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Scott Aspect 50 (10) | $585.47
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The Aspect has a nice frame, well worth later  parts upgrades

BikeRadar verdict

3 out of 5 stars

"If you can’t spend more, the Aspect 50 is a good option, but we’d go for the slightly lighter Aspect 40, at £399"

Fri 18 Dec 2009, 8:00 am GMTBy Steve Worland, Mountain Biking UK

Scott have kept the price of the Aspect 50 low by speccing rim brakes rather than discs.  As a complete bike package, it’s still very reasonable value for money, but we’d say it’s worth paying more for disc brakes and a better drivetrain if you plan to ride off-road throughout the year and you can stretch to it.

Ride & handling: Confidence inspiring ride spoiled by sluggish wheels

The overall ride experience on the Aspect 50 was excellent for a bike at this price. The handling is confidently neutral, the fork works well enough in terms of helping you to tackle bumpy off-road terrain and it’s only really the rim brakes that remind you this is an entry-level machine.

But even the low profile rapid-rolling treads were still not enough to make up for the fact that it was noticeably slow on the climbs. The overall weight of the bike is probably part of the issue, but the weight of the wheels is the real culprit – a few hundred grams of extra spinning weight adds to drag until you get up to speed.

The geometry of the Scott is a little more relaxed than that of many other bikes in this price bracket and this makes for a slightly lazier steering feel in twisty singletrack, but a lazier descending feel on rough terrain as well, which can be a confidence booster for riders who haven’t previously ridden off-road very much.

 scott aspect 50:  scott aspect 50

Chassis: Nice frame, well worth later parts upgrades

The frame is the highlight of the Aspect 50. It boasts lightweight double-butted hydroformed tubes and has disc brake bosses to cover the option of a later upgrade as well as luggage rack eyelets for utilitarian usage.

While the shapely tube profiling, tapering almost to square on the top tube and biaxially ovalised on the big down tube, are pleasing to the eye, the practical emphasis is on achieving the ideal combination of low weight and high strength.

There’s plenty of mud room around the seatstays and chainstays and the machined head tube offers lots of reinforcement strength around the integral headset. There’s only one set of bottle cage bosses and the seat clamp slot is on the back, prone to rear wheel spray.

The neutral handling geometry is designed around a 100mm (3.9in) travel fork and the SR Suntour XCM unit provided is a better performing fork than we’re used to finding on bikes at this price. 

The lockout lever on top of the right hand leg works for progressive compression damping too. The fork is clunky if you turn it all the way, but halfway is enough to stiffen the compression for road use and climbing.

The tyres don’t block in the mud but wheel weight slows progress: the tyres don’t block in the mud but wheel weight slows progress

Equipment: Good fork but heavy wheels and hefty drivetrain slow you down

It’s hard to keep overall bike weight low at this price. A heavy drivetrain and heavy wheels take the overall bike weight up to 13.9kg (30.6lb), despite the rim brakes saving some weight over discs.

The basic build of Acera gear mechs and the trouser guard equipped crankset conspire to show the bike’s lower budget against others costing just a little more.  Still, the gears kept shifting efficiently throughout the test period and we’ve never found reason to complain about Shimano’s EasyFire shifters.

The Scott Ozon tyres are fast-rolling and they don’t block in the mud, but traction in the wet is not great. The wheels are sturdily built but both inner tubes punctured on the first ride because of poor rim tapes that allowed the spoke ends to rub through.

Many riders will like the simplicity of the rim brakes but muddy conditions starting to affect the blocks and the cabling reminded us why we like the hydraulic disc brakes on more costly bikes.

The rest of the finishing kit here is reasonable quality Scott branded stuff that does the job and makes all the contact points comfortable.

About BikeRadar reviews: Our review scoring system has changed in 2010. Therefore recent reviews may have comparatively lower scores than past reviews. Click here for a full explanation of our ratings.

User Reviews

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  • User review of Scott Aspect 50 (10)

    I have an Onone 456 own build and £3500 Orange Five own-build that are both 14kg so this bikes weight is doesn't seem especially bad to me. That said the weight is noticable if riding hard uphill now I have built up a 10.8kg 29er to compare with. I have an Onone inbred that I have swapped back to V brakes and they really seem like a big step back when you are used to disks, when the conditions are wet and muddy.

    Anyway the Scott looks like good value to me, especially for a someone who thinks they may be riding regularly and is willing to spend on upgrades as bits wear out (but can keep the frame and fork for some time).

    0.3

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Specification

Name:
Aspect 50 (10)
Built by:
Scott
Price:
$585.47

Available Sizes:
L, M, S, XL, XS
Weight (kg):
13.9
Weight (lb):
30.6

Frame & Fork:

 
Frame Material:
6061 double butted alu
Fork Model:
Suntour XCM V2 100mm (3.9in) with lock-out
Headset Type:
Ritchey Logic

Geometry:

 
Seat Angle:
71.5 Degrees
Head Angle:
70 Degrees

Brakes:

 
Brakes Model:
Scott Comp V brake

Transmission:

 
Cranks Model:
Shimano 44/32/22
Bottom Bracket Model:
Shimano
Rear Derailleur Model:
Shimano Acera
Front Derailleur Model:
Shimano Acera
Shifters Model:
Shimano EZ-Fire Plus 8-speed
Cassette:
8-speed 12-30

Wheels:

 
Front Wheel Weight:
2210 g
Rear Wheel Weight:
2835 g
Rims Model:
Araya GP 710L
Front Hub Model:
Scott
Rear Hub Model:
Shimano

Contact Points:

 
Saddle Model:
Scott Aspect
Seatpost Model:
Scott
Stem Model:
Scott
Handlebar Model:
Scott 24.5in riser

:

 
Wheelbase (in):
41.5 in
Bottom Bracket Height (in):
12.5 in
Chainstays (in):
16.75
Seat Tube (in):
17 in
Standover Height (in):
31 (in)
Top Tube (in):
22.5 in
Description:
Scott Ozon 2.0 tyres

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