The History Of High-Pivot Mountain Bikes

The History Of High-Pivot Mountain Bikes

Show Video

cannondale jekyll gt force trek session norco  range da vinci spartan forbidden dreadnought   all of these recently released bikes have come  out with a high pivot suspension design now it   may seem like this is the latest fad but in fact  that design has been around since the early 90s   so why has it come back and is it here  to stay or is it all just high pivot hype all full suspension mountain bikes have a main  pivot now this is just a virtual point that the   rear wheel will rotate around when it sinks into  its suspension most full suspension bikes have a   low pivot centered around about the bottom bracket  but this a high pivot bike has a virtual pivot   point that is much higher hence the name having  a high pivot point means that these two points   the rear axle and the bottom bracket have a much  more accentuated or exaggerated movement hence we   talk about high pivot bikes having a rearward  axle path now this extreme movement gives the   high pivot both its benefits and its disadvantages  now the benefit of a rearward axle path   means that when you're descending down rough  terrain the bike will get less hung up on big hits   so the theory goes that it'll be a smoother ride  but also a faster ride as all of those little   bumps aren't slowing you down now cannondale  believed in this design way back in the early 90s   they brought out the super v in 1993 and it stuck  around for about three years before they axed it   due to those odd riding characteristics now the  problem with a rearward axle path is that as the   cassette moves backwards it will pull the chain  and therefore pull on the cranks and that's what   we know as pedal kickback and this can be quite  disconcerting especially if it's a force great   enough to knock you off your pedals so this is  where this has come into play this is known as   the idler or the pulley wheel and this effectively  reroutes the chain line closer to the main virtual   pivot point so you don't get that chain growth  so you can effectively tune out pedal kickback   and stop those disconcerting features that we saw  in the early 90s and it also leaves the suspension   to be freed up from any pedaling forces giving  you a nice magic carpet ride it's important to   reiterate that high pivot point is just referring  to that virtual pivot point it's got nothing to   do with the linkage system companies can choose  a single pivot a split pivot a four bar linkage   design and still have that high virtual pivot  point even the position of the idler can tune   in and tune out different braking and pedaling  forces so i think it's fair to say that no high   pivot is born the same but how did we get from the  cannondale in the early 90s to the bikes of today   and why are we seen so many in the last couple  of years here's a little history lesson for you the real high pivot development started in the  early noughties where the downhill world cup scene   was seeing rougher courses less like cross-country  grassy descents in 2000 the v process was created   specifically with one purpose and that's for nico  voughlier to win the world championships on a   rough spanish course that was four minutes long  sadly nico didn't win that world championships   he's one of the few that he didn't win over the  course of about a decade but to be fair he did   get a puncture although i think it left a bit of  a sour taste in his mouth outside of the world cup   brooklyn machine works was rising to fame and  they got cultural kudos as they were ridden by   cool free riders and even begged  investment from rapper pharrell williams   but outside of the free riding scene these bikes  were seriously heavy steel free riders with 24   inch wheels and so outside of free ride in the  streets of new york city they didn't really prove   to be that popular in 2004 danny hart started  his downhill career on the balfour bb7 named   that because the pivot point was a whopping seven  inches above the bottom bracket we also saw the   mysterious honda rn01 with that secretive gearbox  something we later found out to be more like a   derailer and a cassette hidden away and it was a  probably an attempt to correct the chain line much   like the idler of today now it cost honda hundreds  of thousands to make which is probably why it   never went into mainstream production also in 2004  louis arrays was starting out the k9 engineering   it was a four bar linkage design with a high  pivot point and he'd added the idler in there   the bike got high praise from the media but  it came with a really detailed user manual   and needed to be specifically set up for riders so  perhaps that put the public off interestingly 14   years later louis is now the brains behind the  gt force the gt fury and the cannondale jekyll   in 2006 trek brought out the session 10  which was a single pivot high pivot design   with the idler pulley now they were copying  their former free ride hucker the diesel   and they wanted to make a seriously fast downhill  bike which i believe they achieved but trek say   they moved away from this platform because they  wanted to concentrate on a suspension platform   that better worked across multiple disciplines  and multiple bikes by 2015 we had a number of high   pivot designs we had the antidote dark matter  a seriously boutique downhill bike we had the   ghost dh9000 we had wind masters racing on the  bulls wild core and we had the zeroed a quirky   internally geared bike with shimano alphine but  it was common sound riding addiction team that   were playing around with the new common sound  supreme dh that i think really changed the game   common sounds commitment to that team year on  year and commitment to developing that bike year   on year is what i really think secured the high  pivot design fast forward to 2018 and a relatively   unknown french rider ormury pirion bust onto the  scene won three world