Modern, aggressive geometry goes against tried-and-true performance. What is this EVO thing all about?
Few bikes can claim a history as iconic as the Specialized Stumpjumper. Like the Porsche 911 or Ford Mustang, the 37-year-old Stumpjumper lineage has evolved through the years — with each new model becoming the industry’s technology beacon of their era.
As the story goes, Specialized’s original Stumpjumper was the first mass-produced mountain bike dating back to 1981. The latest Stumpy is a far cry from the first generation, but shares one common thread: both are mountain bikes for … mountain biking! Today’s over-categorization and genre segregation be damned, Specialized has always intended the Stumpjumper to be the one bike that can do it all, a proverbial jack-of-all-trades — the clear choice to take on an epic 10,000-foot vertical ascent sufferfest or when you finally decide to chamois-up for what could possibly be an all-day adventure into the high-alpine, chasing your best, and most fit riding buddies.
With the introduction of new Stumpy came a few distinct models, including the regular version, a short travel version, and the made-to-party EVO version with its new school geometry. We were able to extensively test two of the most intriguing models head-to-head, pitting the standard Expert 29 against the EVO Comp Alloy 29 in a sibling-versus-sibling shootout to determine where each excels.
Join Vital MTB tester Jeff Brines for the video low down:
Both bikes have the same 140mm rear and 150mm front suspension travel, so we decided to test the two in a side-by-side format, under similar conditions, often riding both on the same day, and even the same trail. How’d the pair fare? Which one is better? Which one is faster? Which one is best for what conditions? We sought to answer these questions and more.
The chart below compares the regular Stumpjumper 29 (sizes M-XL) to the EVO 29 (sizes S2/S3). We tested a size XL and a size S3.
Offered in both 29” and 27.5” wheel sizes, the EVO Comp Alloy’s geometry numbers have more in common with a YZ250 than it does with Stumpjumper’s cross-country roots of yesteryear. The geo stats are boundary-pushing for a bike of this nature, while not to the absolute extreme as a few Nicolai and Pole models are currently exploring. The EVO only comes in two sizes: S2 and S3, both with seat tube heights that allow riders to size up/down with relative ease. We sprung for the longest EVO. With a 475mm reach, it’s hardly an outlier: a number of brands currently produce XLs with significantly longer reach bikes. However, when looking at the complete package, it does start to push limits, especially when considering the bike’s 445mm (15.7") rear end (much praise), ultra low 328mm (12.9") bottom bracket height, slacked out 63.5-degree head tube angle, and reduced offset 44mm FOX 36 fork. Typically size-large riders choosing the size S3 will notice a more drastic length difference. Worth noting, one can steepen things up 0.5 degrees with Specialized's flip chip in the shock.
The all-aluminum bike comes ready to rally out of the box with aggressive 2.6” tires, downhill-worthy SRAM Code brakes, 30mm wide rims, and a 12-speed drivetrain. On paper, there doesn’t appear to be a chink in the EVO’s armor — and it all retails for $3,620 from a bike shop.
While the Stumpjumper EVO has an industrial look with its metal tubes and welds, the Expert has a sexier supercar appearance as its carbon fiber creates smooth-arcing contours that make the bike very pleasing to the eye. Even the paint has a look to it that screams “quality.” Add carbon wheels and you’ve got one hot-looking ride that is ready to perform.
The geometry was a bit more conservative — shorter chainstays, shorter reach measurement, and a more “traditional” 66-degree head tube angle coupled with a standard 51mm offset fork. The build is clearly aimed more at trail use with SRAM Guide brakes, a non-piggyback RockShox Deluxe RTC damper, and a Pike RC fork.
Perhaps not quite as good of a value as the EVO, the Expert is still nothing to scoff at, as the bike comes in at $5,000 USD with carbon wheels.
Finally, unlike the EVO, the Expert has the super clever SWAT box feature — a storage space in the frame that allows you to keep the backpack at home and always have what you need, be it a snack, multi-tool, spare tube, or even a can of your favorite beverage (we kept it classy with a sparkling rosé, a fine canned wine).
Both bikes climb well. In fact, we’d claim these are two of the most efficient 140mm 29”-wheeled bikes we’ve ever thrown a leg over. It should be of little surprise that the Expert scurries up climbs. The combination of lightweight, reasonably good-for-ascending geometry, and solid pedaling kinematics all worked in harmony going uphill.
