Jamis Bicycles' Dragon Comp hardtail mountain bike turns the job of creating a mountain hardtail into an art form. While some companies have all but shunned steel for their frames and relegated them to the lowest bicycles in their lineups, Jamis has created a stunning hardtail that revels in its exquisitely built steel frame. Utilizing traditional craftsmanship with all the advantages of current bike building technology, Jamis has given this bike the most frictionless cable routing system possible, perfected the 853 steel welding process to provide for the strongest frame possible (853 steel becomes harder when it is welded, creating a nearly unbreakable frame.) One of the frames available is Jamis' 15th anniversary Team frameset, essentially the culmination of twenty years of off-road racing knowledge.
The Frame is made from Reynolds 631 and 853 chromoly steel, whose weld zones are stronger than other bikes, and thus allow for the tubes themselves to be drawn thinner. Torsional stiffness is increased 30% by means of heat treated chromoly rear stays and investment cast (lost wax) dropouts. The double-butted chromoly stays and reinforced head tube collars help, too, and all this adds up to a light, stiff frame with the sort of feel that can only be found in a steel frame. Available sizes for this frame are 13, 15, 17, 19, and 21 inch, and colors are gloss black and bone. All together, the bike weighs about 28 pounds.
The component set is equally impressive for a mountain hardtail under $1300, including such parts as a Shimano Shadow Deore XT rear derailleur, Deore LX 28.6mm front derailleur which is a top pull unit. These are controlled by Shimano Deore LX Rapidfire plus SL 27-speed shifters. The crankset and bottom bracket are Shimano, as well, utilizing the Deore M532 175mm crank and Deore integrated, respectively. The brakeset is a Shimano 485 with hydraulic disk brakes and 6" Center Lock rotors. The Easton EA30 MonkeyBar is the low rise type, and is 685mm wide, just enough to keep the whole rig under control down any hill. Easton also supplies the Stem and Seat post, while the saddle is a WTB Rocket V Comp with SL top and steel rails. The bike rolls on Shimano centerlock hubs, WTB speed Disc double wall rims, and WTB ExiWolf 2.1 tires
Riding the Jamis Dragon Comp mountain hardtail down a trail inspires a feeling of confidence and control that sometimes slips out of the grasp of aluminum bikes. While its weight isn't noticeably higher than an aluminum frame bike, the Jamis Dragon Comp feels sturdier, as though there's a bike with some substance beneath you that you can squirrel around logs without too much flex, and rocket off jumps knowing that there's enough flex to land comfortably. This bike is an A+ effort for Jamis and well worth the $1300 asking price for those riders who don't need titanium frames or the price associated with them, and like the feel of steel.
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