cups in a row and took the   overall title and to prove it wasn't a flash in  the pan fellow rider miriam nicole took the world   championships in 2019 and 2020 and all of a sudden  this 29er high pivot bike was the hottest fastest   bike on the planet and everyone wanted a piece  of the action by 2021 it opened the floodgates   to high pivot designs while common sound were  developing their supreme dh for the world cup   circuit deviate cycles were prototyping an enduro  trail bike with the high pivot design so i wanted   to speak to ben jones to find out where it  all came from and where he thinks it's going   okay so ben jones from dv8 cycles tell  me why did you choose the high pivot   suspension design for your bikes  well i i didn't choose anything   okay chris did that yeah i had to be super clear  here so my business partner chris is the designer   of the bikes but i believe that chris um was  in new zealand um during a guidance season   and he rode a zero g something maybe yeah it  was like a g2 or it was the earlier ones yeah   yeah it was one of the earlier ones and it was a  downhill bike with a gearbox and with a high pivot   a very high pivot this thing was this thing was  almost on the top tube it was it was super high   and he loved the way it rode and  you know uh chris is an engineer and   he was i think that got him thinking about the  best way to design his own body well the two   things that came from that is one he really liked  the gearbox thought the gearbox had some real uh   great advantages um and he really liked the high  pivot and how it rode so our first bike the guide   had a gearbox and a high pivot well we saw it a  lot in the downhill world cup scene throughout the   northeast basically and right up to like 2015 2016  which is when you guys were starting to design   your dv8 suspension platform um so why do you  think we didn't really see any enduro trail bikes   um at that time because you were kind of the  first of the few to start designing enduro trail   high pivots yeah um i mean i think  there's a real simple answer to that   and that is one by drivetrains right i think the  hype of it to perform in a trailing enduro setting   um particularly needs an idler and it's extremely  hard to design an idler without a one by um front   chainring so i think it's that as drivetrains  moved on and as we all accepted you know 11 and   12 speed one by systems i think that's given us  the ability to kind of execute this this high   pivot concept on a trail and endure a bike because  in the past one by was a downhill bike right so   i think that's why it's been able to make the  jump um and there's probably some other factors   as well just in terms of what we're able to do  on these modern trail bikes and obviously enduro   bikes now i mean you know a modern injury bike  is nine tenths of downhill bike in terms of its   performance downhill so you know i think that's  given the the customers or the rider is asking for   so much more out of that platform which is where  you know we can start experimenting with different   suspension concepts that have maybe been a thing  in downhill and being successful and downhill we   can kind of start to try and bring them into  that space you know if you think about it   only 10 years ago a um you know a trail bike was  basically a burly cross country bike right there   was you know maybe 120 mil travel 130 mil travel  um you know there was probably other aspects   the suspension designers and bike designers  were trying to sort out without starting to   to go into uh introducing these downhill  technology can i even call it technology   yeah yeah sure so explain you mentioned the  idler and that's kind of where what really   changed something so explain why do you need it  and why the position's so important the idler   allows you to tune the pedal and performance of  a high pivot bike effectively that's the the key   advantage is the placement idler determines  what we call anti-squat which is effectively   how how the suspension reacts to pedal forces  effectively is what it is uh the other thing   that is maybe a little bit more contentious but is  this idea of pedal kickback so the idler prevents   pedal kickback uh the reason it's a little bit  contentious is not because it it doesn't exist it   definitely is a concept it's effectively the the  chain lengthening um under suspension compression   uh the the argument is always about how the free  hub comes into that does that kind of take up the   slack uh my ver my view is that it and i'm sure  there's a correct engineering answer but is that   when you place the idler um on the pivot  you eliminate that chain growth and you   eliminate that pedal kickback which means  that pedaling through rough terrain feels   like pedaling through flat drain it doesn't  either suspension feedback doesn't affect   your pedal strokes the whole argument about  pedal kickbacks really interesting i mean doddy   actually discussed it in a show recently because  everyone's talking about it like it's a bad thing   and of course you don't want a force to kick you  off your pedals you don't want that resistance   on a descent but that amount of chain tension  does allow you other benefits doesn't it so   yeah i mean it's so the chain tension and that  growth in the in the chain on a lot of platforms   like a non-idler platform is what determines  your anti-squat right so and again this is my   non-engineers understanding of it um but that is  effectively what allows you to allows a suspension   designer to in to create a bike that doesn't  squat through its suspension as you're pedaling   so on a lot of bikes as you put some pedal power  down it firms up the shark and you know you can   kind of use that um in order to well in order  to get an official peddling platform right uh   the idler eliminates the connection between those  two things so it eliminates the connection between   chain growth and anti-squat the anti-squat is  controlled