Bird Forge Stainless SLX custom build review
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Bird Forge Stainless SLX custom build review

Jan 20, 2024

Traditional tubing meets modern geometry

This competition is now closed

By Tom Marvin

Published: October 28, 2022 at 4:00 pm

This review has been published as part of our Headline Bikes test, where we put eight trend-setting mountain bikes for 2023 through their paces. Read more about the bikes setting the trend for the year ahead.

The Bird Forge was first launched in 2021, with the stainless steel version landing this autumn.

Bird has always designed its bikes towards the forefront of modern geometry, with longer reaches, steeper seat tube angles and slack-ish head angles. This is no exception.

Swinley-based Bird has gone to Californian manufacturers KVA for its stainless steel MS3 tubes.

Bird says the frame should feel pretty much the same on the trail as the Reynolds 853 Forge, but be more impact- and corrosion-resistant, especially with the clearcoat it applies.

The downside is this steel is expensive and hard to work with, reflected in the price.

The reach on my large frame is very long at 496mm, while the bottom bracket is almost scraping the ground at 302mm.

Frame details include ISCG-05 mounts, external cable routing, a nicely forged yoke to give impressive tyre clearance, plus two bottle cage bosses.

Bird allows you to customise the spec of your bike at the point of purchase. My build may not be cheap, but that's because the frame is dripping with components that leave little to complain about.

The Shimano SLX drivetrain on my test bike is improved by an XT shifter, the Hope-hubbed wheels come with torque caps pre-installed, and the 200mm dropper gets the saddle right out of the way. These are all neat touches that show Bird really considers its builds.

RockShox's new Pike Ultimate is one of the leading trail forks, and I love Formula's Cura brakes.

The only element of the spec that I wasn't sold on was the thin EXO-casing Maxxis tyres – I’d spec some burlier mountain bike tyres to make the most of the geometry.

Builds on this frame start at around £2,300.

No frame without rear suspension and 2.4in rubber at the back (rather than a currently-out-of-favour ‘plus-size’ tyre) is ever going to feel ‘smooth’. However, the classically skinny steel tubes on the Forge S give a slight respite compared to a stiff carbon or alloy frame.

Add in a long 1,200mm wheelbase, and the Bird pitches forward and back less over bumps than a shorter bike would, calming the ride in rough terrain. These two elements enable the Forge S to hold good speed off-road, without feeling like it's rattling your fillings.

In turns, the moderately slack 65.5-degree head angle (with a 140mm fork) combines well with the slammed BB. Your weight is dropped low below the wheel axles, encouraging you to lean the bike to carve corners.

The long front centre, mid-length chainstays (435mm) and low BB make the Forge sound as though it could be a handful in tighter terrain, but I never found it held me back. It's easy to pivot from side to side, and even encourages the odd cheeky Scandi flick.

Its biggest nemesis is thick, moderately spaced roots, which rob speed more than closely packed equivalents. Here, and over similarly spaced rocks, I felt the EXO-casing tyres were at risk.

Given the speed the Forge S inspires, I’d want to run an EXO+ casing as a minimum, or perhaps a tyre insert.

Bird's spec options change with availability; at the time of going to press, an EXO+ Assegai would be a (slower-rolling) option. At least DT Swiss's broad EX 511 rims offer decent support to the tyres.

Down steep descents, the new Pike's spring and damping give great support as your weight is pitched forwards. While the front wheel doesn't look miles ahead of the bar, the Bird never felt nervous as I tipped it into more precipitous terrain.

The firm bite and ample power of the dual-piston Cura brakes boost confidence further.

On paper, the 75.2-degree seat tube angle, measured at my pedalling height, doesn't sound steep, but with the fork sagged, the seat tube becomes more upright, rather than slackening as it would tend to on a full-suspension mountain bike.

As such, it puts you in a good position over the BB. Along with the lack of suspension bob, this helps the bike ascend decently.

Bird's new Forge is a very capable hardtail mountain bike, with well-considered modern geometry that delivers stellar handling.

The Forge is lavished with high-quality components, but the tyres specced with my test bike struggle to keep up with the pace and there's no getting away from the high price that accompanies that stainless steel KVA MS3 frame.

Senior technical editor

Tom Marvin is a technical editor at BikeRadar.com and MBUK magazine. He has a particular focus on mountain bikes, but spends plenty of time on gravel bikes, too. Tom has written for BikeRadar, MBUK and Cycling Plus, and was previously technical editor of What Mountain Bike magazine. He is also a regular presenter on BikeRadar's YouTube channel and the BikeRadar podcast. With more than twenty years of mountain biking experience, and nearly a decade of testing mountain and gravel bikes, Tom has ridden and tested thousands of bikes and products, from super-light XC race bikes through to the most powerful brakes on the market. Outside of testing bikes, Tom competes in a wide range of mountain bike races, from multi-day enduros through to 24-hour races in the depths of the Scottish winter – pushing bikes, components and his legs to their limits. He's also worked out that shaving your legs saves 8 watts, while testing aerodynamics in a wind tunnel. When not riding he can be found at the climbing wall, in his garden or cooking up culinary delights.