RockShox just聽announced a full makeover of its . The news couldn鈥檛 come soon enough.
Now, we love dropper posts. By getting the saddle out of a rider鈥檚 way, they make it safer and easier to negotiate technical obstacles and聽go faster through corners.聽They have transformed mountain biking the way fat, rockered designs changed skiing.
Unfortunately, many models have also proven temperamental, verging on flat-out unreliable. In our experience, the RockShox Reverb, the most ubiquitous聽dropper聽on the market, has been the worst offender. At this year鈥檚 edition of the 国产吃瓜黑料 magazine bike test, we had problems with Reverbs on 11 separate bikes, ranging from posts that developed sag at the top of the travel to ones that locked out completely and wouldn鈥檛 drop. We聽even had units that we bled and re-bled to no avail.
鈥淥ur durability hasn鈥檛 been maybe as good as we wanted it, and we have been working on that. We have made a number of changes over the past two or three years,鈥 says Sander Rigney, the Reverb category manager at Rockshox. 鈥淏ut you also see more problems with Reverbs because, if there鈥檚 a height-adjust post on a bike, there鈥檚 a high likelihood that it鈥檚 ours.鈥

Rockshox definitely has a majority share in the category鈥攐ver half the聽bikes in our test with droppers were equipped with a Reverb. And it鈥檚 also true that the company has a very reliable warranty program and, by every account we鈥檝e ever heard, is always quick with repairs and replacements. But that鈥檚 little consolation to the bike owner whose seat post is constantly on the fritz.
That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 such welcome news that RockShox has finally undertaken a comprehensive overhaul of the Reverb. The new posts keep the same overall configuration as the current line, but all the internals have been analyzed and updated. 鈥淭here was no need to change the basic design. Everyone appreciates the performance: return speed [and]聽adjustability,鈥 Rigney explains. 鈥淲e just set out to make it work more consistently and for a longer period of time. Basically, that comes down to good reliable seals all around.鈥
The company beefed up the overlaps at every seal and bushing so there鈥檚 less likelihood of side-load pressure. That should ensure they run better for longer. Rigney claims that the news posts should withstand up to four years of normal use without developing the sag at the top, which is one telltale sign a Reverb needs service.聽In addition to the standing 100-聽and 125-millimeter聽models, RockShox also added two longer-drop posts at 150-聽and 170-millimeters.聽
So will it be enough to remedy the Reverb鈥檚 checkered history? Only time will tell. But judging by the company鈥檚 new line of Guide brakes, which have all but eliminated the dependability issues of the previous XX models, we are cautiously optimistic. Stay tuned for durability reports once we鈥檝e taken possession of test posts and spent some time beating them up.