EVIL WRECKONING GX EAGLE
£5,845 29er enduro/mini DH rig with the feel of a 650b play bike
This all-new Wreckoning is Evil’s third, packing a significantly di erent shape and more travel. When it launched in 2016, this hulking carbon beast was one of the first long-travel 29ers and was often labelled ‘enduro’, even though its meathead looks belied a surprisingly lively feel and it never came over like an out-andout race rig. Its energetic ride relied on slightly conservative geometry (compared to many of its rivals, that is) and progressive suspension, which encouraged messing about and having fun more than any bike with more than 160mm of travel should. But does a longer, slacker version upset this winning formula?
The frame
Built like a tank with huge chainstays, everything’s updated on the Wrecker’s fat unidirectional carbon fibre frame, from the more angular lines and sculpted shape, through to wholesale changes in geometry and sizing. It’ll fit properly tall people now, and each frame’s about 20mm longer. The Wrecker’s Achilles heel used to be its climbing position. This has been improved, but the 76.5-degree seat angle still isn’t the most upright compared to other new rigs, which put the hips further over the BB for extra e ciency. The chainstays remain short (430mm), and now use a 157mm Super Boost axle (which may cause headaches if you buy a frame only or want to upgrade the wheels). Evil have upped the travel provided by their DELTA system by 5mm, to 166mm.
The kit
Three di erent build kits (in the UK) stretch up to the best part of eight grand for the wireless SRAM AXS version. What’s smart is that Evil prioritise the suspension, so you get a top-tier RockShox ZEB Ultimate fork even on the cheapest GX Eagle model we tested. This new, sti , 38mm-stanchion fork works great. Here it’s specced with 170mm of travel and the shorter (44mm) o set, which delivers a neutral, calm steering feel on 29ers. The rear suspension has been updated to a trunnion-mount RockShox Super Deluxe coil shock, with the same toptier damping. Dave Weagle’s ‘dualprogressive’ DELTA design e ectively runs completely sealed bearings at every point of shock rotation too, for superior suppleness.
The high-quality Industry Nine enduro wheels have a sensible 30.5mm internal width for good tyre footprints. Out back, the Super Boost spacing splays the spokes wider at the flanges for greater sti ness. While the rear hub engages almost instantaneously, it whines like a swarm of bees. The Maxxis Minion
The ride
This new Wreckoning retains its predecessor’s uncanny ability to feel like it has 650b wheels. It pops out of berms like there’s a booster button in your shoes, yet the coilsprung suspension simultaneously irons out chatter, deeper hits and rocks, without impacting any ability to pump for speed and feed back information about the terrain with what feels like explicit detail.
Totally rock-solid and with 5mm more travel than before, the chassis almost replicates the sensation of riding a full-on downhill bike. It surges down the roughest trails calmly, stably and well-isolated from bumps, but with enough dynamism to react on blind trails or simply shred berms and hits on manmade tracks.
A trump card is the trait of first railing turns with amazing grip and then spitting you out at the perfect instant, just as the suspension is fully loaded and the rear tyre starts to break away. The single-pivot DELTA suspension provides perky pedalling and a more ‘urgent’ feel than the majority of competitors too, so there’s no penalty in terms of responsiveness on mellower trails either, although it doesn’t track as well as some designs under braking.
This Wreckoning does everything an enduro bike can, while also coming over like a snappy freeride or jump bike half the time. Evil appear to prioritise ride quality above all else, so while the mud clearance and seat angle are improved, they seem almost nonchalent about these aspects maybe still not being perfect, content with the way the frame looks amazing and testers are left grinning. But no bike’s perfect, and we guess you can a ord to be cocky when you’ve sussed out a handling formula that gets the rider buzzing like this.