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Cannnodale Trigger


Cannnodale’s Trigger trail bike is a distinctive, well-shaped, feature-loaded all-rounder, but it needs careful tuning to get the best from it.

The frame

The Trigger looks similar to the Jekyll enduro bike but the head tube ‘box’ is shorter and the tube shapes of the ‘BallisTec’ carbon mainframe are subtly different too. Because the midframe carbon linkage now drives a conventional shock, there’s room for a bottle where the old Trigger’s pull shock used to be. It also means you get a modified Fox Float X damper, not a totally proprietary design as before. Cannondale co-invented the 30mm axle standard so there’s no surprise the Trigger has a PF30 bottom bracket (BB). It also uses their ‘Ai’ offset stays and a 148mm hub to keep things tight out back.

The kit

The Fox ‘Gemini’ shock is matched with a Fox 34 fork, which is near the top end of its travel range at 150mm. While 29mm WTB rims bulk up the 2.35in Maxxis tyres to 57mm wide, they also square off the carcass for a slower, less supple roll, and the whole wheel pack is relatively heavy. Overall bike weight is fairly hefty too, though the 30t ring fitted to Cannondale’s SpideRing cranks helps offset this.

Shimano’s XT/SLX transmission clicks dutifully through most gears but the 37t to 46t gap at the top of the cassette makes keeping a consistent cadence hard. The SLX brakes had a random bite point issue on one side too – a common problem. They sit on a wide bar (with matching 45mm stem), while you sit on a nice Fabric saddle atop a TransX dropper that’s essentially the same as the Race Face post on the Santa Cruz and the JD on the Saracen.

The ride

With its 14kg weight, long reach, big bar, broad rims with grippy tyres and the slackest head angle on test, you’d expect the Trigger to feel rock solid and connected on the trail. The Fox fork and shock are ‘Performance’ units with a tight and tappy, rather than soft and grippy, initial feel. This reluctance to get moving combines with the tall BB and centre of gravity to perch the bike on top of the trail rather than hunker it down. We had to drop tyre pressures lower than usual to stick the Trigger to the floor predictably over roots and rocks.

Setting shock pressure proved a test of patience too. Even with two volume spacers and 200psi+ (for a 70kg rider), it regularly slammed to full travel, even in the firmer compression settings that left it feeling uptight under power. That also meant very little mid-stroke cornering support in 145mm-travel ‘Flow’ mode, so if we knew a descent was bermy rather than bouldery, we’d flick to the 115mm ‘Hustle’ setting to give us a firmer feel to carve with. This left the Trigger short on big-hit capability, so adding extra spacers would make more sense.

The extended legs of the 34 fork (which is only adequately stiff at best) and its tall ride height, added to the tappy initial suspension feel and relatively flexy front end, make the Trigger feel hesitant and short of confidence through turns for a 14kg bike with a great front tyre. That weight and the grippy rubber mean it’s the steadiest here in terms of powered speed too, with even the 2.6in-tyred Specialized feeling faster on the pedals in stuttery sections.

On the upside, the Trigger does carry speed well once things get steep and sizable but stay straight. The ‘FIT GRIP’ damper in the fork works really well deeper in its stroke, and the slacker head angle and long reach make it stable at speed, as long as you don’t have to turn. If you drop your heels and let it run, the linear back end swallows square edges impressively too.

Unfortunately for the Trigger, the Jekyll has even more big-hit appetite, a significantly stiffer fork and front end, and a better balance between its 165mm ‘Flow’ and 130mm ‘Hustle’ modes. Even with 2.5in and 2.4in tyres (which feel better suited to the same i29 rims), the same-priced Jekyll 3 is only 300g heavier too.

DETAILS TWO FOR ONE
The remote-controlled side dial changes the ‘Gemini’ shock between fully-open, 145mm-travel ‘Flow’ mode and a tighter-feeling, taller-riding 115mm ‘Hustle’ mode

MOVE OVER
Cannondale’s ‘Ai’ stays offset the rear hub to the drive side by 6mm to allow a stiffer laterally symmetrical wheel build

DIALLED DETAILS
The ‘BallisTec’ carbon frame uses a secure entry-point clamping system for quiet internal cabling and a replaceable carbon panel for belly protection

HIGHS
- Good aggro geometry with unique remote-control travel/character shift
- Impressive big-hit performance in a straight line

LOWS
- ‘On top’ ride feel unless carefully tuned
- Front end feels vague when pushed hard

Distinctive dual-travel all-rounder that’s smooth in a straight line but lacks rowdy trail confidence

WEIGHT 14.02kg (30.91lb)
FRAME ‘BallisTec’ carbon fibre mainframe, ‘SmartForm C1’ aluminium swingarm, 115/145mm (4.5/5.7in)
SIZES S, M, L, XL
FORK Fox 34 Float FIT GRIP Performance, 150mm (5.9in) travel
SHOCK Fox Float DPS EVOL Performance Gemini
HEADSET SI integrated
WHEELS:
HUBS Formula (w/ Ai rear offset)
RIMS WTB Frequency Race i29 TCS
SPOKES 32x DT Swiss Champion
AXLES 110x15mm front, 148x12mm rear
WHEEL WEIGHT 2.3kg (f), 2.93kg (r), inc. tyres
TYRES Maxxis Minion DHF DC TR 27.5x2.3in (f), Maxxis Minion DHR DC TR 27.5x2.3in (r)
CRANKSET/BOTTOM BRACKET Cannondale Si SpideRing Ai BB30, 30t/Cannondale PF30
MECH(S) Shimano Deore XT M8000 Shadow Plus
SHIFTER(S) Shimano SLX M7000 (1x11)
CASSETTE/CHAIN Shimano Deore XT M8000, 11-46t/Shimano HG601
BRAKES Shimano SLX M7000, 180mm rotors
BAR/STEM/GRIPS Cannondale C3, 780mm/Cannondale C3, 45mm/Cannondale lock-on
SEATPOST/SADDLE TransX 120mm dropper/Fabric Radius Scoop

Price $5700

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