News

Mon 2 Nov, 10:35 am UTC

News archive

Just in: Ragley mmmBop

By Guy Kesteven

We’ve already tested the Ragley Ti and steel Blue Pig frames, so we were keen to check out their alloy sibling, the mmmBop.

Ragley designer Brant Richards flew this frame halfway across the world and then rode it halfway up Swaledale in the Yorkshire Dales to meet us mid-ride so we could get on it ASAP.

After a month of hard hammer we can confirm that it’s a standout ride even in the fast evolving hardcore hardtail category.

Rather than just templating the same design across all three materials (titanium, steel and alloy), Brant has tweaked each to accentuate the advantages to the maximum.

In the case of the Ragley that means sub-4lb frame weight but massive strength and stiffness. The big barrel head tube is 1.5in, 1.125in or tapered steerer compatible with the appropriate headset, and the main tubes are similarly stout.

Big tapered seatstays mean there’s no need for a rear bridge (besides a small web gusset), and the innovative ‘3 finger’ chainstay plate design means equally huge tyre clearance behind the bottom bracket, so you can run the fattest tyres you’ve got without worry.

Ragley mmmbop: ragley mmmbop

The chainstay mounted brakes reduce seatstay stress, while multiple bolt-on cable and hose clip options let you route brakes and gears however you want. Frames will be supplied in plain painted finish with sticker kits so you can be similarly individual with your final look.

In terms of ride the mmmBop - named after an infamous Calderdale descent - is as uncompromising as it looks. The whole frame and oversized Nuke Proof seatpost is seriously stiff so it’s not a bike you’ll want to stay in the saddle over cobbles on.

What this translates to in technical situations though is pinpoint precision from the RockShox Revelation fork with Maxle and maximum feedback through the Super Tacky Maxxis Minion tyres. As long as you’re fluid enough to keep the rear wheel connected, power delivery is phenomenally direct for surging up the steepest slopes like a Saturn V.

Ragley mmmbop: ragley mmmbop

The geometry is designed to be at home in the most extreme situations too. A slack 67.5-degree head angle (with 140mm forks) and long top tube are designed to work with a super-short 50-70mm stem and wide bar (the Nuke Proof Warhead kit here is ideal) without constricting breathing or pushing you too far over the front.

The frame stiffness really helps in tight, turning-in-on-the-brakes situations where flexier bikes can stumble and tuck under. The 16.75in chainstays keep the rear end stable when you let go of the Hayes brakes and let the landscape get hazy instead.

Ragley have definitely delivered an outstandingly direct, top value assault on the hardcore technical trail bike market with the mmmBop. We’ll have a full first ride report plus more reviews on the expanded Nuke Proof range in print and online form soon. RRP is £275.99.

Ragley mmmbop: ragley mmmbop

User Comments

There are 12 comments on this post

Showing 1 - 12 of 12 comments

  • Nice.

  • that is a really good price; frame looks sweet

  • "the Nukeproof Warhead kit here is ideal"

    And so are many other brands no doubt!

    So what kickbacks did you get this time for product placement?

    Another totally independent, non-biased review?

    Somehow i think not.

  • Funnilly enough Chewy, when the Brant/Nukeproof P7 light got a bad review the other month, everyone said "Oh, they just gave it a bad review because Nukeproof don't pay enough advertising". Even though there was a full page Nukeproof ad in that same issue for the same light. Now, they get a compliment and it must be because the reviewers are crooked, right?

    Here is a newsflash- Brant is also affilliated with Nukeproof- designs parts for them at least, not sure how much more- and I do declare both use the same distributer. So, when Brant builds a Ragley frame up for a mag review, no surprise he tends to use that stuff. And when Bikeradar review the bike he's built, they might just mention the bits that were on it, because you can't ride a frame without the other parts.

    So, was there a reason you picked out Nukeproof, and not Maxxis, Rockshox or Hayes? Other than that they don't fit in with the bribery theory?

    Your conspiracy theory is awarded a D ;)

  • Well said Northwind.

  • In my opinion there was no need to plug the brand of stem and bars.

    If you read the text without the insert regarding Nukeproof the paragraph canters well enough without it and adds no value to the review.

    Like i said, just my opinion but seemed to me like blatant product placement.

    Could be wrong...........

    :-)

  • "Nice" - BoardinBob

    mmmmmmm, not sure about that, looks a bit of a pig to me! Headtube especially looks minging, like an old scaffold pipe!

  • ... and they just couldn't resist mentioning the Saturn V... as if the space programme needs any more publicity. I wonder how much NASA had to spend on advertising to get such a blatant plug ;-)

  • glad i just paid a deposit on one.my friends have the steel and ti versions which have impressed me.cant wait to build it up.

  • Looks good. I'd find it hard to choose between steel & alu. though (ti costs too much). I'll be interested to hear how the two compare as the frame geometry on the Ragley website looks the same.

  • 1.5 headtube - Cannondale have been doing this for years on all their hard-tails.

  • Great price, but not so sure about a chainstay mounted disc boss and bolt on cable hangers. Think these will make everything look untidy.

  • 1

Post comment:

You need to login or register to post comments.

Related links

Also on BikeRadar