The EVO was the real surprise. Despite the slack head tube angle, we never felt the bike was unwieldy. All modesty aside, our tester set more KOMs in the Jackson area (yes, going uphill) on this bike than any other bike he has ever tested. The magic was in the steep seat tube angle paired with longer chainstay length, just long enough to keep the slack front end from rising too often.
Speaking of seat angles, depending on your saddle height, either bike may or may not prove to have a steep enough seat tube angle. This is the problem with “virtual” seat angles as it’s variable based on height. For our tester’s 34” inseam and 6’2” height, it wasn’t a problem, and he never felt in a position too far back, but it’s not hard to see a taller rider may find themselves slamming the saddle forward on the rails to keep the effective seat angle to a reasonable number.
The only caveat to the whole climbing thing is this: if the trails you frequent involve a high potential for pedal strikes, maybe count the EVO out of consideration. As far as we know, the EVO has the lowest bottom bracket height of any 140mm 29” bike in mass production, which puts its pedals at the most risk of hitting obstacles — there is a reason most bikes have a higher bottom bracket, so if you pedal through technical terrain be prepared to smash some pedals (even if you intend to swap the stock 170mm crank arms to a set of 165mm). The Expert did not suffer from this nearly as much, and one could mitigate this on the EVO with extensive ratcheting, but there are times this isn’t the most effective technique.
Let’s start with one disclaimer: you can go fast on either of these bikes. Specialized team riders Jared Graves and Curtis Keene choose to race the non-EVO Stumpy at the highest level on the Enduro World Series, so it’s clear the Stumpjumper can be piloted down rowdy terrain at ludicrous speed. That said, we did not find either bike to be a formidable enduro race weapon. There are other 140mm bikes on the market that outperform either one of these when descending — does that make them both bad bikes? Absolutely not. Let’s get into the details...
Despite extensive monkeying with the rear shock on both bikes, neither could be tuned to feel as supple or as bottomless as other bikes in this category, like the 140mm-travel Transition Sentinel and Santa Cruz Hightower LT or the 150mm-travel Trek Slash and Yeti SB150. In fact, both Stumpjumpers’ suspension action felt worlds apart from the aforementioned whips. The reason behind this isn’t entirely clear. On paper, the kinematics look good: a progressive leverage ratio compressing a modern suspension damper. But, both simply felt anemic on trail. If we hadn’t been told so, we’d guess these were “over forked” 120mm bikes.
The Expert seemed to have more appetite for eating bumps than the EVO, despite the fact that it had the less-favorable damper tune of the two. One rationale behind this was simply frame material, with the Expert’s carbon layup providing a bit more damping than the EVO’s alloy frame.
Overall, they consumed bumps similarly — and with all due respect, this was an area we weren’t overly impressed. However, when you transition from “enduro” mentality to “trail” mentality, things start to make more sense, as either bike adequately ingested bumps in normal trail situations. Charging into new, gnarly terrain at mach chicken made the bikes seem to lose their appetites. The Stumpjumper platform prizes efficiency, providing a more sporty trail-type of ride than other bikes with similar amounts of travel.
Aboard each bike, differences between the EVO and Expert were easily felt — with the Expert providing quicker handling and feeling a bit more twitchy than the EVO.
The Expert rewards smaller inputs and asks the pilot to utilize a more precise touch, while the EVO, on the other hand, allows the rider to be more aggressive with inputs — tipping the bike over as far as the trail will allow — to let the wheels work the terrain.
On that note, the EVO seemed to have more grip at the tires. How? The EVO seemed to place the rider in a more neutral position over the bike, which was proven by the use of some shipping scales to determine weight balance. We weighed 47%-front and 53%-rear on the EVO; atop the Expert, weight was distributed 45%-front and 55%-rear. This difference, along with the slacker head angle and lower bottom bracket, helped us have a bit more faith to tip ‘er over in the twisties as keeping weight on the front tire is often the biggest challenge a rider faces when cornering.
Up front, the EVO’s FOX 36 was preferred to the Expert’s RockShox Pike — it tracked better and chewed bumps better. Despite being heavier, the 36 is one of our favorite forks here at Vital, especially the Grip 1 budget-based damper, which rides like anything but a “cheaper” fork.
Overall the regular geo'd Expert model felt like a trail bike, through and through. The bike’s expertise is in the fact it doesn’t have one; a jack-of-all-trades. This means you may never have the absolute best tool for the job, but it will never completely be out of its element this side of a World Cup Downhill race track or Pro-level XC race. While you give up capacity for outright descending prowess, you gain in overall efficiencies and just being able to go (and go and go).
