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first ride review – Singletrack World Magazine

first ride review – Singletrack World Magazine

Hot off the cold trails it’s the brand new Spur. Just how sweet ‘n’ lo can u go?

Crocus focus
  • Brand: Transition
  • Product: Spur V2 Eagle 90
  • Price: £TBC (€7,199)
  • From: Windwave
  • Tested by: Benji for 1 day
‘Hidden’ hardware as with other revamped Transition models of late

Was it the original Transition Spur that instigated the whole downcountry genre? Well, maybe. If we ignore certain bikes of the 2010s that paved the way. Bikes like the Specialized Camber, the Whyte T129 and the Santa Cruz Tallboy were 29ers with modest amounts of travel allied to relatively progressive (for the time) geometry.

Cheat sheet

This new Spur arrives at an unusual time in the bike world. A handful of World Cup XC bikes are now sporting some of the same geo numbers as this bike. The key word there being “some”. Not only that but the new Spur V2 isn’t obviously all that different from the Spur V1.

All of the dials, all useful

Let me save you the head-scratching and magnifying glasswork. The Spur has way more standover than the aforementioned World Cup XC bikes. It also has a suspension kinematic that is not really found on XC bikes either. Hint: massively progressive (like, more than 30%).

This was quickly flipped to LOW

The contrast ‘n’ comparing to the previous Spur is less clear cut. The chainstays are a smidge longer in the L & XL sizes (a few mm). The stack is a bit higher. And the seat tubes have been pleasingly hacked down (approx 30mm size for size). The angles are very similar. The fact that the head angle hasn’t been slackened, nor the seat angle steepened, will raise a lot of folks’ eyebrows.

Mud flap

Transition aren’t daft though; both the shock mounting and the headset cups are ‘normal’ so you can tweak things with offset bushings and angle-adjust headsets if you want to. And I think a fair few Spur riders will do exactly that.

SRAM Motives with 180mm rotors

The most significant thing that differentiates the new Spur from the old one – aside from the frame storage in the downtube – is the flipchip (or rather a flippable lower shock mount. This slackens the angles a small amount (0.5°) but also drops the BB height by 7mm. Which is a significant bunch of mm. And no doubt one reason why the new Spurs are being specced with 165mm cranks. In Low mode, the new Spur sports a 47mm BB drop. Which is approximately a 335mm BB height. This is pretty darn low slung. Especially on a bike with a wheelbase north of 1,200mm (L & XL).

OneUp 210mm 31.6mm dropper

Spur V1 and V2 geometry compared (Large)

Geometry (Large) Old Spur New Spur (Low/High)
Reach 480mm 480/485mm
Stack 619mm 630/626mm
Effective top tube 630mm 633/631mm
Seat tube 460mm 430mm
Effective seat angle 75.9° 75.9°/76.4°
Head tube length 120mm 120mm
Head angle 66° 65.5/66°
Chainstay length 435mm 441/439mm
Wheelbase 1,219mm 1,233/1,231mm
BB drop 40mm 47/40mm
Approx BB height 335mm 328/335mm

First ride impressions

They’re not kidding when they say that the suspension kinematic is very progressive. There is clearly a lot of leverage being applied to the rear shock around the sag point (I ran it with 13mm sag FYI). If you run the rear shock wide open, it bobs quite a bit. So don’t run it wide open.

Eagle 90 mech is sensibly paired with a 1-Click shifter

You can choose to offset bob in three ways: pedal smoother, dial on more rebound to stop the suspension oscillating, or apply more low speed compression (LSC). There is no correct answer.

165mm cranks

For what it’s worth, I ended preferring how the bike rode with quite a lot of LSC and hardly any rebound. I just seemed to suit the punchy persona of the bike. I set the Fox 34 SL fork the same way. On certain steep and sketchy descents I flicked the rear shock to run wide open, so as to ge the bike to ride/sit lower into its travel and also to improve traction. it is still quite slippy out there at the mo.

It’s one of the ironies of MTBIng in my experience; the less suspension travel you have, the harder it is to set up well. The windows of operation are just tighter and more unforgiving of a few mm/clicks/PSI.

