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Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09) | $2710
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Spesh’s swoopy frame is great for getting a swerve on

BikeRadar verdict

4 out of 5 stars

"Fast, efficient, predictable and well-priced, but definitely the safe not special option"

By Guy Kesteven, What Mountain Bike

Specialized’s super-light carbon bikes may be the limelight huggers, but for most riders this highly efficient and enjoyable lightweight alloy version will be more than enough bike for any situation.

Light, fast, efficient, and with a sweetly detailed and quality kit collection, the Elite delivers an outstandingly drama- and stress-free day ride experience. It’s exactly that complete safety that can make it feel dull alongside more characterful competitors though.

Ride & handling: Light, efficient and very neutral – perhaps too neutral

A polished, well thought-out and easy vibe extends right through the ride of the Stumpjumper. The longer fork leans the head angle back to a reassuringly stable extent and it lifts the bottom bracket for pedal clearance as well. A relatively short top tube and steep seat angle still keep your weight forward to avoid any front tyre slips though.

The rear suspension is equally neutral, with minimal reaction to either pedal or braking inputs to upset its smooth poise. This does mean you need to flick on the Pro-Pedal platform damping to stop it feeling squelchy and soft under full power.

The low weight, plus fast tyres and a full shock lockout option front and rear, make it vanish up fireroad or tarmac climbs like the proverbial rat up a drainpipe.

However, the fact that it stands out most on tarmac is something of a giveaway to the Stumpy's tame rather than tear-it-up character off-road.

There’s certainly nothing wrong with the way it sucks up drops and boulders, and it holds its lines fine most of the time too, but the slightly soggy pedal feel and lack of trail reference in fully open mode combines with slight frame twang to rob it of a real carving edge or predatory character.

The narrow bar and forward weighting make you less inclined to throw it into turns hard enough to grind the end caps off, or launch the big stuff too.

It’s not that it can’t do it if you make it, but it terms of ride character, it’ll definitely be safe and steady rather than incite a riot.

A great looking, great riding but otherwise unobtrusive trail companion. : a great looking, great riding but otherwise unobtrusive trail companion.

Frame: Good looking and remarkably stiff for its weight

All-white bikes are something of a rarity for Specialized, but the pure colour picks out the clean frame design nicely. Specialized originated the stress-spreading curved down tube that nearly everyone else has adopted. The Stumpy also runs a direct force line from head tube to swingarm tip via gracefully curved top tube and seatstays.

The stays are extended right up to the seat tube, with short, triangular rockers, forked clevis joints on the pivots and a hollow bridge piece and armpit gusset all keeping the back end remarkably tight for its weight.

Kinked seat tube and direct mount front mech keep tyre clearance good, and there’s room for a conventionally placed bottle too. A sheaf of sealed cabling running under the down tube keeps gears sweet and you get a snug-fitting rubber chainstay guard too. Typically for Specialized, subtly colour-coded trim and equipment adds a high-class touch.

Lever fl icking goodness helps get full potential from the smooth suspension: lever fl icking goodness helps get full potential from the smooth suspension

Equipment: Quality kit selection and attention to detail

There’s plenty of quality equipment aboard the Stumpy. Fox TALAS RL forks aren’t quite as smooth as the company's fixed-travel Floats, but the 100 and 120mm settings give useful handling tweak options, even though we spent 90 percent of the time running them at the full 140mm stroke.

The Specialized-specific Triad shock adds complete lockout to the normal fully open and ProPedal options of the Fox RP2 shock.

Avid’s Elixir brakes stand out in control terms and get a few grams of ‘SL’ weight-saving via alloy pad backers and a custom colour.

A Shimano XTR rear mech window-dresses the otherwise SLX/Deore-level transmission, while just 28 spokes on the front helps build a fast reacting wheelset. The lightweight S-Works tyres are light and fast too, with reasonable dual compound grip in most conditions.

We’d go for wider handlebars for increased leverage in technical situations, and the single-bolt seatpost needs firm tightening, but otherwise the angle-adjustable stem and reinforced saddle set up excellent contact points.

Specialized’s enviable attention to detail also extends to a broad range of size-specific kit, with shorter cranks on the small size, plus thinner saddle and grips and smaller disc rotors on the small and medium.

