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The new Pivot Switchblade is shown in studio profile. A rider takes a jump on the bike in the background. Tech specs calling out front/rear travel of 160mm and 142mm, respectively, trail and enduro discipline, and wheel size of 29 inches are displayed at the bottom.

Master All Mountains

 

  Pivot’s bestselling, most versatile MTB has always unlocked more trails than its specs seem to allow. The newest version rivals even the Firebird on lawless, double-black descents while remaining snappy on the pedals and planted on the way up like a Trail 429. We’re in blissful disbelief at how good this new Switchblade is to ride. Let’s get to the details.  

Shop Switchblade
A closeup of the rear triangle and the rear shock.

Sweet Spot

 

First thing our eyes go to is travel, and the new model is unchanged from its predecessor—and for good reason. The 160/142 combo is dynamite at soaking up the ragbag of trail clutter you’ll find out there without feeling like you’re over-biking it. New is a retuned DW link that allows DH-like control in high-speed hits and confident traction on climbs. 

The front triangle and fork.

Modern Geo, The Pivot Way

 

Pivot takes its time with bike design. A hands-on, butts-in-the-saddle approach going through 2–3 frame versions resulted in the new Switchblade’s specific geo. It’s got the longer, slacker, steeper format of modern rides but with Pivot’s stamp on it. The seat tube angle is referenced from where the rider sits (not the post clamp), and smaller steps in swingarm length ensure ride quality is perfect across the size range. 

A closeup of the flip chip print on the rear triangle.

The Flip Chip Mix 

 

Switchblade is an MTBer’s MTB. It ships equipped with 29ers, but should you wanna get funky, it’s ready to swap over to a mixed-wheel setup with the flip of a chip. Switch between High and Low settings to alter geometry to suit your preferred setup and the trails you ride.