Manitou have made the FS again. No really.

by 31

A statement piece – a concept bike, if you will – that is equal parts nostalgia and innovative passion project of a few cycling industry insiders made into a reality: Manitou FS II.

Press Release in full…

LOOKING BACKWARDS TO SEE FORWARD: MANITOU FS II (2025+)

The bike of tomorrow built standing on the shoulders of MTB origins

Those of us who have followed the MTB movement from its earliest years can recall how Manitou lead the charge on the application of front suspension for mountain bikes. Having done a great deal of work smoothing out the leading edge of the Mountainbike the brand of the dark red M also pioneered the concept of a softer trailing end as it brought about some of the industry’s first iterations of rear suspension. For over 20 years Manitou has innovated solutions to create a complete #scienceofsmooth platform, beginning with the FS and continuously innovating newer, more sophisticated and higher performance products.

While Manitou has a long and storied history of fantastic and innovative rear suspension solutions and the full suspension Mountainbike is the choice of the majority the groundwork to a smoother experience in the saddle was laid by the Manitou FS project. The origins of mountainbiking were a lot less smooth than what would be the case after some significant evolution within the sport. There was no talk of hardtails but rather hard athletes who resembled medieval knights with as much protection and perhaps even a similar fear of what laid ahead of them in competition. The advent of the first suspension fork by Doug Bradbury under the Manitou name in 1990 was not only disruptive but would prove to change the face of off-road cycling forever. One year later, Bradbury made what would be an equally disruptive development in creating the first serious and functional full suspension MTB. While appreciated at the time, little was it known that the Manitou FS would be the bike that changed everything for the future of MTB to come.

At Manitou, our commitment to pushing the boundaries of mountain biking innovation began in the early 1990s, and one of our proudest achievements was the introduction of the Manitou FS full suspension bike in 1993. At the time, full suspension designs were still emerging, and we knew we had the chance to make a groundbreaking impact on the sport.

Building on our heritage in suspension tech- nology, pioneered by Doug Bradbury, we had already gained a reputation for high-performance suspension forks like the Manitou I. But with the Manitou FS, we took things to the next level, combining front and rear suspension to create a bike capable of handling the toughest, most technical trails.

The FS’s monocoque aluminum frame was a major innovation—lightweight yet strong, it brought aerospace engineering principles to mountain biking. Paired with our elastomer rear suspension, the FS gave riders improved control, comfort, and confidence on rugged terrain. Though elastomers were cutting-edge at the time, this early suspension system laid the groundwork for the more advanced technologies we use today.

The Manitou FS wasn’t just a bike—it was a statement. It helped legitimize full suspension as a real choice for both trail riding and racing. While full suspension was controversial back then, we knew the future of mountain biking demanded it. Our belief was validated as the FS became a sought-after model for serious riders, helping to shape the future of off-road performance.

Though we’ve evolved our suspension technology, the Manitou FS remains a pivotal part of our history. It helped set the standard for innovation in mountain biking and pushed the limits of what riders could achieve on the toughest trails.

In an effort to celebrate not only the origins of the brand but also an innovation that changed the face of an entire sport, Manitou has partnered with Gamux, Pinion, Gates, Schwalbe, Hayes, ProTaper and Reynolds to create a forward thinking, modern twist on the original Manitou FS bike. The thought was that while the nostalgic motives for recreating such a bike certainly hold some value, examining the past can also be a conduit to building a better future. Employing lessons learned from such a long and storied history with the same passion and desire to innovate ensures that the future of MTB is every bit as exciting as the wild ride that has brought us to present day. The Manitou FS II project set out to incorporate the most advanced components and solutions of tomorrow on a platform that has roots in the iconic design that kicked off the revolution of the full suspension mountain bike.

THE FRAME

The relatively small in terms of size but huge in terms of innovation, engineering prowess and passion (a fitting and coherent match to the Doug Bradbury operation of year’s ago) made Gamux the perfect match to develop the frame for such a project. The Swiss frame builders run a smart engineering firm, developing designs not only for their own frames but for a long list of A-list clients in the cycling industry as well. For the FS II project the Swiss engineers combined cutting-edge production and engineering technologies such as CNC machining and bonding with the finest raw materials available to create yet another Gamux frame ahead of its time. From CAD design and FEM optimization to manufacturing components from 7075-T651 aluminium on a 5-axis CNC machine to redesigning the fork lowers, the frame build was equal parts artistry equal parts scientist.