The EVO’s true identity was far more perplexing. In some ways, it rode very similarly to the Expert. In others, it felt more like a Demo in Specialized’s DH lineup than a run-of-the-mill trail bike. Held back by the harsh feeling rear end and a more flex-laden frame, we were never fully comfortable pushing the bike to the speed the geometry asked. That said, in steep, twisty, loamy trails the EVO proved to be an absolute weapon; this was where the EVO was most at home, and these types of trails left us scratching our head in amazement at the bike’s ability.
Both bikes jumped fine, with no ill effects noticed while flying through the air, loading the lip of a takeoff, or doing something miscalculated. Though the shock’s O-ring often indicated “you have reached the end of the travel, sir,” we never noticed a harsh bottom-out, at least while riding at reasonable pressures. This isn’t to say either would be our bike of choice for hucking to flat, but larger impacts were not as much the problem with the suspension as repeated square-edge bumps. The bike simply didn’t track as well or offer the rider as much traction as other 140mm bikes.
Worth noting, we swapped out the original 2.6” GRID tires on both bikes for a new BLCK DMND casing and compound from Specialized, which falls between GRID and DH in terms of weight and durability. However, we do feel that the original GRID tires, especially on the EVO, were on the harder side of things — this was found especially obvious in the desert where slipping and spinning on slickrock became a bit unnerving.
We had a few buddies throw a leg over both the EVO and the Expert, and the results echoed our thoughts, highlighting a few common traits:
This made us wonder if perhaps the shorter eye-to-eye and stroke is partially to blame for the feeling one gets when really trying to rally. Perhaps the damper struggles to control the bike’s travel as the leverage ratio, especially off the top, is over 3:1? This is mere speculation, but something we continued to mull over as no chart, component, or number seemed to explain what we were feeling on the trail.
Both bikes passed the Vital durability test during this five-month test. Neither frame cracked and no component became mangled beyond repair.
EVO Durability Concerns
Expert Durability Concerns
Both bikes proved to be reasonably good values, with the EVO getting the most sincere tip of the cap. We noticed in our comments section of our Stumpjumper First Look that perhaps this isn’t the sentiment of our audience, so some breakdown is required.
Specialized did an admirable job putting together a bike with a good components spec at a solid price point. In today’s marketplace, direct-to-consumer has its benefits, but the real value of this brick-and-mortar-only model from Specialized is its spec: there isn’t a single component that needs changing to really push the bike. While none of the parts may be sexy, they work damn near as well as the top shelf stuff at a fraction of the price.
The FOX 36 accumulated some weird wear on the stanchions’ finish, although performance remained stellar. The Code brakes remained flawless. Once we received the correct (production) shock, the FOX DPX2 never hiccuped. The SRAM NX Eagle drivetrain may not be as crisp as top-of-the-line offerings, but it never let us down. When compared to premium drivetrains, it’s hard to say, “We’d go faster if we had _____.”
Shoutout to X-Fusion for their Manic dropper post that functioned like an industry-leader with a satisfyingly-ergonomic lever, going through thousands of cycles without a hiccup. Considering our history with dropper post reliability, it is relieving to find brands figuring out the secret to long-term functionality for such an integral and necessary component of the modern trail bike.
The only component that required tinkering was the rear hub. It would often loosen, but this is something we were more than happy to live with considering we could spec this bike with parts double the price and probably forget we did so on the trail.
In the end, we give the Stumpjumper EVO a confident “yes” to the question “does it provide value?” It offers one of the most rally-friendly spec’d bikes at the lowest price — plus, let’s not forget there will be actual human beings at a real bike shop involved with this purchase.
At $2K more, the Expert is substantially more expensive. With a carbon frame, carbon wheels, and a more high-end build throughout, it also isn’t a bad value, though nothing like that of the EVO.
Truth is, though there is an undoubtedly nicer feel to lighter weight, premium parts, it evaporates pretty quickly on the trail. We actually preferred the EVO's X-Fusion Manic dropper to the Expert's RockShox Reverb, and we wholeheartedly prefer the FOX 36 to the RockShox Pike up front for the type of riding we like to do. In the rear we liked the EVO’s FOX shock more than the RockShox on the Expert.
Oh, and one qualm with the Expert’s build: please give us the RockShox RCT3 Pike — at this price point a premium damper is warranted. Otherwise, the spec is certainly up to snuff.
