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Offres du JourHonzo
Prix du fabricant
1 299 $US(1 122 €)| Cadre | Aluminium |
|---|---|
| Suspension | Semi-rigide, 130mm |
| Fourche | RockShox Recon Silver RL |
| roues | 29″ Aluminium |
| Transmission | 1 × 11 |
| Groupe | Deore |
| Freins | Shimano Deore Disque hydraulique |
| Tige de selle | Compte-gouttes |
Basé sur le matériau de construction et le niveau de qualité du cadre, de la fourche, du jeu de roues, du groupe, du système de suspension, etc.<link> En savoir plus →</link>
Comparez la gamme complète de modèles Honzo
Voir la comparaison152cm – 171cm
157cm – 183cm
175cm – 196cm
180cm – 196cm
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Résumé
The Kona Honzo trail bike is celebrated for its versatile and capable performance, offering a remarkably smooth ride over rough terrain and stable, confident handling on descents. While it excels in durability and ride quality, some reviews note its weight and climbing efficiency as areas for improvement. The bike's geometry and suspension setup are frequently praised for making it a fun and reliable choice for aggressive trail riding.
Versatile and capable performance
Stable and confident on descents
Remarkably smooth ride over rough terrain
Durable and rugged design
Fun and playful handling
Weight affects climbing efficiency
Stock components may need upgrading
Can feel beaten up on longer rides in rough terrain
The Honzo ESD is one of the current breed of hardcore hardtails proving that you don’t need to tackle the gnarliest lines.
It’s manoeuvrable, fun in the tight stuff and has bags of personality and pep
The Honzo was one of the most refreshingly 'shut up and ride' bikes that I’ve swung a leg over in a very long time.
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Voir tous les avis

oct. 2022
8 Months of hardtail tough love with an unruly Smurf
Versatile and capable across different terrains
Surprisingly stable and planted for a hardtail
Good value for the price
Solid build, no parts fell apart
Quiet, chunky, rugged, sweet handling
Refreshingly 'shut up and ride' bike
Stock brakes lack bite and fade on steep descents; need pad/rotor upgrade
Dropper remote was bent on arrival
Heavy wheels and tires affect climbing and responsiveness
Not a spry switchback hound; lazy at slow speeds
Can be physically demanding; rider fatigue on long rides
Shifting not as crisp as higher-end groupsets

févr. 2022 · Alan Muldoon
Long, low and slack was a phrase rarely used in 2012 when the original steel Honzo was launched with the aim of becoming the best hardtail on sale. But with a hardtail history dating back to the 1980s Kona was in a good place to push forward with fresh thinking. The Honzo’s frame design breaking new ground back then, with 1×9 gearing, super-short chainstays, a 68º head angle and a stubby stem. Oh, and it was a 29er too… It proved such a successful formula it paved the way for the brand to evolve the entire range – in Kona’s words it was ‘The hardtail that started a revolution’. Fast forward 10 years and the entry-level aluminium Honzo (the cheapest bike on test at £1,599) costs just one pound less than the original. It comes specced with a 120mm travel RockShox fork and a no-nonsense Shimano 11-speed Deore drivetrain. And while the Honzo DL, with its longer travel fork, premium Maxxis rubber and 12-speed gearing looks more comparable to the other hardtails in this test, it’s a huge jump up in price at £2,399. Kona was an early pioneer of the sloping top tube frame design and it’s a key part of the Honzo’s DNA. It gives the 6061 butted aluminium frame an exceptionally low standover height, which considering it rolls on 29in wheels for all four frame sizes, is good to see. When it comes to geometry, the Kona doesn’t exactly mirror its three rivals; its 66.5º head angle is a touch steeper and the 415mm chainstays are notably shorter. However, the 479mm reach on the size L is on point, as is the short 455mm seat tube that allows you to run a longer dropper post on each frame size. In fact, Kona even fits an adjustable stroke TranzX + Rad dropper, which makes moving up a frame size a genuinely viable option. Suspension Kona uses a RockShox Recon RL Solo Air fork to the Honzo, where its 120mm travel matches the Whyte 629’s burlier built fork. Yes, the slimmer 32mm steel upper legs and a more basic air spring made us question whether the Recon would compromise the Honzo’s ability, especially with a 90kg test rider on board. We needn’t have worried though as out on the trail any reservations soon faded. Considering its stature and price, the Recon held its own with a solid performance in rough, twisty singletrack. However, we did need to add an extra 20-30psi of pressure to the RockShox guidelines to give the support needed in steeper terrain. Components To stay within the tight budget Kona fits a 1×11 Shimano Deore drivetrain, where a combination of the 11-51T cassette and 30T chainring actually gives it the lowest climbing gear ratio in this test. Shifting was superb throughout the test and we didn’t miss that extra cog one bit. The build kit isn’t without fault though. And while even Shimano basic hydraulic brakes are ultra reliable, the twin-piston calipers on the Kona use …Continue reading »
Lively ride, short seat tube
Poor rear tyre/mud clearance

