Prairie Dog
Well-Known Member
- Region
- Canada
- City
- Red Deer
I took the Epic Evo out for its inaugural spin at Heritage Ranch considered to be one of the easier trails that I ride but does possess a couple of leg burning climbs. SRAM T-Type tranny together with wireless shifting is such a sweet upgrade.
Shifting under full load while climbing is a joy but I admit that it requires a bit more effort than what I am accustomed to but I will say that the 1 x 12 gearing is superb. That being said, the EE is so fun to ride, is seriously fast and is an extremely capable down country bike. Since the rear derailleur no longer requires a hanger interface, the presence of limit/B tension adjustment screws are a thing of the past. Just set it and forget it. Micro tuning can be accomplished either from an app or directly through the wireless pod controller. The GX groupset is slightly heavier than the higher spec’d versions but I doubt that I could sense any difference. Performance wise, it’s likely on par.
The Levo is still the perfect bike on days when I don’t feel that my legs are up to the task. It just powers up techy assents with little effort and gets me to the trail heads in no time flat. The Epic Evo is different in that case. It is happy to be pedaled, but happy to be pushed around on a descent as well. I like that the 130/120mm travel is enough to play on trail features, but not so much that you feel detached from what you are riding. Sure, if I took this bike to shuttle at some places it might be a bit under done, but not necessarily the wrong bike. The Epic Evo is ideal for those who want a bit more play in their ride, for greater capability than most will find with a pure XC bike.
I decided to head home since I felt that I still had enough juice in the old legs to head out on the tarmac for a 40 km ride. Not that I’m complaining, but I really think that it's time to head out further afield for a change in scenery.
Shifting under full load while climbing is a joy but I admit that it requires a bit more effort than what I am accustomed to but I will say that the 1 x 12 gearing is superb. That being said, the EE is so fun to ride, is seriously fast and is an extremely capable down country bike. Since the rear derailleur no longer requires a hanger interface, the presence of limit/B tension adjustment screws are a thing of the past. Just set it and forget it. Micro tuning can be accomplished either from an app or directly through the wireless pod controller. The GX groupset is slightly heavier than the higher spec’d versions but I doubt that I could sense any difference. Performance wise, it’s likely on par.
The Levo is still the perfect bike on days when I don’t feel that my legs are up to the task. It just powers up techy assents with little effort and gets me to the trail heads in no time flat. The Epic Evo is different in that case. It is happy to be pedaled, but happy to be pushed around on a descent as well. I like that the 130/120mm travel is enough to play on trail features, but not so much that you feel detached from what you are riding. Sure, if I took this bike to shuttle at some places it might be a bit under done, but not necessarily the wrong bike. The Epic Evo is ideal for those who want a bit more play in their ride, for greater capability than most will find with a pure XC bike.
I decided to head home since I felt that I still had enough juice in the old legs to head out on the tarmac for a 40 km ride. Not that I’m complaining, but I really think that it's time to head out further afield for a change in scenery.