Almost by definition, bikes come with compromises. A stiffer bike might mean more responsive, but it’ll cost you comfort. A slacker one is often more fun on descents, but likely a pain climbing uphill. A big suspension allows you to bulldoze over rocks, but you’ll be stuck moving at the speed of a bulldozer all day. Despite what marketing gurus want you to believe, no two-wheeled steed can do it all; there’s always a give-and-take.
Short travel cross-country (XC) bikes — everything from 100mm to 120mm — are often the biggest culprits of this type of hyperbole. Tucked between trail bikes designed for technical singletrack and old-school hardtails made for flow trails, they are booming in popularity thanks in part to spin doctors who position them as one-bike-quiver-killers, able to handle anything. But very rarely is that true.
Pivot Cycles, on the other hand, stuck to their vision: making a rocket ship. When they launched the first Mach 4 SL in 2019, their full suspension lineup was missing one thing: a high end XC bike. Pivot claimed the Mach 4 SL could take podiums, but the results were a mixed bag. It was lighter and faster than its big siblings, but not otherworldly efficient. The new version remedies this, fully realizing their original vision.
The original Mach 4 SL took 300 grams off its predecessor, the Mach 429SL; this new bike follows suit, carving 300 more grams off. A size small World Cup build now weighs under 23 pounds including a dropper seatpost, putting it near the top of XC race bikes. Combine with a responsive feel, minimalistic design, and capable front and rear suspension, and you get a near perfect XC bike – a blend of speed, efficiency, and enough performance to hunt down podiums.
While Pivot’s main priority was making a rocket, the Mach 4 SL doesn’t fall too far off the pace in performance metrics like suspension, stiffness, or handling, either. The frame was completely redesigned, with a lengthened and slackened geometry and a revised DW-link suspension (which Pivot has used since its inception), helping maintain confidence on technical trails. Overall, it’s incredibly fast — and fun to ride.