Tech

First Look: Specialized Chisel Dual-suspension

Words by Kylie Hanekom | Images Raymond Cox

By Press Office · 32 comments

I’ve become well acquainted with the Specialized Epic and Epic EVO over the years, and my first reaction when I was asked to ride the new Chisel alloy full suspension was intrigue. I’ve become so spoiled with my carbon equipment that I wasn’t sure what to expect from a modern aluminium, mid-level bike.

Having preached “it’s not about the bike” for many years, in the name of investigation I headed to my original home trails in Tokai to rally this new offering. Bigger travel bikes aside, I think the last time I rode a dual suspension alloy frame in Tokai was with my Specialized Rumor back in 2015.

I’m so happy I did. It served as a much-needed reminder to me that bicycles don’t need to be full factory racing spec to be fun, and fast. Here are my first impressions after a few laps of ‘Vasbyt‘:

What’s new?

The obvious answer is that the new Chisel moves away from the hardtail format and is now a full suspension mountain bike. The kinematics and geometry have been borrowed from the new Epic 8 which launched earlier this year. The new Chisel offers 110mm rear travel, paired with a 120mm fork.

Notable features include low weight as a result of the D’Aluisio Smartweld process used in the frame production, and a single piece hydroformed seat tube that integrates the seat tube pivot, main pivot, and bottom bracket shell. A flex stay design, unusual for an alloy bike, also helps keep the weight down.

I tested the Chisel Comp Shimano build which comes specced with Shimano SLX 12-speed groupset. A RockShox Deluxe Select+ shock paired with the RockShox SID 120mm fork with a Rush damper takes care of suspension duty. A TranzX dropper post comes standard on all models and serves as a good indicator of this bike’s capability on the trail: it shreds. In terms of rubber: a Ground Control 2.35″ Control Casing T5 on the front is paired with a Fast Trak 2.35″ Control T5 on the rear, offering an excellent pairing for rolling speed and grip on most South African trails. A Power Saddle Sport and Specialized Trail Grips complete the finish. The claimed weight for the medium size out of the box is 12.86 kg.

On the Trail

The Epic 8 heritage is noticeable immediately in the pedalling efficiency and the sense of contained energy the Chisel gives you the moment you turn a pedal. Like its sibling, the Epic 8, the Chisel feels like a coiled spring just waiting to turn your watts into forward momentum. Whether it is the light weight, or the kinematics or the way in which the alloy has been deployed in the frame design, or more than likely a combination of these factors: the Chisel doesn’t feel like a typical alloy bike. It has none of that slight energy-sapping ‘give’ that I’d previously associate with the material.

The first word that come to mind was “lively”. The Chisel felt snappy and responsive and ready to tackle the climbs. I love a bike that gives back what you put in, and the Chisel had this in spades. I enjoyed weaving through the rocks, and pushing out of the corners, up the Faerie Garden trail. Much like the Epic 8, the front wheel goes precisely where you put it, and pops with ease.

Pointed downhill I immediately felt comfortable, and found myself seeking out trail features to play with. The Chisel handles with the precision of an XC weapon, and the capability I’ve come to expect from modern “down-country” bikes. I appreciate that, out of the box the contact points didn’t need to be changed. I’d happily roll the dice on a big day out with the standard saddle, grips, and tyres.

I’d need to give it more time in the saddle, but my initial impression was that the Chisel is race ready. I’d happily tackle a local marathon or stage race and expect the bike to hold its own.

Local Pricing and Availability

Stock is available at launch. The Chisel FS Comp retails for an MSRP of R59K, and the Chisel FS for R49K.

Chat to your nearest Specialized retailer, or for more information head to specialized.com


To find out more about the design and development of the Chisel, take a look at the full press release here:


The All-New Chisel

The Lightest, Fastest Alloy Full Suspension Bike in the World

With advanced kinematics and geometry from its big sibling, the Epic 8, combined with cutting-edge D’Aluisio Smartweld technology, the Chisel mountain bike delivers performance you can feel—whether you’re racing “between the tape” or ripping solo hot laps on local trails.