in a different way so you can achieve   exactly the pedal performance and the  characteristics you were saying we might   want but without needing the chain tension and the  chain growth and that i think is why the platform   such a advantage on a trail and enduro bike you  know is is because you can do both you can create   that really efficient pedaling platform while  not having pedal kick back so yes on a lot of   bikes you need pedal kickback in order to create  the anti-squat on an idler driven high pivot you   don't so you disconnect that relationship i  think it's fair to say that no high pivot is   alike really even if you have the same linkage  design even where the idler pulley is positioned   can affect it so for example your highlander and  your claymore well there they're tuned slightly   differently aren't they so explain that to me why  are they different and how yeah and it's a really   good point so the idler placement determines  the anti-squat characteristics of that bike so   how that bike pedals so for example on  the highlander we went for a slightly   higher anti-squat number so when anti-squat  is at 100 that means there's effectively no suspension reaction to uh to a peddling force  now that does depend on what gear you're in and   you know it does depend on quite a lot of things  but ultimately around 100 is is no effect above   100 is a slight extension of the shark under pedal  forces so with the highlander we chose to go um   130 ish somewhere in the middle of the drivetrain  so what that gives you is especially when you're   pedaling that ground that is uh you know where  you need some traction it effectively extends the   shock very slightly as you put in some pedal force  uh and it gives it that kind of snappy feel as you   as you're pedaling up um technical climbs and  stuff on the on the claymore which is designed   as very much more of an enduro bike where you're  probably spinning up hills um you know you still   want it to be able to to be to handle technical  climbs but you know most people riding modern   enduro could be spinning up fire roads uh we  tried to make it quite a lot more neutral so   it's closer to that 100 mark um so there's not  a huge amount of uh pedal induced suspension   uh force if you like force going into the damper  from from pedaling high pivots intrinsically   have what's called a high anti-rise so there is a  little bit of suspension compression i.e you will   squat into the travel under rear braking and it  will firm up that rear suspension as you break it   um is it a good or a bad thing um the  instincts it's very easy to be like well   any firming up any compression of the suspension  from a braking force must be a bad thing   my um feelings that it's not so much of a  bad thing um especially with the way that um   modern races are racing uh breaking hard into  corners so imagine if you're breaking hard into   a corner what's gonna happen you wait to go over  the front the weights go compress the fork you   know you need a slack head angle to counter that  but what you're getting on these high pivots on   the on with this high anti-rise is you're getting  a corresponding compression of the suspension   which holds the geometry uh it holds the  wheelbase of the bike and it gives you an awful   amount of stability when you need it when you're  braking hard is the rear suspension a little bit   stiffer probably does it seem to affect anyone  that's winning world cups and these hype events   no uh it really it seems as though it's only doing  good things for them so i think it comes down to   riding style um it's certainly not any slower i  don't think there's any doubt at this stage that   a high anti-rise makes you slower it doesn't  um you know is it does that kind of suspension   performance if you like or does that kind of  suspension um characteristics suit everyone   maybe not um i think it suits aggressive riders  i think that that kind of kinematic um suits   aggressive riders i think it's hard to argue with  the results that that we're seeing from high pivot   point platforms across uh enduro and downhill at  least right in the last two years it seems every   man in his dogs brought out a high pivot design  you've got trek da vinci norco cannondale gt   why is everyone now bringing one out do you  think because it works not that you're biased   it does i mean if it didn't work you know  everyone's developing high pivots now   listen maybe it's a better bandwagon  thing i mean you know i think i think   the bigger brands have seen the success of maybe  some smaller brands uh in the hype of its base   and decided to get in on the action so there's  definitely an element of that um but it works   it works at the highest level um you know they win  downhill races so do you think there's any future   uh thoughts with the high pivot is it the future  is everyone gonna have a high pivot are we gonna   see high pivots on anything else i don't think  you guys see them on cross-country race bikes   you're not going to see them on road bikes  um yeah the weight penalty of the kind of   infrastructure that goes into it is probably not  appropriate i think a high pivot would sue an   e-bike it makes a lot of sense for an e-bike uh i  think you'll see some e-bikes with high pivots um   i will neither confirm or not if we are working on  one certainly i think it would suit all i'll say   is i think it would suit the high pivot platform i  think an e-bike and a high pivot would work really   well but there's certainly some engineering  challenges that need to be overcome first trying to argue that high pivot is better  than low pivot is like trying to argue   that any suspension platform is better than  another it comes down to rider preference   but what do you guys think do you think it's  all high pivot hype or are they here to stay   let us know down in the comments below and  join the debate and we'll see you again soon

2022-08-24 07:02

Show Video

Other news