150 is more of a long-travel trail bike than an enduro racer, Whyte have used a RockShox Revelation fork up front instead of the burlier but heavier Yari. Our original fork felt a little slow and sluggish but the replacemen­t worked a lot better and its sturdy chassis helped keep steering precise. The Rev doesn’t deal with successive high-speed hits quite as comfortabl­y as the more expensive, Charger Damper-equipped Pike, though, and needs more air in it to keep it propped up on steeper trails, which means a little more chatter through the bar. Fortunatel­y, the four-piston SRAM Guide T brakes (a mid-season upgrade from the Level Ts that originally came on the S-150) boost power on long descents, helping to keep your hands that bit fresher.

While the S-150 S isn’t as refined as it could be, it’s not afraid of going seriously fast, though the ride isn’t quite as smooth or comfortabl­e as that of some of the other bikes here.

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