Pace RC405

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pacerc405

Pace RC405
Price: £1169 frame in gloss snow, orange, khaki or blue.
From: Pace Cycles 01751 432929
www.pacecycles.com
Tested: Three weeks

Reviewed: Singletrack Magazine – Issue 39

We’ve waited a long time for this bike. Those of us who have been waiting for a full suspension bike from Pace have been waiting for over a decade! But here it is at last. To say there was a lot of interest and expectation in test riding the RC405 would be a slight understatement.

We were offered the chance to test ride it for a day over at Dalby Forest but we thought that one rider’s experience after one day of riding wasn’t really going to be suffi cient. So we waited until Pace could loan one to us for two weeks and then we passed it around a few of our Test Squadron and put as many miles in it as possible (as it happens we kept it for three weeks).

The RC405 is a floating pivot design; the rear triangle is attached to the front by two pairs of linkages (similar to Santa Cruz, Intense, Iron Horse and Giant designs). Where the RC405 is a bit different is that the rear shock is not anchored to the front triangle – it sits between the leading ends of the linkages (imagine a finger and thumb squeezing a jelly bean). This doubles the tweaking potential of the rear shock’s spring rate. It also means the rear wheel’s axle path is not a constant arc – it’s a shallow ‘S’ shape.

Here’s some numbers for those that like them: 130mm rear travel, 69° head angle, 73° seat angle, 22.9in top tube (Medium), 17.1in chainstays, 13.3in BB height, 6.2 lbs (without shock). Ours was 28.5lbs. In typical Pace fashion there’s a lot of clever engineering design touches that are easy to miss or underestimate. The frame is made from 6066 alloy heat treated to T6 strength. The pivot shafts are hard anodised and shielded. The German-made cartridge bearings have additional seal covers. The head tube takes a semi-integrated headset to keep the front end low but still strong. If you turn the bike upside down you’ll notice a length of weld on the down tube at the BB end – this is the result of Pace installing a hidden internal strengthening wall in this area for better chassis stiffness. You can even install Maxle rear dropouts if you so wish.

Dave Anderson: “Climbed beautifully with more traction than you could ask for and it felt really efficient and yet active. Initially, the front end felt quite high but it didn’t present any problems when going up – being able to lock the forks down helped. Very smooth when going down. Nicely balanced and happy to be thrown around. Enough travel and responsive handling to get you out of trouble when you’d bitten off more than you could chew. I’m not sure about the rear triangle drive side clearance – sticky gloop might be an issue – but still a very capable UK trail bike and probably the nicest full bouncer I’ve ridden.

Dave Clarke: “Soft but not soggy. No pedal grounding over lumpy singletrack under power. A very motorcrosser-like ‘floaty but controlled’ feel when riding fast over rocks. Very controlled, even when hitting high speed “Oh shite!” moments over rocky unexpectedness. The front end stayed nicely down on steep ups, back end stayed active without bob. Excellent back-end suckage climbing rocky steps. Swoopy trails make it come alive; it just upped and went. Want one.”

Benji Haworth: “Knowing all the time and effort that Pace had put into this, not to mention the fact that they’re very handy bike riders, I fully expected the RC405 to be a good bike. But I was blown away by just how good it was. In many ways it’s actually quite a hard bike to review because it was pretty much fl awless. It could munch all-day XC miles with the best of them with very little pedal kickback for a floating pivot bike. It was even very capable at tight ‘n’ twisty technical trails as well – often the undoing of otherwise decent full sussers.

“On swoopy trails was where it excelled – it felt taut and responsive, no power-delay, no suspension ‘trapdoor-ing’, but lots of grip and momentum-retaining absorption. Downhill it was more of an agile, sprightly descender than a thunderous juggernaut – although a quick stem, brakes and tyre swap at the end of our test period improved things a lot in this area.”

Overall: Adaptable and highly capable of pretty much everything. Not bad value either considering the time, effort and materials that have gone into it. A fantastic mountain bike for the UK.

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Comments (0)

    I am selling one (bought aug 2008) in the classifieds – check it out.

    Can they really justify the price when you compare the design to the £400/£500 lesser known Viper RC1.0 ?

    I ride a 2010 ‘405 and I have to say I love it. The only downside for me is that the paint finish is not that durable. I have been riding it regularly for about 4 months now and the paintwork chips and scuff really easily.

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