THE BUILD

Building the frame of the future required the incorporation of the drivetrain of the future and as such, the Manitou FS II proudly boasts a Pinion C1.12 gearbox as well as a Gates CDX belt drive. The inclusion of said technologies conditioned heavily the design of the frame, and the overall packaged ushered in a great deal of performance benefits (admittedly more evident on modern frames with modern rear suspension) in the form of lower center of grav- ity for better handling, protected gearing and significant reductions in unsprung weight. To ensure that even the smallest details of the bike were coherent with creating the most advanced overall build possible, the finishing spec is the stuff of Dream Build videos the likes of what we see on Gee Milner’s channel. The Manitou Mattoc fork, perhaps the most versatile fork available with its 110-150mm travel range is the veritable jack of all trades that excels in all it does thanks to its versatile specificity. The lightest and stiffest solution in its class the Mattoc can perform flawlessly anywhere from XC to light enduro and everywhere inbetween… the fork of tomorrow that takes lessons from the origins of MTB, when there was but one discipline: mountainbiking.

The rear suspension replicates the iconic Manitou FS original design but does so using a Manitou Junit fork with custom CNC lowers and retuned internals. The youth fork might be for smaller riders, but it is packed with the same internals, technologies and performance benefits as found in adult sized forks and as such made for the perfect addition to this conventional/unconventional modern/retro build.

While the suspension ensures the smoothest ride possible the build incorporates the latest and greatest 309 Enduro wheels from Reynolds which boast not only unmatched efficiency and performance but offers just the right amount of vertical compliance as well to ensure handling not found elsewhere. Those hoops can also count on the finest rubber to meet the road via the most advanced Schwalbe tires in circulation… light years ahead of anything imaginable in the years of the first Manitou FS.

In yet another addition of a brand that harkens back to the origins of our sport, the modern/retro build sports the Hayes Dominion brakes in their limited edition purple colorway. Said colorway is a hat tip to the origins of the brand, which coincidentally launched the original hydraulic disc brakes for mtb in addition to shaping the standards and designs for the industry as a whole for years to follow. The original logo boasted elements of purple in the logo and was seen atop the best athletes to grace the trails in its day…fast forward to 2024 and the same is true for this hue of purple.

To finish out the build the finest finishing kit available was used from both Wolf Tooth for grips, pedals, spacers and more to ProTaper… the bar that started it all.

As we reflect on the past, we not only see where we’ve come from but also catch a glimpse of the future of mountain biking. From the Manitou rear-facing arch to the standards Hayes set for brakes, and the near-universal adoption of full suspension, today’s riders— whether in XC, DH, or anything in between—are enjoying a better experience in the saddle, hands down. They ride on the technology of tomorrow, built upon lessons from the past for an incredible present.

hayesbicycles.com/manitou

Singletrack Weekly Word

Sports Newsletter of the Year finalist at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2024. Find out why our newsletter is different and give it a go.

Orange Switch 6er. Stif Squatcher. Schwalbe Magic Mary Purple Addix front. Maxxis DHR II 3C MaxxTerra rear. Coil fan. Ebikes are not evil. I have been a writer for nigh on 20 years, a photographer for 25 years and a mountain biker for 30 years. I have written countless magazine and website features and route guides for the UK mountain bike press, most notably for the esteemed and highly regarded Singletrackworld. Although I am a Lancastrian, I freely admit that West Yorkshire is my favourite place to ride. Rarely a week goes by without me riding and exploring the South Pennines.

More posts from Ben

Home Forums Manitou have made the FS again. No really.

Viewing 31 posts - 1 through 31 (of 31 total)
  • Manitou have made the FS again. No really.
  • 5
    Rubber_Buccaneer
    Full Member

    Looks like there has been a horrific telepod accident involving a 90s Manitou and Pace RC100

    2
    tall_martin
    Full Member

    There aren’t many bikes I don’t want to ride.

    But I’d be keen not to ride that bike.

    1
    nuke
    Full Member

    Was it actually a competition where they get some primary school kids to draw mountain bikes, then the prize was manitou would build the favourite design?

    1
    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    I so wanted one of those 90’s FS Manitou bikes. I think Mountain Goat licensed the design too, I remember reading a review / publicity piece on it in either MTB Pro or MBi.

    /rose tinted specs

    #ThoseWereTheDays

    1
    cookeaa
    Full Member

    You’d have thought that if you were having a custom frame made (especially to commemorate a bit of an icon) you could spec’ the headtube the length you wanted and not need to run 2″ of spacers…

    Rigger boots, flat cap, grease applied with an old copydex brush, I think we’ve hit peak hipster bike mechanic…

    nickc
    Full Member

    Not many bikes are genuinely eye wateringly ugly, but that is eye wateringly ugly. Disturbing

    7
    somafunk
    Full Member

    I had a Manitou HT back in 1994…….always wanted a FS though.

    Nope… I lied. I had a Marin Indian Fire Trail, but I pretended it was a Manitou

    1
    reeksy
    Full Member

    …Manitou lead the charge…

    Even the spellchecker in MS Edge has picked that up [Facepalm emoji]

     

    I actually quite like the looks. Better than that E-Cotic thing.