Lightweight | D’Aluisio Smartweld

Thanks to D’Aluisio Smartweld, the Chisel boasts the lightest aluminum XC frameset in its class. Traditional alloy frame construction joins tubes with welds at the highest stress point. D’Aluisio Smartweld delivers the highest strength at the lowest weight by using hydroformed tube junctions that allow us to move the joint away from the area of the highest stress and create a “valley” for the weld bead to lay in.

One-Piece Seat Tube/Bottom Bracket

The first of its kind, Chisel shaves extra material and weight with a one-piece hydroformed seat tube that integrates the seat tube pivot, main pivot, and BB shell. On a more traditional bike, the seat tube is typically just a “tube” with pivots and BB shell welded on.

Killing it Softly

Our D’Aluisio Smartweld technology not only makes Chisel the lightest bike in its class, it also delivers previously impossible handling and ride quality. Each highly manipulated frame tube boasts continuously varied wall thicknesses and shaping that deliver stiffness where you need it – for efficiency – and ride-smoothing compliance where you want it – for comfort and optimal control.

Capability

Capability, Dialed to 11

The high performance pedigree of Chisel can be traced directly to the Epic 8, our World Cup race machine. DNA from the Epic 8, like advanced suspension kinematics, Ride Dynamics tuned suspension, and progressive geometry honed on technical World Cup courses can all be found in the Chisel, making it more than capable of handling varied terrain with confidence and speed.

Smoother Is Faster

We engineered a flex stay rear end for class-leading suspension performance, while eliminating the extra weight and maintenance associated with pivots required in a traditional design. More common on carbon bikes, extensive field and lab testing prove that Chisel has achieved the impossible—the efficiency, control, and light-weight of a flex stay design, in advanced alloy.

Spec Callouts

  • Cockpit: 29mm rise bars
  • Fork: 120mm travel RockShox fork
  • Shock:  110mm of rear wheel travel (metric 190×40)
  • Dropper: Dropper posts on all models
  • Brakes: SRAM Level T Brakes
  • Front Tire: Ground Control 2.35 
  • Rear Tire: Fast Trak 2.35

Geometric Capability

Progressive Geometry for Modern XC and Downcountry
Chisel’s progressive geometry delivers technical terrain capability alongside fast and efficient climbing and acceleration. The generous cockpit centers the rider on the bike for optimal traction and cornering control. The low bottom bracket and slack head tube keep things composed in the rough.

  • Head Tube Angle: 66.5 
  • Reach: 445mm 
  • Chainstays Length: 438mm
  • Seat Tube Angle: 75.5 degree
  • Bottom Bracket Height: 336mm 
  • *(Size medium) 

Engineered to Disappear – Specialized Ride Dynamics

While you were cutting school to ride your bike, some kids stayed in science class. A few of those kids rode their bikes, too. They grew up to be members of Specialized Science Club, creating evidence-based performance for riders. The Ride Dynamics team is an elite part of the Specialized Science Club that relentlessly focuses on holistically developing the chassis, geometry, kinematics, spring curves, and damping performance of our bikes to achieve a singular, elevated ride. A ride so good, so intuitive, that it disappears underneath you, leaving nothing but the pure exhilaration of the riding experience.

Two Styles, One Goal

How did we make the Chisel equally at home on the race course and technical trails? Well, its lightweight and efficient kinematics help it fly up the climbs, while its suspension and geometry make it a capable, downcountry weapon.

Efficiency

Chisel pedals with incredible efficiency thanks to the utilization of geometry and kinematics that went into our World Cup racing Epic 8 platform. The steep seat tube positions the rider in the optimal pedaling position, and honed anti-squat reduces pedal-bob. Put it together and Chisel translates every watt applied to the pedals into maximum forward motion.

Balance of Power

The leverage rate and anti-squat on Chisel were designed together to give the balance of suspension performance and pedaling efficiency. As a performance benchmark, it sits between the new Epic 8 and the previous Epic EVO in terms of overall kinematic profile. Not too race-y, not too rowdy. Just right.

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Comments

hansolo

Jun 19, 2024, 5:44 AM

Nice bike and good to see big companies still trying to deliver better "cheaper" bikes. I wonder if they will do a Chisel Evo?

Headshot

Jun 19, 2024, 5:51 AM

Well done Spesh. Perhaps feeling the pinch a bit as the punters run out of cash for their more exorbitant offerings? It's almost affordable 😉
AndreJvVZA

Jun 19, 2024, 5:54 AM

👏👏👏👏👏👌
Hilton.