Long travel option means maximum lazy angle control: long travel option means maximum lazy angle control

User Reviews

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  • User review of Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09)

    I was torn between this and the Zesty 314.

    Although I fell in love with it in the shop with it's "innocent" looks and due to the fact I love specialized...the zesty kinda swayed me partly due to the fact of how many spesh you see on the trails! and also now with this review....and also I like to try something new and exotic every so often! I've had my 04 stump HT for a while now and didn't wanna get into the trap of being a 1-name-biker.

    But now the lapierre's are becoming so popular I feel like it won't be as new and exotic as i thought......but I guess thats always the case if you want a good bike, everyone else does too!

    Who knows, by the time I get the cash for the zesty....there will prob be a new love of my life! (sorry Carolyn)

    I'm still gonna give the elite 4* in case i change my mind when i test ride both of em!

    Then i'll come back and post a proper review

    0.3
  • 0.3
  • User review of Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09)

    I have the comp 08 version, same frame and shock, the triad bobs badly on lock out.

    0.3
  • User review of Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09)

    With 140mm forks, nice wide bars, you can ride these bikes all day, uphill and down. You see so many of these out on the trails, because they work so annoyingly well. They are very good at giving confidence, and the suspension works brilliantly at dialing out trail buzz. Oh, and Spech are very good with warranty issues.

    Mine was the 08 version (see http://www.pinkbike.com/photo/1592854/ )

    p.s. It says something that the worst thing anyone can say about these bikes is that they are too common.....

    p.p.s. I sold it, and through various transitions of bikes, I bought a 29er (http://www.pinkbike.com/photo/2260625/ ). Now I want the Spech Epic 29er

    0.3
  • User review of Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09)

    Excellent value for money as far as im concerned. reasonably good spec. brakes have lots of control as i have come from other avids which was all or nothing.

    very plush; just soakes up bumps, jumps and other obstacles. I feel very safe on the bike with little flex in the frame for a light bike.

    They are very common but the specialized UK office is on my doorstep who have proved very useful and helpful getting mojo to sort a stuck down fox shock from my old specialized free of charge and upgrading the seals.

    They do have excellent warranty cover, customer service and readily available spares and parts so I can live with being a commoner.

    well done specialized. would have preferred in black like the US 2009 version but still very sleek and stylish.

    0.3
  • User review of Specialized Stumpjumper Elite (09)

    Absolutely love it, upgraded from a rockhopper and have never looked back.

    I put some carbon sworks bars and a carbon s-works stem on and the wider bars do make a difference although it is subtle.

    Stock SPD pedals arent very good (if youre into flatties) so stuck some wellgo MG1's on.

    Unless Im unlucky the sworks tyres seem easy to puncture, a downside of them being quite light perhaps?

    9.5/10

    0.3

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Specification

Name:
Stumpjumper Elite (09)
Built by:
Specialized
Price:
$2710.00

Available Sizes:
L, M, S, XL, XXL
Available Colours:
White
Weight (kg):
12.3
Weight (lb):
27.1
Year:
2009

Frame & Fork:

 
Frame Material:
M5 manipulated alloy, 120mm
Fork Model:
Fox 32 Talas RL, 100/120/140mm
Rear Shock Model:
Fox Triad

Geometry:

 
Seat Angle:
74.5 Degrees
Head Angle:
68.5 Degrees

Brakes:

 
Brakes Model:
Custom Avid Elixir R SL

Transmission:

 
Cranks Model:
Custom Shimano FC-M542
Rear Derailleur Model:
Shimano XTR
Front Derailleur Model:
Shimano SLX
Shifters Model:
Shimano SLX

Wheels:

 
Rims Model:
Custom DT Swiss X420SL
Front Hub Model:
Specialized disc
Rear Hub Model:
Custom DT Swiss X420SL
Tyres Brand:
Specialized
Front Tyre Model:
The Captain
Front Tyre Size:
26x2.2
Rear Tyre Model:
The Captain
Rear Tyre Size:
26x2.2

Contact Points:

 
Saddle Model:
Specialized Format
Stem Model:
Specialized adjustable rise stem,
Handlebar Model:
Specialized XC low-rise 640mm

:

 
Top Tube (in):
23.1 in
Wheelbase (in):
43.9 in
Bottom Bracket Height (in):
13.4 in
Chainstays (in):
16.5
Seat Tube (in):
17.5 in

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