Specialized Hardrock Pro review
BikeRadar verdict
"Specialized have injected real class, speed and sweet cross-country handling into the mid-price category"
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The bottom rung of Specialized’s polished and performance-orientated mountain bike ladder has never looked better than this year’s Pro. And its smooth speed is every bit as slick as its appearance, making it a great fast trail bike for the price.
Naturally fast, light, comfortable and well balanced, the Pro is exactly the trail ego boost many riders are after. The fact that it looks great isn’t going to hurt sales either, although you’ll need new tyres for winter.
Ride & handling: Fast, balanced feeling bike that’ll bring out the best of your fitness
With an 80mm fork, steep steering angles and a short rear end, the Hardrock is a fast handling bike. It’s easy to whip in and out of tight singletrack sections, and it doesn’t wander around on climbs.
The combination of a 90mm stem and 26in low-rise bar gives enough leverage and stability to maintain control when the trail starts bullying you about. Fitting a 100mm or even 120mm fork to tilt the angles back would make it a lot more stable and confident on more technical descents though.
The frame’s ride quality is certainly good enough to make upgrading worthwhile. The spring in those curvy tubes cuts back on sting and chatter and keeps you comfortable while you’re cruising.
While the 80mm RockShox Dart fork isn’t super-plush and it twangs around under braking and steering, what it does do, it does consistently. Adjustable rebound also means predictable comfort and control in easy or intermediate situations, and no nasty surprises. Specialized alter the spring weight according to bike size.
The fast-rolling semi-slick tyres and light weight (for the price) keep the Hardrock lively and responsive through the pedals, and there’s a decent amount of breathing space – adding to its easy speed and pedalling efficiency. This makes it a fast bike, as long as you have enough grip to keep the pace up.
When the tyres do fidget, bodyweight is naturally centralised which, in the dry, gives an easily controlled slide, not a sudden smackdown. You’ll still definitely need something more toothy on the front (and eventually the back) in wet conditions though.
Frame & equipment: Smooth riding, sweet handling frame with well chosen kit
The lazy S-curve of the rounded/rectangular section down tube accentuates the curved crossbar for a distinctive frame. Out back the rear stays use subtle shape changes and ankle/crank dodging curves to link up with neat little forged dropouts.
The curved stay bridges will only allow for a low profile 2.3in tyre but the forward-facing seat slot keeps out rear wheel spray. Open gear cables are easy to service, and you get rack mounts for commuting. The Hardrock Pro also comes in more sizes than most, but note that Specialized sizing is generally on the small side.
Specialized have clearly thought about what most mid-range bike owners actually want from their ride. The semi-slick Fast Trak tyres aren’t up to winter conditions that real enthusiasts will plough through, but they're perfect for enhancing the speed and rolling efficiency of less fit riders. They’ve enough grip for trail centre surfaces, which is where a lot of Hardrock riders will spend most of their time.
Our sample bike had a wonky stem that had been mis-forged to such a degree that the bars were diagonal rather than straight; apart from that, though, the kit is all fine for the money.
The SRAM X.4 shifters get little gear indicators so you don’t have to glance back, and the SRAM mechs have a good positive action. The Tektro Auriga brakes are reliable and consistent with pimpy-looking curved-arm rotors. Colour-matched saddle, forks, hubs and rims all contribute to the slick overall appearance.

What's the score with BikeRadar reviews? You can find a full explanation of our ratings here.
User Reviews
There are 8 reviews on this post
Showing 1 - 8 of 8 comments
-
dmjb3
Posted Sun 22 Nov, 2:07 am GMT Flag as inappropriate
Nice bike for commuters / beginners who live in sunny california.
fasttrak tyres are lethal in british weather, frame has little clearance for mud as well.
bad review in general. comment about hardrock riders spending most of their days at trail centres is laughable. hardrock owners use their bikes for getting to work in the summer, the odd tow-path and for rusting in the shed when the felt comes off over the winter.
dart forks are pogo-ey. consistently crap is still crap. pretty poor spec for a £500* bike - tora's would be more appropriate at this point, surely?
bikeradar please explain why you are giving 4/5 stars to a bike despite you acknowledging that it's that badly made that the bars don't line up, and it needing an immediate upgrade to be safely ridden in this country? new tyres please...
*most people should be able to wangle 10% off at the dealer.
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starseven
Posted Sun 22 Nov, 1:42 pm GMT Flag as inappropriate
Bought one of these for my son and like riding it myself now and then, lovely angles.