Even with dollars and cents out of the equation, if we were going to pick only one Stumpjumper then we’d go EVO, hands down. Though it was slightly heavier, it most often proved faster down the trail while only being a bit slower, if at all, going up. Just plan on doing some pivot greasing, be conscious of your crank length on trails with high pedal strike potential, and maybe do some tire swapping. Otherwise, we simply had more fun, more often, on the EVO than the Expert.
Perhaps not the enduro race slayers we were expecting, both the Expert and EVO Comp Alloy provide a compelling blend of efficiency and versatility that have always been present in the Stumpjumper bloodline. Despite what you may see Specialized top racers doing on the bike, the Stumpjumper is, in fact, a trail bike designed for the modern trail rider.
Those looking for a sporty feeling wagon-wheeled bike that can be composed in almost any situation this side of a legit EWS stage or an elite XC race would do well to check out either model. The EVO specifically is a unique ride that rewards those who want to test the limits of modern geometry in steep, twisty terrain while sacrificing little in the way of efficiency.
Visit www.specialized.com for more details.
Stumpjumper EVO Comp Alloy 29 Rating
Stumpjumper Expert 29 Rating
Jeff Brines - Age: 32 // Years Riding: 18 // Height: 6'2" (1.88m) // Weight: 200-pounds (90.7kg)
Jeff didn't go on a real date until he was nearly 20 years old, largely as a result of his borderline unhealthy obsession with bicycles. Although his infatuation with two wheels may have lead to stuttering and sweatiness around the opposite sex, it did provide for an ideal environment to quickly progress through the ranks of both gravity and cross-country racing. These days, Jeff races enduro at the pro level, rides upward of 150 days a year while logging over 325k of human-powered ascending/descending on his bike. Bred as a racer, Jeff is more likely to look for the fastest way through a section as opposed to the most playful. He lives in the shadow of the Tetons in Jackson, Wyoming.
Photos by Ian Haney and Jeff Brines
Fox
2/21/2019 1:04 PM
“Charging into new, gnarly terrain at mach chicken...” nice one, Brines.
The evo is such a unique bike for the money. It’s actually pretty unique regardless of the price. Specialized really did well with this one and there are a lot of guys with these bikes on the mtbr forum that are loving them. In today’s market, how can you argue with such a cool ride at such a reasonable price?
But alas, I am all about charging into new, gnarly terrain at mach chicken, often alone, deep in the back country of SW CO, far out of cell range, so I may wind up on something else that affords a little more room for pilot error.
jeff.brines
2/21/2019 1:17 PM
I believe my original words were "mach loony" but the editors stewed day and night for "mach chicken". A writer is lost without a good editor eh?
In all seriousness, yeah, this is a bike for those who are precise at speed. If this isn't you, there are better steeds out there...
Salespunk
2/21/2019 6:52 PM
I own both of these bikes right now plus a HTLT. My builds are a little different since I have the SWorks SJ and have put XO1 on the Evo along with SC carbon wheels so take my comments with a grain of salt that it is not an exact comparison.
My experience is that the Evo SLAYS steep rocky sections a "mach chicken" with the stock suspension. I ride a lot of these types of trails and the Evo is by far my favorite bike I have ever ridden for those types of trails. I have set PR's on every steep/fast section even over my HTLT with a custom tuned X2 and Fox 36 with a Push ACS3 kit. I have over 1K miles on those same trails with the HTLT and less than 150 on the Evo to put it into perspective. Will type up more on a separate post, but do not be afraid of the Evo for these situations. BTW also won the first Enduro race of the year on it by quite a bit. It pedals fantastic.
Fox
2/22/2019 6:39 AM
jeff.brines
2/22/2019 7:22 AM
Salespunk
2/22/2019 8:38 AM
I weight 180 and race Masters 40-50, but would have been 4th in Expert at my last race. Have been top 5 at National Championships in the recent past. Also top 5 on almost every Strava segment locally against fast Pro's. I live in San Diego which has a crazy amount of high speed chunk on the local trails. Chris Powell in the Jeremy McGrath video posted up a few days ago is one of my teammates and I am usually 5-10 seconds behind him on DH segments for comparison. The trails in that video are some of the smoothest I ride.
No offense taken, context is important.
Hunterchek
2/21/2019 11:01 AM
jeff.brines
2/21/2019 3:21 PM
PlunderPath667
2/21/2019 10:50 AM
jeff.brines
2/21/2019 1:29 PM
Honestly, I don't know why I felt what I felt from the rear of the bike. The usual suspects are absent when looking at the kinematics.
