PRESS RELEASE: Deviate CyclesMixed Wheels, Maximum FunCarve the way up front, let loose at the back with the all new Deviate Claymore MX.
Inspired by the medieval Scottish two-handed great sword, known for its strength and symbolism of the rugged Highlands, the Claymore embodies this legacy - crafted to conquer the world's most challenging terrains.
This long-travel high-pivot enduro bike has been given an injection of added playfulness with a reworked rear triangle, designed to accommodate a 27.5” wheel out back.
The Claymore MX is the first mullet to be added to our range, with the Highlander II MX launching in the coming months.
Photos by
James VincentRear Triangle vs Link ApproachDeviate Cycles lead-engineer and co-owner Chris Deverson explains why we have opted for a rear triangle rather than link solution:
| We’ve found a balanced geometry for our bikes and keeping this consistent was fundamental to our approach. A link design puts the rear wheel in a different portion of the wheel path - therefore outside of the bounds of the optimal anti-squat - whilst a rear triangle switch allows us to keep the consistency whilst providing the added playfulness and manoeuvrability for those inside lines.- Chris Deverson |
Watch the Claymore MX in Action Customers
can reserve an MX frame with an initial 20% upfront payment, with the remaining balance due before shipment at the end of May/early June 2024. Full or partial builds are also available by
contacting the team directly.
Pricing : £2999 GBP (inc VAT) / $3,200 USD / €3,499.00 EUR / 4500 CAD / 3,200 CHF
- Sizes available: Medium, Large, X-Large
- Colours: Moss Green, Rowan Red
- UDH
- Worldwide shipping
- Lifetime frame warranty
To find out more, head to
deviatecycles.com
I'm 5'10", 460mm is too short for my riding style with such low stack. 490 would be pushing it (if stack were super high), but I could probably get away with it on this frame and some extra spacers. Which is exactly what I do on my size L Process X (490mm reach at only 637mm stack).
L RAAW Madonna v3 is 480mm reach at 664mm stack. Not going to do the exact math but probably pretty close to the same "real world" reach as this if you run the bars at the same height via steerer spacers, maybe even shorter.
Bikes with a low stack and long reach give you the most options for riders to tailor to their needs. Like it long and low = leave it alone. Want a shorter reach and higher stack = add spacers. Want all the reach but higher stack = use a high rise bar (doesn't alter effective reach). Mix and match the above to get where you want to be.
Then you can also bring stem length into this, but some people prefer a certain length for position and ride feel.
Bikes that start out with a high stack leave you a bit stuck if the geo isn't already perfect for you.
One is my "trail" bike. Funny enough, both are size large 160/170ish mm bikes, marketed in the same "enduro" category in 2021/2022.
there are not many options for high rise bars > 30mm, and the price to try something is high.
XL bikes often don't have enough stack IMO.
I had an XL 2018 (Gen 4?) Trek Fuel Ex at one point with a stack of 610mm. way too low at that size.
Link for the people!
www.jmjdesigns.co.uk/custombuilddeviate
Front end washout is easily controlled on a mullet. I find I can ride ‘on the edge’ of control a lot easier. Its more fun in the corners and on very steep and twisty trails. Easier to rear wheel steer, and chuck into catch berms.
Yea its not as fast and stable, but I ride for hoots rather than to be the fastest
www.santacruzbicycles.com/en-US/bikes/nomad
Edit: Looking at the website, 30mm is the bb drop for the standard 29 version.