     

     

    fahzure
    Full Member

    Direct to wallhanger. Could have spent that £20K building trails.

    captain_bastard
    Free Member

    Marin licensed the original design, I know I had one, a Pine Mountain FRS. The concept was good, simple short travel, enough to provide some comfort but without the complication of (what were at the time) unreliable shocks.  The execution however… required constant fetteling and attention to access the meagre travel on offer

    1
    matt_outandabout
    Free Member

    That’s. Umm. Challenging in the looks department.

    matt_outandabout
    Free Member

    And as above, you’re commissioning a custom frame, so why diddy headtube and all sorts of odd angles and spacings?

    2
    Roly
    Full Member

    Look how they massacred my boy !

    twistedpencil
    Full Member

    A friend had one of those when I was studying A Levels.  It was what got me interested in mtb beyond messing around in the local woods.

    I remember it being eye wateringly expensive back then, and not significantly more capable than my Raleigh Moonrun!

    3
    mogrim
    Full Member

    The “by Ben Haworth” byline is a bit of a lie, isn’t it?

    1
    sharkattack
    Full Member

    It looks better than the new Cotic and I’d rather ride this than anything designed for tarmac.

    Just give me a silver suit and RoboCop helmet.

    radbikebro
    Full Member

    I actually quite like the looks of that – probably just the purple and chrome more than anything else but I’d definitely have it in my garage.

    mert
    Free Member

    I i wonder if it’ll crack as effectively as the originals?

    5
    BadlyWiredDog
    Full Member

    I don’t have the energy to wade through that extraordinarily verbose press release you’ve lazily published in full. Could you not just have, you know, summarised it rather than inflicting a load of near-unreadable garbage on your readership?

     

     

     

    wbo
    Free Member

    If it’s like the old ones the headtube will fall off anyway, then you can add a custom one.

    dirkpitt74
    Full Member

    So the only time he uses a torque wrench is to put the rotors on?

    I don’t mind the looks too much – but they should have just used higher rise bars.

    No dropper?- I’m out…..

    And what’s with the odd dual seat post clamps?

    3
    tenburner
    Full Member

    Impressive word salad

    desperatebicycle
    Full Member

     Could have spent that £20K building trails.

    I don’t think that’s the idea of that Yootoob channel. I suspect they make a bit of cash from it and use it to do another grim bike build, purely for entertainment value. Fact that their bikes divide opinion shows it works. They did a completely gold bike build didn’t they? That was the last time it came to my notice anyway.

    chrismac
    Full Member

    You have to ask why they bothered and who wanted to spend the money to design and develop it.

    beaker
    Full Member

    I’d happily have the one from the nineties to go with my RTS, but that thing up there is awful.

    Gunz
    Free Member

    That press release gave me a headache, do they ever read these things back to themselves?

    bigrich
    Full Member

    “industry insiders”

     

    what industry? cos its not bikes.

     

    BadlyWiredDog
    Full Member

    I don’t think that’s the idea of that Yootoob channel.

    I vaguely remember reading a piece about the whole Dream Builds channel a while back. From – hazy – memory, Gee Milner, who makes the things, did the first one on a vague whim and was mildly astonished when it went viral and the rest – to paraphrase a lot of waffle – is history and also, I think, co-promoted with anyone who’ll pay him to feature their bike/frame in one of his videos, though I’m just guessing at the last bit, but you know, capitalism, the internet etc.

    I guess the appeal is that they combine a sort of zen-like calm to the watcher. In reality the endlessly smooth process is utterly at variants to most attempts at building up a modern frame, where you’re endlessly trying to thread partly bled, poorly sealed hydraulic brake hose through a labyrinthine internal routing maze before haplessly connecting the wrong hose to the wrong lever then realising the whole thing routes through the headset anyway, or something like that.

    If you were making a parody video – which it’s absolutely ripe for – you’d ‘wake up’ at the end to find the reality of a load of expensive, semi-butchered components strewn across the workshop floor with the mechanic banging his head against the wall in frustration.

    Also, the thing where he slathers most of the contents of a tube of grease onto the headset bearings. Do people really use that much?

    boco
    Full Member

    Crikey, let’s hope they don’t bring back the Prst1!!!

    jkomo
    Full Member

    Why do you grease the outside of a bearing. Honest question, cos aren’t they the bits that stay still, or is it to keep water out.
    Headset and spacer choice is bad. It’s as far as I’ve got.

    mick_r
    Full Member

    Is it grease or anti-seize? (Shimano anti seize also has a brush in the cap) I sometimes use a very light smear of anti-seize / anti-fretting compound to stop non-press fit bearings creaking in the frame / housing.

    Looks like it was a fun overall project so why not, but I’d be more interested in seeing a video of the frame being designed and made rather than just some dull final assembly.

Viewing 31 posts - 1 through 31 (of 31 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.