Maybe it was the wheel path, but I've ridden other bikes with very similar wheel paths without noting this sort of anemic-ness (its a word) from the bike's suspension action.
Realize, it wasn't "bad", it just felt like less travel. Harsh for a 140mm bike. About what you'd expect from a 110-120mm bike.
I know I'm supposed to be reviewing a dead stock bike, but for a period of time I had the opportunity to throw a black box shock built for the bike on the Evo. This was omitted from the review, as it wasn't really fair in a comparison kind of way, and pushes the limits of what I was reviewing. Even with that top level damper it never felt like other 140mm bikes. It was better with that shock, and I even knocked off a few best-ever laps around here. But if I was riding off my game even a little bit, the bike let me know...and confidence dwindled.
My gut feel is it has to do with the leverage ratio being too high off the top, and the damper being unable to control this very effectively - especially with super big negative air chambers we have these days, but I'm guessing. Maybe a longer stroke/eye to eye shock would have been the fix. Who knows.
I also think if it felt more like the Sentinel, which is what I was expecting, the line between the Enduro and the Stumpy would blur further. I'm thinking Specialized wanted to keep this thing sporty...and have people go toward the Enduro who are looking to lean back and hold on.
...all speculation, of course! Maybe a bigger nerd than me can figure this one out...but it wasn't just my notes that reflected this harshness. Every bigger/faster person who I know who threw a leg over the bike said the same thing.
Hunterchek
2/21/2019 1:50 PM
jeff.brines
2/21/2019 2:09 PM
andyjr77
2/21/2019 10:52 PM
Interesting you mention both long shocking it and a coil - that's precisely what I've done. I'm running a 216x63 Vivid R2C Coil, 3mm off set bushing and in the low position on my 275 S3, giving the same "effective position" as the standard shock in the high setting. Stroke is limited to 57mm giving 163mm travel, and I'm on a 500lb Nukeproof SLS spring at 175lbs ride weight.
It's night and day different from the standard shock, way more midstroke support, but none of the harshness which many of us found with the standard shock. Maybe it's a coil thing, maybe it's the extra headroom of a WC DH shock on a trail bike and the huge oil volume, I don't know.
I've coupled it with an MRP Ribbon Coil up front at 170mm, and the thing flies. I'm setting PBs on local tracks that I set previously in the summer, and we're in the middle of a typical wet, slippery UK winter right now.
There's definitely an argument to treat the Evo as a "platform" for upgrade on suspension, and interestingly, nearly all of us owners I know of have independently ended up with similar setups.
jeff.brines
2/22/2019 7:21 AM
FWIW, this is something I really did want to do to the bike but for obvious reasons I wasn't allowed to do. Like I said, I had to omit the whole BlackBox shock from the review, so long shocking with a coil *absolutely* would have been out. (though I have a suspicion this is what Jared and Curtis are doing)
Specialized doesn't want people long shocking the thing as it obviously voids the warranty. That said, for the price, I'd absolutely buy the bike, push the fork's travel to 160mm and then pickup a coil in the dimensions you suggested for the hell of it. Doesn't need to be some swanky coil, any coil that is valved right with the right spring will do.
With a simple tire swap and shock swap you could go from "efficient trail bike" to (possible) "enduro weapon". Pretty cool.
The geo is so good I could see this working well, and you'd be all in around $4K...with a bike shop involved
Superpi
2/26/2019 3:23 AM
Jeff, plug the negativ chamber of the DPX with an o'ring or something else and let us know!...
jeff.brines
2/26/2019 7:19 AM
Superpi
2/27/2019 10:17 AM
jeff.brines
2/27/2019 10:46 AM
Superpi,
Yeah, I hated the stock tires, at least on the Evo. Total speculation, but it seems Specialized had a batch of OEM tires that were megahard compound (technical term). The tires on the non Evo were the same tire, but were a lot more compliant.
Still, like you said, they didn't bite super well, at least on harder surfaces. They were great in softer dirt, but rock, roots, etc - EEEK!
Going to my old friend the DHF was a good way to also test the capabilities of the bike, being tires are probably the 3rd leg of the tripod when it comes to bike handling (geo, suspension, tires)
Specizlied then sent a new set of tires, which were also great. Maybe not Minion DHF great, but really damn close...
In short, change em. You'll be happy.