Muddymoles mountain biking in the Surrey Hills and Mole Valley

The year of the long-travel 29er?

Posted by Matt | February 1, 2017 | 5 comments so far

Orange Stage 5
For once I feel I may be – if not ahead of – at least in the game. And that’s unusual.

News of new models for 2017 seem to be revolving around slack, long travel 29ers with big wide wheels. The sort of mile-munching bikes that you can have lots of fun with when you decide you’ve had enough of climbing, with handling that’s on your side from the start. This makes my purchase of a YT Jeffsy unusually prescient. But what other options are popping up?

Well, first of all Orange continue to hone their folded aluminium, single pivot design that has been around since full suspension started. This week comes news of the new Stage 5 and Stage 6 bikes, Enduro style slack sleds which rock 140mm front, 135mm rear travel for the Stage 5 and 160mm front, 150mm rear travel for the Stage 6. Both have long wheelbases and either 65.5° or 66.5° head angles meaning fun is pretty much baked in. Head over to Factory Jackson for more info.

Santa Cruz Hightower 29

Next up, it would be silly to talk about long travel 29ers without a nod to the Santa Cruz Hightower, arguably one of the early bikes to this category. With a 67° head angle, long wheelbase and short chainstays it is bang in the sweet spot with 135mm rear travel and 140mm at the front. It’s also flexible enough to switch to 27.5 Plus wheels if you fancy and is the sort of bike to win lots of fans around the Surrey Hills.

Ghost Bikes SL AMR 9

Another brand, Ghost, have the SL AMR 29er to offer, with 150mm front, 140mm rear travel and a 67° head angle complimenting a tidy looking overall package.

Pivot Switchblade 29

Pivot also have the option of a long, slack 29er in the form of the Switchblade which has the added flexibility of accommodating Plus size tyres too. In 29er form it has 135mm of rear travel and 150mm up front with a 67.25° head angle. This is a bike I really like the look of.

Devinci Django 29

A bike that’s been on my wish list to ride for a while is the Devinci Django 29, a slightly shorter travel option at 120mm of rear travel but a bike that promises to be sharp and responsive when you want it to be and milder natured the rest of the time.

Orbea Occam TR 29

Quite possibly a brand that many overlook is Orbea, who offer – in the shape of the Occam TR series bikes – 29ers with 120mm of front and rear travel with 68° head angles, longish wheelbases and short 435mm chainstays. The Occam (Razer, geddit!?) looks like a responsive, fun handling trail bike that you could push into a wide range of riding and love every minute of it.

Pole Evolink 140

Finally for this round up, new kid on the block Pole offer the Evolink 140 29 which pushes the envelope on what a 29er should be. With a crazy sounding 64.5° head angle, a long effective reach of 621mm and a wheelbase of 1284mm (for the medium) it’s a bike that is possibly better suited to descending than climbing; yet with its effective seat tube angle of 77.5° Bikeradar have described it as ‘one of the best technical climbing bikes’. I think riding it is the only way to really know, but for me it sounds more Enduro than Trail. Strangely, the damn thing is also foldable??

So there you are, if you are looking beyond a YT Jeffsy for long days ragging the trails this summer, there’s a lot to choose from… and a lot of fun to be had along the way…

Big wheels, keep on turning.

Matt

About the author

Matt is one of the founding Molefathers of the Muddymoles, and is the designer and main administrator of the website.

Having ridden a 2007 Orange Five for many years then a 2016 YT Industries Jeffsy 29er, he now rocks a Bird Aether 9 and a Pace RC-627.

An early On-One Inbred still lurks in the back of the stable as a reminder of how things have moved on. You can even find him on road bikes - currently a 2019 Cannondale Topstone 105 SE, a much-used 2011 Specialized Secteur and very niche belt drive Trek District 1.

If you've ever wondered how we got into mountain biking and how the MuddyMoles started, well wonder no more.

There are 5 comments on ‘The year of the long-travel 29er?’

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  1. Elliot says:

    I thought this was the year of the coil shock? I quite fancy a Cane Creek Coil Inline like on the Ghost^

    From that selection I’ll take the Pivot please (seeing as I already have the Cruz lol), stunning colour!

  2. Lloyd says:

    Much as it pains me to say, but the Pivot is a fine looking bike(sorry Santa Cruz) – and I do have a bike size space in my garage………………. and it is sooo long since I last bought a bike……………

  3. Mat-S says:

    For once I get to feel like I was (accidentally) ahead of the trend here – my Meta 29er is surprisingly close to some of these bikes on angles and lengths. Fit a slackset and I could probably push it well into the slacker end. Pretty sure it’s got clearance for b+ tyres too- about the only ‘modern’ thing it doesn’t have is boost.

    That was released in 2012 – Commencal must have had the crystal ball fired up!

    That said, the new ones look lovely (and that Jeffsy of yours is a very nice bike). I’d love to try the Pole and see what it can do

  4. Tony says:

    It does make me think whether I could fit a slackset to my Specialised Stumpy FSR 29er. It’s 140mm both ends but my Orange Four is probably as good on the downs with 110mm of travel. Hmmmmm…

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