The suspension kinematic is very probably where the Spur’s secret sauce lies. It has the firm accuracy of other 120mm bikes but rarely felt as quickly out of its depths or hitting-the-buffers as other short travel bikes can. I’d be fairly confident it taking the Spur out ‘against’ a lot of 150mm trail bikes and having no issues being left behind or underbiked.

Nice contact points

As well as the suspension feel, the overriding aspect I have from the Spur is lowness. You can get away with a lot if your centre-of-gravity is low AF. This low slinging uber confidence comes about from the massive BB drop (47mm in Low setting) and the immense standover afforded by the short seat tube and healthy dropper insertion. Honestly, with a 210mm dropper and a top tube around your ankles you can nadge your way down stuff that some lofty, slack, mullety enduro bikes would have you panicking on.

Not thru-headset cabling

Is the Spur’s BB too low for some riders and terrain? Quite possibly. The 165mm cranks help but I suspect it’s not the bike for folk who are prone to pedal clanging.

40mm stem, IS42/52 headset cups

A quick note about the build. It’s pretty much all well chosen stuff. Certain riders may wish to bump up the rotors a size. And whilst the front and rear Maxxis Forekaster tyres are worthy of keeping in your tyre pile, a slightly more capable front tyre will be required for most of the UK year. I’d like to give a ‘shout out’ (what is this? local radio?) to the contact points: the ODI grips and SDG saddle really do help set the feel and expectation of the Spur. Minimalist but not deathly harsh.

Forekasters are great, when it’s drier

What can’t the Spur do? It can do fast stuff. It can do rought stuff. It can’t really do rough stuff fast. That’s just the physics of the thing. 120mm of travel can only do so much. It can pretty much negotiate anything tekkers but just not at high velocity. And that’s fine.

Arguably the other thing that is a chink in the Spur’s armour is climbing. Specifically sat down, steep climbing. I am surprised that Transition haven’t steepened the seat angle. The slightly longer chainstays help prevent excess wheelie-ing but coming from bikes with 78°+ seat angles, the Spur does feel like you’re not quite in as an efficient position over the cranks. I found myself climbing out-of-the-saddle a lot more than I typically do. Which is fine, for a while. For modest length rides and/or flatter terrain it’s something that’s not a massive issue but on steep pitches and no doubt on long distance routes, you may be wishing for a steeper seat angle.

Overall

I couldn’t help but think that whilst the Transition is no cliched quiver killer, paired with a longer travel (e)MTB, it would make for a pretty perfect two-bike garage that could encompass the whole spectrum of what makes mountain biking so gosh darn rad. I just want to ride it again. It’s beguiling and addictive, like all the very best ‘cult’ bikes are. Very much looking forward to more rides on it.

Transition Spur V2 Eagle 90 specification

  • Frame // Spur Carbon, 120mm
  • Shock // Fox Float SL Performance Elite, 190x45mm
  • Fork // Fox Float 34 SL Performance Elite, 130mm
  • Wheels // DT Swiss XR 1700 Spline
  • Front Tyre // Maxxis Forekaster 3C EXO+ 29×2.4in
  • Rear Tyre // Maxxis Forekaster 3C EXO+ 29×2.4in
  • Chainset // SRAM Eagle 90 DUB, 165mm, 32T
  • Brakes // SRAM Motive Silver, 180/180mm
  • Drivetrain // SRAM Eagle 90
  • Stem // RaceFace Aeffect R 35, 40mm
  • Handlebars // RaceFace Turbine 35, 800x40mm
  • Grips // ODI Elite Flow Lock-on
  • Seat Post // OneUp dropper, 31.6mm, 210mm
  • Saddle // SDG Bel Air 3
  • Sizes Available // S, M, L, XL
  • Size Tested // L
  • Weight // TBC (don’t want to know until ridden the bike more)

Geometry of our size Large (low)

  • Head angle // 65.5°
  • Effective seat angle // 75.9°
  • Seat tube length // 420mm
  • Head tube length // 120mm
  • Chainstay // 441mm
  • Wheelbase // 1,233mm
  • Effective top tube // 633mm
  • BB height // 47mm BB drop
  • Reach // 480mm

185cm tall. 73kg weight. Orange Switch 6er. Saracen Ariel Eeber. Schwalbe Magic Mary. Maxxis DHR II. Coil fan.


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