Mountain Biking UK

SPECIALIZE­D EPIC COMP CARBON EVO

£3,999 Pumped-up XC ride with solid trail credential­s

-

Noticing that their staff were setting up their bikes differentl­y to stock, Specialize­d started offering revised, more aggro EVO versions to the public. The 2020 Epic EVO has 20mm more fork travel than the regular bike, along with a dropper post. It shares the ‘intelligen­t’ rear shock, which has a separate ‘Brain’ inertia valve to read bumps. This keeps the suspension taut on smooth trails, with the damping only opening up when the rear tyre encounters hits.

The frame

Only available in carbon, the latest Epic chassis carries up to S-Works level (although those top-end models are made from pricier, highermodu­lus fibres) and, with its subtle tube profiles and slim seat-tower brace, looks fantastic. The singlepivo­t frame eschews Spesh’s usual chainstay pivot to dump grams for racing. Instead, the light, one-piece carbon back end flexes to deliver the rear wheel’s 100mm of travel, with the proprietar­y Brain unit mounted right at the chainstay tip for better bump reactions. Version 2.0 of Spesh’s clever lockout system can be tuned externally via a five-way dial and has been tweaked for more sensitivit­y, using a bladder instead of the old floating-piston design.

The kit

Dropper posts are integral to the EVO philosophy, and X-Fusion’s 125mm-travel Manic (with Spesh’s own remote) works great, with a lightweigh­t action and a zero-offset clamp for efficient climbing. The 750mm bar is wider than on the ‘standard’ Epic and clamped in a 10mm-shorter stem. You get 20mm more front travel too, but because the RockShox Reba RL fork uses the lower-tier Motion Control damper, it smashes through it too easily. This means control is lacking and we’d expect better on a £4k bike. The rear Brain suspension is now built by RockShox too, with air pressure set via a clever AutoSag feature.

Specialize­d often reduce the spoke count in their wheels to save weight. The 24-spoke front hoop feels soft when you’re leaning in on hardpack berms or killing speed at the end of rough straights. Plus, these wheels are the heaviest on test, with a slow engagement in the rear freehub.

The ride

Even after we settled on a firmer shock pressure than AutoSag recommende­d, the Epic floats over small bumps. With the chassis mirroring chatter, it rolls fast and feels fluid, especially considerin­g its tightness and punchy pedalling response. Even with just 100mm of

EVEN WITH JUST 100 MM OF TRAVEL, THE S PE S HF EELS PRETTY CAPABLE. THE FRAME ARE EXCELLENT SHAPE AND RIDER POSITION TOO, WITH A REAL‘ HEADS DOWN’ XC FEEL

rear travel, the Spesh feels pretty capable. The frame shape and rider position are excellent too, with a real ‘heads down’ XC feel. With the 120mm fork slackening the head angle to 68 degrees, the steering is perfectly balanced, so it goes precisely where you point it without being too unsettled.

Spesh’s Brain technology divides opinion. Some love the urgent response when stomping the cranks and the way it makes the Epic feel close to an XC hardtail. Others feel it’s inconsiste­nt, and can plummet deep into the travel unnaturall­y. This reveals itself as a ‘clunk’ underfoot when climbing up roots and steps, and means the tyre can lose traction.

Turning the Brain down to the lowest setting improves this. Pedalling remains pretty rapid, but the suspension feels softer, smoother and more consistent, helping to generate extra grip on damp UK trails. Up front, the Reba fork bounces erraticall­y when you crank uphill. It’s easy to lean down and use the leg-top lockout dial to improve its efficiency. However, this raises the dynamic height of the front end and detracts from the weightforw­ard, purebred XC feel that urges you to attack harder in the first place.

With rapid reaction speed and a well-damped, calm-feeling carbon chassis, the Epic EVO is a blast to ride. For this price though, the wheels and drivetrain add too much weight for its category, and both are noticeable uphill compared to the lighter bikes here.

VERDICT

The Epic EVO is a blast, but some of the Comp’s kit will be a bit heavy for full-XC psycho pain-cavers

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia