After our annual bike test, 国产吃瓜黑料 declared 2020 鈥the year of the short-travel 29er.鈥 Contributor Josh Patterson, who ran our test, lauded this category of mountain bike for its well-balanced personality: it has the lively feel of a short-travel bike, paired with the descent-capable geometry of a more aggressive trail bike, and is built around big 29-inch wheels with great rollover capability.听
Yesterday, Yeti Cycles released its latest answer to this much hyped breed with the new , an evolved version of the 听that the company says it will eventually replace. The SB115 has 115 millimeters of rear-wheel travel, a 130-millimeter-travel fork, slack听trail-bike geometry, and a build that wouldn鈥檛 be out of place on an enduro bike.
Though the SB100 was declared a genre-blending bike when it first came out in 2018, with a 120-millimeter听fork, longer and slacker geometry, and a stock build that included burly tires and a dropper post, it was, at its heart, a light cross-country听race bike. Reviewers and Yeti athletes alike praised it for handling much gnarlier terrain than its 100 millimeters of rear-wheel travel should have allowed, calling it a 鈥渄ownhiller鈥檚 cross-country bike.鈥 But it still only offered听100 millimeters of travel.听
So the SB115 began as an attempt to make the SB100 even more capable through one of Yeti鈥檚 Lunch Ride (LR)听builds, says product manager Ryan Thornberry. (The name Lunch Ride听is听a nod to the company鈥檚 long-standing midday-ride tradition, in听which employees started putting burlier suspension parts on their personal bikes.) LR听kits make existing models more downhill oriented, with a longer听fork and a slightly longer stroke shock, as well as a few other build tweaks.听
To make an SB100 LR, engineers swapped in a 130-millimeter听fork for the previous听120-millimeter听fork, but this slacked out the headtube听and seat-tube angles. To maintain the geometry and handling of the 100, engineers redesigned the upper link听and moved the pivot that connects the shock to the seatstay听to the rear. This not only allowed for听nearly identical geometry to the SB100,听but it also enabled the installation of a longer-stroke shock and gave听the bike an extra 15 millimeters of rear-wheel travel. (Because of the longer fork, the bottom bracket height is taller on the SB115, but the headtube and seat-tube angles are essentially the same as those听on the SB100.) Thus the SB115 was born. Impressively, Thornberry says they听achieved the extra travel without a net-weight gain鈥攁n听SB115 frame weighs the same as an SB100 frame.
If the SB100 lived somewhere between a cross-country听and trail rig, the parts for the SB115 belies its intentions to evolve closer to听the trail end of the spectrum. I鈥檓 testing an SB115 in the T2 build ($6,900), which features Yeti鈥檚 top-tier (lightest) Turq carbon frame and drivetrain, with its new 10-52 cassette. My bike sports four-piston, downhill-style听 brakes, based off SRAM鈥檚 high-powered Code brakes. It has 780-millimeter-wide handlebars. And it rolls on a plump 2.5-inch tire in front, with a 2.3-inch in the rear鈥攖he same setup I鈥檝e run on my enduro bike.
I owned an SB100 for about a year, along with a听135-millimeter-travel 29er that was both enduro and trail oriented. While the SB100 always wowed me with its capability, I still found that I preferred my long-travel trail bike in most normal riding situations, since I gravitate toward technical riding, faster descents, and the bike park. Having ridden the SB115 for the past few weeks, I can say that this new bike is even more versatile听and well suited to being an everyday trail bike for many riders.
Unsurprisingly, the SB115 climbs very, very well. Yeti claims that a size medium in my T2 build weighs 27.6 pounds, with a frame weight of 5.9 pounds. (The mid-tier C series carbon frame has a claimed weight of 6.2 pounds.)听For a lightweight trail bike these days, that鈥檚 impressive. Compare these numbers to a couple of the SB115鈥檚 current听peers in the 115-to-120-millimeter-travel 29er category: has a purported frame weight of 6.4 pounds; , with a similar X01 build to the SB115, has听a stated bike weight of 28 pounds.听
Having ridden the SB115 for the past few weeks, I can say that this new bike is even more versatile听and well suited to being an everyday trail bike for many riders.
But the SB115鈥檚 ability to punch up hills in a direct, efficient fashion is not just because it鈥檚 light. Yeti鈥檚 Switch Infinity鈥攊ts signature suspension design, which听pairs a four-bar linkage with a pair of 鈥渢ranslating鈥 shafts housed near the bottom bracket鈥攈as always displayed great small-bump compliance, amounting听to confidence-inspiring traction. On climbs ranging from steep, loose听fire roads to scrabbles up lumpy or ledgy sandstone, the SB115 sticks to surfaces, providing a welcome听assist on technical uphills. It made noticeably easier work of the hardest climbs in the听Colorado听Front Range.
And when the trail flattened or turned downhill, the extra 15 millimeters of travel in the rear and 10听millimeters in the front showed. If the SB100 rode like a听cross-country听bike with trail geometry, the SB115 rides like a short-travel trail bike, period. I rode the SB115 as my daily driver for about a month, on the same terrain where I鈥檇 normally take my 135-millimeter 29er or the I鈥檝e also been riding. The most revelatory descent I experienced on the SB115 was a fast, notoriously rough, downhill-only trail filled with water bars, bombed-out landings, and bony rock gardens. This was nowhere close to ideal terrain for a bike like this, and while I did have to choose my lines more carefully, the SB115 was remarkably composed at high speeds. On a few similar descents, I even set PRs听or lost very little time compared to rides on long-travel bikes. Bigger and听frequent听slower-speed hits did buck the bike more, but that鈥檚 to be expected for a short-travel bike. Yeti boasts that Switch Infinity enables engineers to tune for a 鈥渂ottomless feel鈥濃攎eaning it鈥檚 extremely difficult to bottom out鈥攚hich helps contribute to a bike that rides like it鈥檚 more capable than its travel suggests. The SB115 exhibits this personality trait to a T.
While it鈥檚 impressive that the SB115 holds its own on the gnarliest trails, in reality those trails represent a small percentage of the terrain that most of us ride听most of the time. It鈥檚 on all the other trails鈥攖he ones that fall in the fat part of the bell curve, the blues and tame blacks鈥攚here this bike really shines. Sharp, nimble handling makes the SB115 a joy to dive-bomb through S-turns and flat corners and to lean over and maneuver quickly around obstacles. That same precise feel pays off at slow speeds, too, like听when you鈥檙e threading a tricky line in a rocky switchback turn. And a 67.6-degree head angle strikes a sweet balance between accurate handling and stability: after months of riding super-slacked-out long-travel bikes, the SB115 made me feel like I had suddenly become a better bike handler.
This was nowhere close to ideal terrain for a bike like this, and while I did have to choose my lines more carefully, the SB115 was remarkably composed at high speeds.
A solid pedaling platform encouraged me to hammer out of the saddle on flat and downhill sections more often鈥攅ven when I was standing up and cranking, the rear suspension held steady without detectable bobbing. Solid mid-stroke support (much easier to achieve on a shorter-travel bike) also makes the SB115 wonderfully poppy off of little rollers听and helps it shoot out of deep berms and float over chunky rocks at high speed, displaying grace under pressure. During a time when bikes continue to get longer and slacker and gain more travel, riding the SB115 is a reminder of how fun and playful听a well-balanced short-travel trail bike is. If the gnarliest trails are more fun on a long-travel trail bike, most other trails are more fun on the SB115.听
If you鈥檙e reading this review, though, you鈥檙e likely already sold on the benefits of a short-travel 29er. So is the SB115 for you? Here鈥檚 one way to think about it: if you were to do genetic testing on some popular models in the short-travel trail-29er category, results would show that the SB115 is a more direct听descendant to a cross-country听bike than peers like the , Pivot听Trail 429, or Santa Cruz Tallboy/ (all three bikes feature听120 millimeters of rear-wheel travel and 130 millimeters in the front). Remember, the SB115 has essentially the same frame as the SB100, which was designed as a lightweight cross-country听race bike that could punch above its weight on the downhills. Bikes like the Trail 429听and the Tallboy, by contrast, have never attempted to pass as cross-country听race machines. (Both Pivot and Santa Cruz also offer dedicated, superlight, 100-millimeter-travel cross-country听race rigs.) While I haven鈥檛 ridden the current Trail 429 or Tallboy to be able to speak to how this translates to听ride differences, the SB115鈥檚 racy听lineage shows itself in the overall weight numbers presented above, as well as a听slightly steeper and shorter听geometry compared to these other bikes. (Just for听quick illustrative purposes, here are the head angles on the Trail 429, Ripley, and Tallboy: 67, 66.5, and 65.7 degrees, respectively.)听
That makes the SB115 an easy choice for endurance-oriented riders听and those who might compete in multi-day events with big uphills and ripping downhills,听like the BC Bike Race in British Columbia or the Breck Epic in Colorado. But whether you ever race or not, you want a bike that鈥檚 not just damn good at climbing听but fun to ride all the other days of the year, too鈥攚hich the SB115 most certainly is. So perhaps another way to think of it is this: Are you looking for a fun, playful, and capable short-travel 29er, and do you also prize having a little extra confidence on the climbs and accurate handling? If the answer is yes, I think you鈥檒l be very happy on a Yeti SB115.