janv. 2022 · Ron Koch
Photos by Traece Craig We have been longtime fans of the incredibly capable and versatile Kona Honzo line, so when the slacker and more aggressive Honzo

janv. 2022 · Tom Marvin
Downhill-focused hardtail that lets your legs do the talking
Geometry that’s not going to give you any excuses
Remarkably smooth ride over the rough
Climbs well despite gravity intentions
Value for money isn’t great
The bike deserves stouter rubber

oct. 2021 · Inked_cyclist
Kona's aggressive hardtail is ready for anything.
A riot on the trails
Confident, capable descender
More agile than numbers suggest
Portly
Weak rear hub engagement

août 2020 · Zach Overholt
The Kona Honzo ESD stretches things way out for the slackest, wildest, and most capable steel Kona hardtail yet.

août 2020
The new Kona Honzo ESD hardtail is extra slack, dude. If you're in the market for an aggressive hardtail, don't look past the Kona Honzo.

juin 2020
Whether your first choice is an ultra-light carbon XC race bike or a super-plush enduro ripper, there’s something about a steel hardtail—and the person pedaling it—that commands respect. My first mountain bike was a steel hardtail, a 1996 Gary Fisher Hoo Koo E Koo I bought from a bike courier in Washington, D.C. The courier had hacked off the rear dropouts and welded on horizontal dropouts to run it as a singlespeed.
| Cadre | Kona 6061 Aluminum Butted Couleur: Gloss Kiwi w/ Charcoal & Turquoise Decals |
|---|---|
| Fourche | RockShox Recon RL Solo Air 130mm Tapered 110mm Spacing Voyager: 130mm Type de ressort: Air |
| Amortisseur arrière | n/a |
| Pédalier | Shimano Deore 73mm |
| Casque | Feimin FP-H863 |
| Tige | Kona XC/BC 35 |
| Guidon | Kona XC/BC 35 |
| Selle | Kona Trail |
| Tige de selle | TranzX Dropper +RAD Internal w/ Shimano Lever 31.6mm Type: Compte-gouttes |
| Pédales | n/a |
| Poignées | Kona Key Grip |
| Derailleur arriere | Shimano Deore 11spd |
|---|---|
| Dérailleur avant | n/a |
| Manivelle | Shimano Deore, 30t |
| Manettes | Shimano Deore 11spd |
| Cassette | Shimano Deore 11-51t 11spd |
| Chaîne | KMC X11 |
| Guide de chaîne | n/a |
| Freins | Shimano MT410 Hydraulic Type: Shimano Deore Disque hydraulique |
| Leviers de frein | Shimano M4100 Hydraulic |
| Jantes | WTB ST i30 TCS |
|---|---|
| Rayons | Stainless Black 14g |
| Moyeu avant | Shimano 110x15mm (centerlock) |
| Moyeu arrière | Shimano 148x12mm (centerlock) |
| Pneus | Front: Schwalbe Nobby Nic TLE 29x2.4", Rear: Schwalbe Nobby Nic TLE 29x2.25" |
| Disques | Shimano RT30 180mm (centerlock) |
First added 27 avril
Last updated 15 juin
Not listed for 727 days