The parts are in keeping with the price but the frame is excellent and worth putting some better kit on.
The bikeradar review is ollox like they all are but if you want a sub £500 mtb you could do a lot worse.
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mountain-nic
Posted Sun 22 Nov, 2:26 pm GMT Flag as inappropriate
I agree with DMJB3 - at this price point Tora forks would have done the job. Specialized are of course not the only ones who put "racey" tyres on bikes that might not suit it's intended use - my Lapierre Zesty 314 came with Conti Race kings, when Mountian Kings would have been more suited - all about costs and profit really and to be honest - I'd rather dealers fit the tyres requested at the time of purchase - that really would be customer firendly.
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Dirtydog11
Posted Mon 23 Nov, 7:02 am GMT Flag as inappropriate
If you can find a decent bike at this price point fitted with Toras then buy it, but I doubt you will.
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clarkson
Posted Mon 23 Nov, 10:18 pm GMT Flag as inappropriate
i think with the specialized and a lot of other big brands at this point a lot of the money goes to the frame.
and most reviews aren't neccessarily about the kit. geometry, weight, comfort strength and general enjoyment play a big part!
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paddy.adrenaline
Posted Fri 20 Aug, 5:33 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
I have had this bike for 7 months now and it is still running fine. The geometry is great for me and I recently took it round the 44km w2 trail at afan with no problems. The pedals do need upgrading straight afterpurchasing though.
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Mars_theGuy
Posted Tue 17 May, 2:52 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
I've had this bike for over a year now, it's been my first proper mountain bike and it's been brilliant. I think you're completely wrong about the fork though Bike Radar, it's almost decent in warm weather, but it freezes up in cold temperatures (below 10c) making for an awful ride. After having trashed the rear hub to the point of the wheel having 2cm of play i decided to invest in the bike, got a Recon gold fork and Shimano MT65 wheels (all for less than £450), it's come to life now. A beast up the hills and will cope with any downhills round here in hampshire. As far as tyres go, the fastrax are superb in the summer, and greater still with a high roller xc up front. A couple of components let this bike down, but it's a sick bike overall with a great frame at it's heart!
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piotrn27
Posted Mon 4 Jul, 4:23 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Had it for a year , got nicked just before the season of 2011...
as some of yous said earlier, not the greatest specs (beside the sh.. fork, very annoying (and laud when wet) disc brakes...
But the shape of that frame.... defo the sexiest looking bike i ever had!!! .. :)
Specification
- Name:
- Hardrock Pro (10)
- Built by:
- Specialized
- Price:
- n/a
- Available Sizes:
- 13 Inches, 15 Inches, 17 Inches, 19 Inches, 21 Inches, 23 Inches
- Weight (kg):
- 12.7
- Weight (lb):
- 28
Frame & Fork:
- Frame Material:
- A1 fully-butted aluminium
- Fork Model:
- RockShox Dart 3 SL coil, 80mm travel
- Headset Type:
- Loose ball threadless
Geometry:
- Seat Angle:
- 73 Degrees
- Head Angle:
- 70.25 Degrees
Brakes:
- Brakes Model:
- Tektro Auriga Comp disc, 160mm rotors
Transmission:
- Cranks Model:
- Shimano FC-M361, 22/32/42T
- Bottom Bracket Model:
- Shimano BB-ES25, Octalink
- Rear Derailleur Model:
- SRAM X.5 mid cage
- Front Derailleur Model:
- Shimano Altus
- Shifters Model:
- SRAM X.4
- Cassette:
- SRAM PG830 8-speed, 11-32T
Wheels:
- Rims Model:
- Alex RHD
- Front Hub Model:
- forged alloy
- Rear Hub Model:
- forged alloy
- Tyres Brand:
- Specialized
- Front Tyre Model:
- Fast Trak Control LK
- Front Tyre Size:
- 26x2.0
- Rear Tyre Model:
- Fast Trak Control LK
- Rear Tyre Size:
- 26x2.0
Contact Points:
- Saddle Model:
- Specialized XC Body Geometry
- Seatpost Model:
- Alloy two bolt
- Stem Model:
- Specialized 3D-forged alloy
- Handlebar Model:
- Specialized butted alloy low-rise bar
:
- Top Tube (in):
- 22.9 in
- Wheelbase (in):
- 42.6 in
- Bottom Bracket Height (in):
- 11.8 in
- Chainstays (in):
- 16.7
- Seat Tube (in):
- 19 in
- Standover Height (in):
- 31.3 (in)
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