MBR Mountain Bike Rider

SCOTT VANGUARD EVO PROTECTOR JACKET

- Mick Kirkman

£153.99

SPECIFICAT­ION Weight: 593g (Large) • Sizes: S, M, L, XL • Contact: scott-sports.com

Scott’s Vanguard EVO jacket targets trail and enduro riders looking for extra protection rather than full-on downhill racers. To match its intended use, the sleeveless vest also packs useful storage solutions on the sides of the rear torso including zipped cargo stashes (one of which is padded externally) and a hydration bladder pocket with routing for fluid hoses, so you can ride without a pack.

A cinch to put on with a single front zipper, the Vanguard is also easy to hang open on hotter days for extra cooling. It uses a fine mesh fabric with 15% elastane for a stretchy comfortabl­e fit, but it’s less like a compressio­n top and there’s less of a tight, body-hugging cut here than some vests.

Scott’s Airflex back panel is long and well vented with a snowflake-like mesh pattern and the skin side has a gluedon textured fabric face to add comfort against the body. The panel itself has

Level One (not the more robust Level Two) certificat­ion, but it is still plenty thick and protective, tapering from around 18mm thick behind the shoulders down to around 10mm at the base of the spine.

Like Fox’s Baseframe, the armour itself uses D30’s ‘intelligen­t’ polymer technology that stays flexible while riding (and even becomes more flexible as the body warms it up) and instantane­ously locks into a solid material in the event of an impact. The back panel is less pre-formed than some rivals, however; more of a flat panel than a formed ‘armadillo’ shape.

The Vanguard wicking is decent, but weirdly, even with a looser fit and no chest panel, it doesn’t seem any cooler than the much more protective Fox jacket here. Scott’s mid-weight vest uses a slightly coarser mesh fabric that doesn’t seem to breathe as effectivel­y as Fox’s almost sheer material, but it’s hard to split the pair in terms of wicking or drying time once sweaty.

One niggle we had with the Vanguard is that the back panel rides up and also waggles about more than rivals – it can even contact the back of a full face helmet depending on the design. It can also get a bit twisted since the D30 plate doesn’t sit as close to the spine or remain as locked in position as some rivals. It also gets pretty sweaty and steamy above the tailbone in the area with the multiple stashes and storage pockets.

Scott’s jacket uses quality materials and the storage capability is dialled, but the fit here isn’t as locked down or form-following as some (cheaper) rivals. On my body, the back panel also sticks proud of the shoulders a bit at the top creating a bit of lump under my jersey.

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