Mongoose Canaan Comp Team Bike 08

The Mongoose Canaan Comp 08 is part of Mongoose's Canaan line of cross country
bikes, these bikes are smooth and agile bikes with a strong frame design that
helps to provide strong pedaling performance. The Canaan Comp features a Shimano
components list that helps make this a responsive bike that has room to grow as
your riding skills improve.
- FreeDrive XC/Enduro 3.9" (100 mm) travel, butted alloy frame
- Fox Float R rear shock, air spring rebound adjust
- Rock Shox Tora 318 Air, 100 mm travel, alloy steerer, air spring, Motion
Control, rebound and lock out
- Shimano Deore crankset, hollow forged 2pc, 22/32/44T alloy
- Crank Brothers Smarty clipless
- Shimano Deore XT rear, Deore front derailleur
- Shimano Deore Deore Rapidfire
- Shimano CS-HG50-9 11-32 cassette
- WTB SpeedDisc XC laced to Shimano disc hubs
- Hayes Stroker Trail, hydraulic disc brakes, 160 mm rotors
- Easton EA30 Lo Rise handlebar
- WTB Rocket V Comp saddle
See the bike online at JensonUSA
Reviewed at BikeRadar.com

Named after the legendary US 24-hour race, the
Canaan is designed for caning round technical trails for hour after
hour, but its supple high traction suspension and surefooted handling
make it serious fun whatever kind of riding you’re into.
Ride
Taking
out a summer tyred race bike in trail conditions better suited to an
ark, we were expecting to end up in the river that runs along our test
trails.
Actually though, we had a total blast.
True, the
tyres were as likely to go sideways or completely swap ends as go
forward, but the Mongoose surfed the slides astonishingly well. The
slack (for a racer) steering angles help it hold a line when lack of
traction or tiredness is taking its toll, and the short stem lets it
snap react to corner changes or slide catches.
The Freedrive back
end glues the rear wheel down incredibly well, powering us up climbs
that no comparable bike managed despite far grippier rubber and/or
lower weight. It’s really smooth over small stuff too, making the
Canaan a comfy all day cruiser.
The only downside is a slight
softness in power transmission that you’ll notice on smooth climbs, but
flicking the ProPedal lever across firms the shock up enough to erase
it.
The fast rolling tyres and the breathing room in the frame easily negated the effect of the extra weight.
The
Fox shock and the way the rear end moves also means it sucks up bigger
and squarer hits far better than most 100mm (3.9in) bikes.
You’ll
still need to pick your lines, because the fork needs nursing through
the big stuff, but it’s more controlled and coherent feeling than a lot
of ‘race bikes with riser bars’ we’ve tried.
While it’s
impressively confident and fun on technical trails, its naturally fast
feel hasn’t been lost by budgeting. In fact, it gives such
effort-encouraging posture and speed sustain that we pushed it so hard
we puked trying to beat our best laps on timed runs.
Whether we
faced a long, lung busting climb or a slick, steps, roots, drops and
dirty gulley-infested descent, the Canaan had the same attitude: “Don’t
back off, just go for it and see what we can manage.” Smooth,
surefooted suspension, sweetly balanced handling and excellent brake
control meant we had a huge amount of fun ‘having a go’, and that’s our
favourite benchmark for deciding test winners.
Frame
The
Canaan chassis is in its second year, and the 08 model has a few
strengthening plates added to pass the latest safety standards. This
toughening up means it’s not the lightest frame around, but we’re going
to see a lot of currently featherweight bikes suddenly getting a lot
heavier soon.
The top spec Canaan Team is still down near 25lbs
so it retains its ample upgrade potential, which in turn boosts its
core value.
Otherwise, the proven layout stays the same, with a
generously long and low top tube stretch and similarly low slung rear
subframe separated by the complex ‘knot’ of the Freedrive system.
The
various links, bearings and bits mean the chainset acts
semi-independently of what either end is doing. From a practical point
of view it’s a bit of a bugger to clean, and the gear cables need
regular lubing to stop front wheel spray seizing them. But besides
that, we’ve never had problems with Freedrive bearings and mud
clearance is pretty good.
Components
The occasionally
spiky Tora fork is the only obvious trade off in spec versus the
hardtails but you certainly won’t get anything better on a £1,000
susser. It’d be our first upgrade, but it’s a reasonable weight and
super reliable for now.
The Float RP23 shock is a real score though, giving wide ranging compression control for super accurate suspension tuning.
The
combination of Shimano Deore XT Shadow rear mech and Deore transmission
is also a superb choice for the money, and we’re really impressed with
the modulation and power of Hayes’s new Stroker brakes.
Wheels are a robust long running set, and you even get an Easton handlebar.
View the Canaan Comp Team Bike '08 Here