Mountain Biking UK

INTENSE PRIMER EXPERT

£3,999 Boutique US brand aim high with their trail 29er

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Better value for money has put Intense’s bikes within reach of many more riders, thanks to the US boutique brand moving to a direct-sales model, with impressive UK back-up. But does the Primer deliver on the trail?

The frame The carbon fibre mainframe and rear triangle are connected via two short links (the upper of which is alloy), to deliver 130mm of rear wheel travel. You get all the mod-cons, including internal cable routing and integrated frame protection – although we did experience some cable rattle during testing. Travel can be reduced to 115mm, but we kept the frame in 130mm mode to keep up with the 140mm fork.

The kit A RockShox Monarch RL shock tames the back end, while a Revelation RC fork keeps the front wheel controlled. This has the older Motion Control damper, rather than the fancier Charger RC, but still gives you compressio­n damping adjustment. SRAM provide their GX Eagle 12-speed transmissi­on, which is rounded out with an alloy Truvativ Stylo crankset fitted with a chunky 34t ring. This propels the DT Swiss M 1900 Spline wheels, which hold a pair of fast-rolling Maxxis Forekaster tyres. Shimano’s twin-pot XT brakes bring it all to a halt. Finishing kit includes a Renthal bar, Fox Transfer dropper post and WTB saddle.

The ride Looking at the Primer, you might expect it to be quite a hard-charger, but out on the trail the bike has a more ‘head down’, cross-country style ride feel. This is partly due to the rear suspension, which sits fairly high in its travel until you push through this initial ‘propped up’ feel. We ended up running the Monarch RL shock with more sag than we normally might, in order to get it to sit into its suppler mid-stroke. Another contributi­ng factor is the Forekaster tyres, which ride fast, but shirk responsibi­lity when pushed hard in more technical terrain – especially in soft conditions, where their low-cut tread lacks bite.

Treat the Intense as a machine to cover decent tracts of ground on, and you’ll likely come away more impressed. The twin-link JS Tuned suspension feels e cient under pedalling, and the relatively upright shape of the bike – with a long-ish seat tube, a fairly short reach by modern standards (453mm, large) and a notparticu­larly-slack 67.5-degree head angle – will suit those looking to get the miles in, rather than carve turns in the woods. A shorter seat tube and slacker head angle would do wonders to the bike’s handling on technical trails, though, without taking away much – if any – of that cross-country pace.

While value for money is subjective, we’d like to have seen a higher quality fork than the Revelation on this bike – its damping is relatively unrefined, leaving it feeling a touch wooden and quite prone to spiking. That said, Intense UK will set the bike up for you and they provide a tool kit along with it, which definitely aids its value propositio­n. TOM MARVIN www.saddleback.co.uk

Purebred trail bike with an ef icient, mile-munching ride, but some of the spec holds it back

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 ??  ?? You get internal cable routing, frame guards and even a front mech mount
You get internal cable routing, frame guards and even a front mech mount
 ??  ?? It may look like a playbike, but under those lairy colours lies a mileage machine
It may look like a playbike, but under those lairy colours lies a mileage machine

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