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2023 Specialized

Epic EVO

Prix du fabricant

3 900 €
Poids12,7 kg  
CadreCarbone
Suspensioncomplet, 110 / 120mm
FourcheRockShox Reba
Amortisseur arrièreRockShox Deluxe Select+
roues29″ Aluminium
Transmission1 × 12
GroupeNX Eagle
FreinsSRAM Level T Disque hydraulique
Tige de selleCompte-gouttes
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Top Comparaison
Connaissances
Sensation de conduite

Based on frame geometry and build specs.

Terrain
easyextreme
Handling
nimblestable
Epic EVO
Other Cross-country bikes
Transmission

A bike with lower gearing will be easier to ride up steep hills, while a higher top end means it will pedal faster down hills.

Lowest gear

(climbing)

40 km/h

Epic EVO

44 km/h

Similar Bikes

Highest gear

(descending)

Niveau de spécification estimé

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 Epic

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Commentaires
Mountain Bike Action
LONG TERM REVIEW: SPECIALIZED S-WORKS EPIC 8 - THE EVOLUTION CONTINUES - Mountain Bike Action Magazine

déc. 2024 · Ron Koch

The result is a single-frame design that, depending on the components added, can be either a competitive XC racing rig or a confident trail bike that is ready for anything thrown its way.

Lire la critique

Freehub
Bike Review | Specialized Epic 8 Evo Pro

avr. 2024 · Spencer Astra

During the darkest part of the Northwest winter, I found myself aboard the new Specialized Epic 8 Evo Pro, a short-travel speed demon. After a nasty broken elbow, the Epic Evo and I seem to be sharing new titanium hardware. With 130 millimeters of travel up front and 120 at the rear, the new Epic is a cross-country bike that leans more toward gnarlier terrain than a true race bred rig as it seamlessly blends efficiency with just enough grit to tackle unforgiving trails. Even as I pedaled slow and muddy singletrack, this bike remained remarkably zippy—a testament to its short travel, low build weight, and efficient frame kinematics. Specialized has managed to shave off a few grams from the previous model iteration while producing a stable, refined ride. As I climbed, the Epic Evo’s main standout feature was efficiency. Despite the slow winter dirt, I was usually climbing with enough speed to generate a slight wind on my face. The rear shock platform felt taught and supportive under pedaling load. One of the most notable qualities of the Evo, while both climbing and descending, was the frame’s ability to eat high-frequency vibrations from the trail. My left elbow is fairly sensitive as it recovers from the break and, even with only 120 millimeters of travel, the Evo maintained a soft touch while clambering over roots and rocks.

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Bikerumor
Review: Specialized Epic 8 S-Works & EVO XC bikes

mars 2024 · Tyler Benedict

The new Specialized Epic 8 is a downcountry ripper disguised as a race bike. Or maybe it's the other way around. Either way, this bike is fast and fun!

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BIKE Magazine
Specialized announces new Epic and Epic EVO 8

mars 2024

Goodbye Brain, hello SWAT and Flight Attendant

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Bike Perfect
I tested the new Specialized Epic 8 Evo Pro – its mixture of lightweight speed and middleweight control blew me away

mars 2024 · Guy Kesteven

Specialized’s cult favorite rowdy XC winner jumps up a whole weight category to burly downcountry, but does it still have the race speed our expert tester loved before?

Points forts
  • Excellent tech taming longer, lower mainframe geometry

  • XC weight frame with punchy pedaling leaves trail competitors standing

  • Fox Factory Grip2 fork, Float shock and Transfer dropper

  • Puncture reducing rims and grippy T9/T7 Grid tires

  • Generous internal storage, SWAT stem and two bottle cage mounts

Points faibles
  • Nearly a kilo heavier than the previous Epic Evo Comp

  • Shock feels too firm at times

  • Limited rear tire space

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Enduro Mountainbike Magazine
On test: 2024 Specialized Epic 8 EVO – The fun brother?

mars 2024 · Simon Kohler, Robin Schmitt

We tested the 2024 Specialized Epic 8 EVO. But what is the big brother of the XC race bike capable of? Read on to find out.

Points forts
  • More confidence inspiring than the Epic 8

  • Short-travel bike with an integrated storage compartment

Points faibles
  • Shock tune

  • Lack of comfort on rough gravel roads

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Gran Fondo Magazine
Tough business and epic vibes – A ride with Peter Sagan on the new Specialized Epic in Chile

mars 2024 · Robin Schmitt, Benedikt Schmidt

What makes a true champion?Hanging out with Peter Sagan, Martín Vidaurre, and the new Specialized Epic in Chile