Jun 19, 2024, 8:01 AM

I like this a lot! It looks so much like the Epic Evo 2023, or the new 2024 Epic 8. Great geometry, clean design, very balanced spec components, and a really attractive price (compared to "entry level" carbon dual susses these days). Great job!
mecheng89

Jun 19, 2024, 8:17 AM

What a well priced bike. If I was in the market, I'd consider this one heavily.

DJuice

Jun 19, 2024, 8:19 AM

That Pink and Yellow frame set on the international sites!
Irvin85

Jun 19, 2024, 8:54 AM

A bike built for South African racing at an acceptable price.  R30k more to unlock a carbon frame in the Specialized EPIC comp. 

This bike looks great at R59k. I wonder what the weight difference will be between this and the Epic comp. 

DieselnDust

Jun 19, 2024, 8:58 AM

3 hours ago, hansolo said:

Nice bike and good to see big companies still trying to deliver better "cheaper" bikes. I wonder if they will do a Chisel Evo?

You mean a 130F / 120 rear version?

chisel is already 120/110

woukdnt that eat into stump jumper territory 

hansolo

Jun 19, 2024, 10:16 AM

1 hour ago, DieselnDust said:

You mean a 130F / 120 rear version?

chisel is already 120/110

woukdnt that eat into stump jumper territory 

Yes, 130F/120R would be amazing.

The Epic 8 Evo is specced like that.

Lynnwood Cyclery

Jun 19, 2024, 12:45 PM

6 hours ago, Irvin85 said:

A bike built for South African racing at an acceptable price.  R30k more to unlock a carbon frame in the Specialized EPIC comp. 

This bike looks great at R59k. I wonder what the weight difference will be between this and the Epic comp. 

Epic 8 Comp (M) Comes in at 12.27kg

Chisel Suspension (M) Comes in at 13.96kg

Thermophage

Jun 19, 2024, 1:13 PM

27 minutes ago, Lynnwood Cyclery said:

Epic 8 Comp (M) Comes in at 12.27kg

Chisel Suspension (M) Comes in at 13.96

If possible, a FAR more useful comparison would be frameset mass of the two, as a lot the of mass difference can come from componentry and not only from the frameset :)

Irvin85

Jun 19, 2024, 1:36 PM

22 minutes ago, Thermophage said:

If possible, a FAR more useful comparison would be frameset mass of the two, as a lot the of mass difference can come from componentry and not only from the frameset :)

  • Specialized S-Works Epic 8 (FACT 12m) – 1,795g
  • Specialized Epic 8 (FACT 11m) – 1,965g
  • Specialized Chisel – 2,720g
  • Scott Spark Alloy – 3,290g
  • Trek Top Fuel Alloy – 3,740g

https://flowmountainbike.com/post-all/2025-specialized-chisel-alloy-xc-bike/#:~:text=a single structure.-,Specialized Chisel weight,that we're aware of.

 

From Specialized website the Epic S-Works 8 is at 2.21kg

Thermophage

Jun 19, 2024, 1:38 PM

1 minute ago, Irvin85 said:
  • Specialized S-Works Epic 8 (FACT 12m) – 1,795g
  • Specialized Epic 8 (FACT 11m) – 1,965g
  • Specialized Chisel – 2,720g
  • Scott Spark Alloy – 3,290g
  • Trek Top Fuel Alloy – 3,740g

https://flowmountainbike.com/post-all/2025-specialized-chisel-alloy-xc-bike/#:~:text=a single structure.-,Specialized Chisel weight,that we're aware of.

Shot, will help ppl compare better somewhat, but seems those are claimed masses only. Would be nice for a chop with stock to put a few on a scale sometime for a real world comparison :)

Irvin85

Jun 19, 2024, 1:41 PM

Just now, Thermophage said:

Shot, will help ppl compare better somewhat, but seems those are claimed masses only. Would be nice for a chop with stock to put a few on a scale sometime for a real world comparison :)

I was thinking the same thing. It makes one wonder if you really want to fork out the additional 30k for a carbon bike when you save 800grams only, that you can "save" by drinking one bear less the night before. 

