Here it is: A first spy shot of the new Specialized Enduro 2017 has appeared.

After months of speculation about the new Specialized Enduro 2017, it seems a first spy shot has appeared. The new Enduro seems to fulfill most people’s expectations:

X-Wing frame design

Slacker head angle

Slightly Lower BB on the 650b

Available as 29 (with 6Fattie / 27.5+ option) and 650b

SWAT door

Fully internal cable routing

Öhlins RXF 36 fork and Öhlins STX 22 shock

SRAM Eagle X01 1×12

Threaded Bottom Bracket

Boost

More travel (29: 165mm rear / 160mm front – 650b: 170mm rear and front)

66° head angle on E29

65.5° head angle on E650b

With the official launch on Crankworx Whistler only a few days away, it is not a huge surprise that the picture emerged.

I think it is a smart move from Specialized to keep the Enduro’s iconic X-frame design. Earlier, there was a viral campaign based on a leaked prototype drawings that showed an asymmetrical frame. These were later admitted to be fake and just photoshopped from the Specialized Demo 2016 frame.

The next evolution of one of the most famous Specialized bikes won’t be a huge surprise, bringing us a lot that was expected (e.g. SWAT Door, Boost, internal cable routing, Öhlins suspension, SRAM Eagle 1×12), except for the move to a threaded / BSA bottom bracket, which is a departure from the pressfit PF 30 BB that Specialized have sold us before. What’s missing is a longer Command Post dropper, and I think Specialized needs hurry up to keep up with longer posts such as 9point8 FallLine (150mm / 170mm / 200mm) or RockShox Reverb (150mm / 170mm) – a 150mm option should be a minimum.

The Enduro 29 was a super successful bike, and while racers found the head angle too steep, many riders enjoyed the versatility of a long-legged trail bike. In light of the Enduro 29’s heritage, it is a good decision to build upon its strengths with a more modern geometry rather than introducing a revolutionary redesign – all the while Peter Denk is probably working on the 2020 Enduro right now.

Update: Specialized has now launched the new bike (nice video here). Here are the geometry charts:

Enduro 29 / 6Fattie Geometry Size S M L XL Stack 609 609 622 636 Reach 410 430 450 470 Head-Tube 95 95 110 125 Head-Angle 66° 66° 66° 66° BB (29x2.3) 352 352 352 352 BB (650x3.0) 345 345 345 345 BB (650x2.8) 339 339 339 339 BB Drop 19 19 19 19 Trail 107 107 107 107 Fork length 569 569 569 569 Fork Offset 51 51 51 51 Front-Center 727 747 773 799 Chain Stay 432 432 432 432 Wheelbase 1159 1179 1205 1231 Top Tube 555 575 600 625 Stand-Over 757 766 781 796 Seat-Tube 396 430 468 523 Seat-Tube Angle 76.5° 76° 76° 75° Handlebar 780 780 780 780 Stem 40 40 60 60 Saddle Width 143 143 143 143 Seat Post 390 430 430 430 Cranks 170 170 170 170 /* Here you can add custom CSS for the current table */ /* Lean more about CSS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascading_Style_Sheets */ /* To prevent the use of styles to other tables use "#supsystic-table-6" as a base selector for example: #supsystic-table-6 { ... } #supsystic-table-6 tbody { ... } #supsystic-table-6 tbody tr { ... } */

Enduro 650b Geometry Size S M L XL Stack 585 590 604 613 Reach 410 430 450 470 Head-Tube 95 100 115 125 Head-Angle 65.5° 65.5° 65.5° 65.5° BB (650x2.3) 345 345 345 345 BB (650x2.6) 350 350 350 350 BB Drop 10.5 10.5 10.5 10.5 Trail 106 106 106 106 Fork length 559 559 559 559 Fork Offset 51 51 51 51 Front-Center 728 750 776 801 Chain Stay 425 425 425 425 Wheelbase 1153 1175 1201 1225 Top Tube 551 576 604 632 Stand-Over 761 771 782 796 Seat-Tube 396 430 467 521 Seat-Tube Angle 76.5° 76° 76° 75° Handlebar 780 780 780 780 Stem 40 40 60 60 Saddle Width 143 143 143 143 Seat Post 390 430 430 430 Cranks 170 170 170 170 /* Here you can add custom CSS for the current table */ /* Lean more about CSS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascading_Style_Sheets */ /* To prevent the use of styles to other tables use "#supsystic-table-6" as a base selector for example: #supsystic-table-6 { ... } #supsystic-table-6 tbody { ... } #supsystic-table-6 tbody tr { ... } */

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Looking at the numbers, it comes as a surprise that Specialized increased reach only very minimally (about 5mm), and that the BB height on the 29er has not dropped (especially in light of the 170mm cranks), since this has been a recurring comment from riders. As a result, the 2017 Enduro’s BB drop is not big, especially compared to its little brother, the Stumpjumper, which sports a whopping 36mm BB drop (in 29) and 18mm for the 650b. Some riders had also asked for slightly longer chain stays and preferred shorter fork offset (i.e. 46mm over 51mm – Chris Porter suggests this). Stack is a bit lower on the E29, but this is a lot easier to remedy if you prefer a higher cockpit.

The steep seat angle (76° on M and L sizes) should make it comfortable to use longer travel forks, and Curtis Keene seems to be riding a 170mm Lyrik for this weekend’s Whistler Enduro World Series event.

The Enduro comes in the following models:

S-Works ($ 8500 – frame $ 3500)

Full carbon frame, Öhlins front & rear, SRAM Eagle 1×12, carbon wheels



Pro ($ 6500)

Full carbon frame, Öhlins rear, Lyrik front, SRAM Eagle 1×12, aluminium wheels



Elite Carbon ($ 4400)

Carbon front end, Lyrik and Monarch Plus, SRAM 1×11



Comp ($ 3000)

Aluminium, Yari and Monarch Plus, SRAM 1×11

What I’d like to see in addition is a new freeride bike from Specialized, a successor to the Specialized Enduro Evo, and I still hope we’ll see this coming.

(I’ll update this post later on. I’ll also follow up with a review / ride report of the new bike soon).