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MBR
I tested the latest Specialized Epic 8 Evo, and couldn't believe the transformation from XC racer to down-country ripper - MBR

mars 2024 · Guy Kesteven

The new Epic 8 Evo isn’t the pumped up race machine it once was, weight and stiffness are no longer the driving forces any more and really it’s impossible to call it an XC bike. Instead we’re looking at potentially one of the best down-country mountain bikes on the market, a short-travel trail bike with 130mm travel, sticky tyres and proper dropper post. Sure it still gets a modestly lightweight frame and flex stay suspension, but this is now a bike that’s built to shred. If this is sad news for you there’s an XC race alternative in the Specialized Epic 8 that hasn’t abandoned its uphill prowess, and you can read all the stats, design ideas, range focus, sizing and details on the two new Epics right here. Need to know Superlight 120mm travel XC frame with trail hungry geometry 130mm fork, big brakes and sticky front tyre are ready to riot Efficient and effervescent rather than smoothly damped High volume internal storage, and SWAT multitool in the steerer tube Full Fox Factory suspension, with Roval carbon XC wheels and trail bar Epic 8 Evo Pro frame and geometry With its top tube shock placement and flex stay rear suspension design the Epic 8 Evo looks very like the previous generation bike, but there’s a whole lot going on here under the surface. The mainframe is 10mm longer in the large I tested, and slacker by over a degree in the low flip chip setting. The fresh rear end also uses a longer stroke rear shock for 120mm of travel. Anti squat values are also increased for “20% less bob,” Spesh says. The bigger down tube gets SWAT internal storage and the internally plumbed cables/hoses are all threaded through the head tube front, and not the headset. There’s a steering stop to prevent the bar rotating into the frame and you also get rubber armour on the belly and chain stays. That leaves limited rear tyre room as the only obvious gripe. The composite lay up is all new, with a focus on vibration damping – Specialized claims a 12% decrease – as well as low weight. A hollow in-moulded front shock mount also saves 24g over the previous solid, bonded on mount. But the use of Spesh’s heavier 11M carbon, extra length and strength, steel fixtures, internal storage and 75g of rubber armour means claimed frame weight is now 2,105g, some 446g heavier than the old S-Works Epic 7 Evo. Components It’s not just the frame that’s burler than previous Evos, the components are too. The RockShox SID is out and instead the bike uses a 130mm travel Fox 34 Factory fork with GRIP damper. You get a 970g Purgatory front tyre in sticky T9 compound and the Code brakes run extra thick, extra powerful HS2 200mm front and 180mm rear rotors. The rear shock is a Fox Float with oversized EVOL can and you get a fully adjustable Fox Transfer Factory dropper post rather than the two …Continue reading »

Points forts
  • • Superlight frame for a 120mm trail bike, at 1,870g

  • • Aggressive geometry that's ideal for riding hard, and climbing well too

  • • Components are superlative, with 130mm fork, powerful brakes and sticky front tyre

Points faibles
  • • Rear shock tight in feel and doesn't quite match up with the plush 130mm fork

  • • Rear tyre clearance isn't the best

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Géométrie
Spécifications
Construire
Cadre

FACT 11m Full Carbon, Progressive XC Geometry, Rider-First Engineered™, threaded BB, 12x148mm rear spacing, internal cable routing, 110mm of travel

Norme BBBSA, 73mm, Fileté

Norme de suspensionDÉJÀ

CouleurSatin Harvest Gold / Black

Fourche

RockShox Reba RL, Motion Control damper, Solo Air, 42mm offset, 15x110mm thru-axle, 120mm of travel

Voyager120mm

Type de ressortAir

Amortisseur arrière

RockShox DELUXE Select+, Rx XC Tune, Two Position, Rebound Adjust, 190x40mm

Voyager110mm

Pédalier

SRAM DUB, BSA 73mm, Threaded

Tige

Specialized, 3D-forged alloy, 4-bolt, 7-degree rise

Guidon

Specialized Alloy, 20mm rise, 31.8mm, 760mm wide

Selle

Body Geometry Power Sport, steel rails

Tige de selle

TranzX Dropper, 30.9mm, XS-SM: 100mm, M: 125mm, L-XL: 150mm

TypeCompte-gouttes

Poignées

Specialized Trail Grips

Groupe
Derailleur arriere

SRAM NX Eagle, 12-speed

Manivelle

SRAM X1000 Eagle, DUB, 170/175mm 32T, 32T

Manettes

SRAM NX Eagle, trigger, 12-speed

Cassette

SRAM NX Eagle, 12-speed, 11-50t

Chaîne

SRAM SX Eagle, 12-speed

Freins

Front: SRAM Level T hydraulic disc, 2-Piston Caliper, 180mm rotor, Rear: SRAM Level T hydraulic disc, 2-Piston Caliper, 180mm rotor

TypeSRAM Level T Disque hydraulique

roues
Jantes

Specialized Alloy, Tubeless Ready, 29mm internal width, 28h

Rayons

Stainless, 14g

Moyeu avant

Specialized alloy, sealed cardridge bearings, 6-bolt, 15x110mm thru-axle, 28h

Moyeu arrière

Specialized alloy, sealed cartridge bearings, 6-bolt, 148mmx12mm thru-axle, 28h

Pneus

Front: Specialized Ground Control, GRID Casing, T7 Compound, 29x2.35, Rear: Specialized Ground Control, GRID Casing, T7 Compound, 29x2.35

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First added 1 octobre

Last updated 31 mai

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