Lynnwood Cyclery

Jun 19, 2024, 3:14 PM

1 hour ago, Thermophage said:

If possible, a FAR more useful comparison would be frameset mass of the two, as a lot the of mass difference can come from componentry and not only from the frameset :)

 

1 hour ago, Thermophage said:

Shot, will help ppl compare better somewhat, but seems those are claimed masses only. Would be nice for a chop with stock to put a few on a scale sometime for a real world comparison :)

Next Service of a Pro, Expert or Comp That leaves us with a Frameset with Shock only we'll Put it on a scale. 😉

BrentCGP

Jun 19, 2024, 6:01 PM

2 hours ago, Lynnwood Cyclery said:

 

Next Service of a Pro, Expert or Comp That leaves us with a Frameset with Shock only we'll Put it on a scale. 😉

Im emailing around the planet looking for the chisel frame only in a medium. No luck. Organise one for us 🥹

 

DieselnDust

Jun 19, 2024, 6:24 PM

A severe drop in sales is all it took to produce a reasonably light alloy frame. I’d love to see what this builds. Up to with a XO1 transmission and select + suspension 

DuncanDoughnuts

Jun 20, 2024, 7:15 AM

17 hours ago, Irvin85 said:
  • Specialized S-Works Epic 8 (FACT 12m) – 1,795g
  • Specialized Epic 8 (FACT 11m) – 1,965g
  • Specialized Chisel – 2,720g
  • Scott Spark Alloy – 3,290g
  • Trek Top Fuel Alloy – 3,740g

https://flowmountainbike.com/post-all/2025-specialized-chisel-alloy-xc-bike/#:~:text=a single structure.-,Specialized Chisel weight,that we're aware of.

 

From Specialized website the Epic S-Works 8 is at 2.21kg

That frame is only 100G heavier than my Ibis Mojo C in large.   should be easy to get a 12kg bike

ajnkzn

Jun 20, 2024, 7:28 AM

https://m.pinkbike.com/news/first-ride-specialized-chisel-fs-aluminum-done-light.html
 

Mike Kazimer built one up to 11.8kg. 
 

Stupid light wheels but some other spec choices aren’t XC weight so 12kg definitely doable on a frame up build. 

Danger Dassie

Jun 20, 2024, 7:45 AM

Epic move 😋 … the Chisel hardtail is a firm favourite for for many, so seeing an FS version is encouraging. There’s also the alloy Crux. 

Although not without precedent, back in 2015 there was the Epic Comp alloy which ticked all the boxes and was apparently approx 800-900grams heavier than the S Works frameset. Comparative pricing was +- 38k versus 92k

https://www.treadmtb.co.za/bikes-specialized-epic-comp/

DieselnDust

Jun 20, 2024, 9:06 AM

1 hour ago, ajnkzn said:

https://m.pinkbike.com/news/first-ride-specialized-chisel-fs-aluminum-done-light.html
 

Mike Kazimer built one up to 11.8kg. 
 

Stupid light wheels but some other spec choices aren’t XC weight so 12kg definitely doable on a frame up build. 

Looks like a relatively light build can be achieved without too much of budget busting. You’ll still spend about R75k though if starting from a frame and build up

nick_the_wheelbuilder

Jun 20, 2024, 3:04 PM

One could easily save some weight on a Chisel by swapping the wheels out, and make a good bike great.

Based on the website I'm guesstimating the stock wheels will weigh +/- 2000g for the set.

Keep the stock wheels as spares (or sell them) and throw on a 1300g set of carbon wheels for R25k or a 1650g set of alloy ones for R15-16k.

If it were me I'd build a set of wheels with DT Swiss 350 or H-Works straight pull hubs, Stan's Arch Mk4 rims and light 2.0 - 1.5 - 2.0mm spokes.

 

DSC_2862.jpg

Jewbacca

Jun 20, 2024, 3:24 PM

Spending big money to make it lighter seems like reinventing the wheel for the sake of it to me.

A bike in that price/weight bracket already exists ready made.

I think Kylie summed it up perfectly. Not every bike needs to be full factory spec and super light to be fun and fast.

Buying 'cheap' and spending more money than buying the model above it to achieve something so similar but likely less good smells like folly

 

KyleDurh

Jun 20, 2024, 3:36 PM

Proper newbie question. Would this be an upgrade path for a 2019 Specialized Carbon Epic Comp? 

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