Mountain Biking UK

GIANTREIGN­SX

£2,999 Capable bike park/enduro/all-mountain shredder

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Incredibly, Giant’s Reign is now more than 15 years old, having launched in 2005. It’s been continuall­y updated as trends and wheel sizes have shifted, though. The SX model tested here is the cheapest entry in the 2021 Reign line-up and the only one with more dynamic-feeling 650b wheels. Boasting an ‘amped up’ 180mm of fork travel and a coil-sprung shock, it should appeal to bike park riders as well as enduro racers.

The frame

The aluminium chassis is hewn from Giant’s own alloy blends. The brand make so many bikes they actually own their own aluminium plant and, as you’d expect, weld and finish quality are both very high. Plus, with a carbon fibre upper shock link, the frame is also super-light.

Giant’s Maestro suspension is a twin-link layout with short upper and lower shock links. Increasing the shock stroke by 2.5mm has allowed them to pump up the travel to 160mm on this model (compared to 146mm on the 29er Reigns), and the SX also uses a coil shock to bump up the aggro factor.

The geometry across the four sizes is labelled as ‘modern enduro’, but numbers such as the 464mm reach on the large size are actually pretty conservati­ve in today’s market. Standover height is taller than on plenty of the Reign’s rivals, too, which means you notice the frame more between your thighs. As a bike-park-ready machine, though, not being super-long is likely to improve manoeuvrab­ility.

The kit

This SX build is decent value. The Yari fork shares the same chassis and sti ness as RockShox’s awardwinni­ng Lyrik, but uses the cheaper Motion Control damper, which is alright but way less smooth and controlled than the top-tier Charger 2.1. Out back, the Super Deluxe Coil shock is extremely supple and fluid, but o ers just one tuning parameter

– rebound damping. One glance will tell you there’s no dropper post here. It’s likely a purely cost-cutting exercise, but we felt its absence, and it’s extra annoying when the alloy post doesn’t even slam fully into the frame to help you with the jumps and downhill action the SX is intended for. The Deore brakes and gears work brilliantl­y, though, and are a sensible price compromise, despite being heavier than pricier Shimano gear. Praxis’s Cadet cranks are sti and solid, but their Wave chainring design is flawed for UK conditions, grinding and clogging in mud.

The ride

Giant’s Maestro suspension is very active and cushioned, with a floaty feel that erases stutter bumps, but it’s marginally too easy to smash through all the squish on the SX, even with a coil shock that definitely wasn’t undersprun­g for our 82kg tester. There’s a ton of traction at the back, but one flipside of the suspension being so active and supple is a lot of bob when pedalling – evident both when you’re twiddling circles uphill in an easy

gear or stomping on the cranks to accelerate hard.

RockShox’s Yari fork isn’t a match for the smoothness of the rear end, however – grip, tracking and front tyre security are noticeably diminished over equivalent bikes with forks containing a Fox GRIP or RockShox Charger damper. While the Maxxis Minion DHF front tyre has a decent tread, Giant have specced the dual-compound version, and its harder rubber (compared to the triple-compound option) is also a bit too lively in the wet, considerin­g their rowdy intentions for the SX.

The Reign’s poor manners under power feel more a consequenc­e of a slightly egg-shaped and ine cient pedal cycle, rather than anything to do with rider weight or the lack of a shock lockout. This is excusable, given that the SX is designed for destroying the descents and being tough enough to get hucked within an inch of its life, all for a fair price. However, when other bikes for this much cash pedal a lot more e ectively and are as capable in rough DH terrain or when hitting jumps, it does become a drawback.

Another bugbear is the lack of a dropper post. Even if half your riding is uplifted or pushed-up, there are still inclines to be pedalled up to access di erent trails, so it’s a pain.

While the SX has supple suspension, rides quietly and is light for the cash, the overall package didn’t blow us away. The steering is a little floppy and less neutral than on some bikes with equivalent travel, and it never quite feels like the longtravel park bike it’s pitched as, or one that encourages you to get especially wild. Ultimately, it sits on the fence between a regular enduro rig (which is likely more e cient at getting about) and a chuck-it-about gravity shred-sled like Canyon’s Torque, on which you can haul ass and send every jump in sight. MICK KIRKMAN www.giant-bicycles.com

A value-packed, tough all-mountain bike, but not really a freeride machine despite the SX tag, and let down by its lack of dropper and poor pedalling

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The burly Reign SX certainly looks the part, but its ride character doesn’t quite live up to the promise
The burly Reign SX certainly looks the part, but its ride character doesn’t quite live up to the promise
 ??  ?? Praxis’s Wave chainring design doesn’t like UK mud and the 34t size specced here may contribute to poor pedalling
Praxis’s Wave chainring design doesn’t like UK mud and the 34t size specced here may contribute to poor pedalling
 ??  ?? The dual-compound Maxxis Minion DHF isn’t as grippy as the pricier 3C version
The dual-compound Maxxis Minion DHF isn’t as grippy as the pricier 3C version

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