S
Santa CruzBlur
bike5000–14500 EUR
01
Origin
The original Blur debuted in 2002 as a 105–115 mm aluminium full-suspension XC bike built around Santa Cruz's VPP (Virtual Pivot Point) suspension, hand-built in the USA. It was discontinued around 2014 when the Tallboy covered XC duties, then resurrected in 2018 as a full-carbon 100 mm 29er. In 2021–2022 Santa Cruz redesigned it: the VPP linkage was dropped for the lighter flex-stay 'Superlight' platform, returning the brand to World Cup XC racing.
02
Specifications
- Frame
- Carbon fiber — top-tier CC layup or value-oriented C layup; flex-stay single-pivot 'Superlight' linkage saves 289g vs previous VPP frame; CC frame ~300g lighter than the prior generation. Lifetime warranty on both layups.
- Weight
- kg
- Drivetrain
- 1x12 SRAM Eagle (AXS or mechanical depending on build). Top builds: SRAM XX/X0 T-TYPE AXS electronic; mid builds GX Eagle/T-TYPE; entry 90/70 T-Type cable. 10-50t cassette, 34t chainring.
- Brakes
- XC build: SRAM Level hydraulic disc, 180/160 mm rotors. TR build uses larger rotors for extra braking margin.
- Wheels
- 29". RSV builds use Santa Cruz Reserve 28|XC carbon rims on Industry Nine 1/1 hubs; non-RSV builds use alloy rims. Boost spacing.
03
The verdict
+Strengths
- Exceptionally light — Santa Cruz's lightest full-suspension bike at ~10.45 kg, with a stiff, race-ready carbon chassis.
- Active suspension delivers class-leading traction and control; reviewers rated it among the best for grip in its test group.
- Fast, dependable, aggressive handling that climbs efficiently yet descends with more confidence than its travel suggests.
- Two distinct personalities from one frame: pure-XC (100 mm) and capable down-country TR (120/115 mm).
- Lifetime frame warranty on both CC and C carbon layups.
−Weaknesses
- Rear suspension is overly active on flat ground and under power, costing some pedalling efficiency unless the lockout is used.
- Expensive across the board — no genuinely budget-friendly build is offered.
- RockShox TwistLoc lockout requires awkward twisting effort versus a simple lever; TR build drops the remote lockout entirely, a drawback for racers.
- Stock Maxxis Aspen tires are light-tread and only suited to dry, hardpack conditions.
- Spec inconsistencies on some builds (e.g. lower-tier GX shifter paired with X01 mech), and the Fox two-position dropper can misfire during racing.
04
Who it’s for
XC racers (Vivus Maraton, Tartu Rattamaraton, UCI XCO/XCM events). TR variant for fast hobby riders who want one light, fast bike for everything.
05
Versions & builds
Every official build side by side — differences highlighted.
| Spec | XC | TR |
|---|
06
Tags
07
Related models
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