Unno appear to be working on overhauling their entire range this year. First the
Boös eMTB, then the
Burn enduro bike, both of which turned heads with some striking new design language from Unno. With low-slung top tubes, tall seat masts, and sleek, low-slung silhouettes, they looked more like concept bike sketches than production bikes.
Now, the Dash, Unno's trail bike has been given the same treatment. "It has a lot of similarities with the recently-launched Burn," says Unno's founder, Cesar Rojo, "but we promise it is a very different bike. The Dash has always been our 'slay any trail' bike, being the closest idea to mountain bike perfection that we can imagine."
Unno Dash Details• Intended use: Trail/all-mountain
• 150mm front travel
• 140mm rear travel
• 29" wheels
• Sizes: S1, S2 & S3
• Reach: 435, 470 & 510 mm, respectively
• Weight: TBC
• Price:€7,795 - €10,495 inc. Vat
•
unno.com Frame Details The new bike has very little in common with the outgoing
Unno Dash, which was released in 2018. Travel has been bumped up by 10 mm front and rear, now sitting at 140 mm at the rear and 150 mm up front. Unlike the Burn enduro bike, the Dash is a dedicated 29er in all three sizes.
The frame is a carbon fiber monocoque with Unno's twin-link suspension system. One short link is connected concentric to the bottom bracket, while the other connects just above it and drives the shock. It's a progressive design with a generous amount of recommended sag: 35% (+/- 5%).
There's an integrated chain guide and seat tube clamp, down tube protector and a full complement of EnduroMAX frame bearings. The maximum recommended rear tire width is 2.6". The frame's plastic parts and rubber protectors are made with
Oceanworks recycled plastics salvaged from the sea.
Though Unno's press communication glossed over this, it appears to have the same through-headset cable routing and downtube storage compartment as the
Unno Burn, released a couple of months ago.
Geometry Unno will build three sizes which they say will cover riders from 165 cm (5' 5") to 195 cm (6' 5") tall. That means the gaps between sizes are pretty big - there's a 35 mm difference in reach between S1 and S2 and 40 mm between S2 and S3, so getting the right size will be crucial. It's a big improvement on the old Dash which was released in just one size (effectively a medium) with a 455 mm reach and a wheelbase of just 1,180 mm.
Unno have taken stack height seriously, with a stubby 105 mm head tube in S1, growing to a lengthy 145 mm in the S3 size. That should mean very tall or short riders will be able to get their
bar at the right height without resorting to extreme handlebar rises or towers of stem spacers. The chainstay length remains the same in all three sizes, at 445 mm. The seat angle is nice and steep, and at a shade under 65 degrees the head angle is slacker than many trail bikes.
Specs The Dash will be available with two build kits:
Race and
Factory, costing €7,795 and €10,495, respectively. Both feature Unno's own Deux one-piece carbon cockpit; Fox Factory suspension with a Float X2 shock and 36 fork; Formula four-pot brakes and SRAM AXS gearing. The Factory version's upgrades are mostly superficial, with XX1 vs. GX AXS gearing, carbon rather than alloy Synthesis rims from CrankBrothers, and a Reverb AXS dropper instead of a Fox Transfer. Both builds only get 175 mm of dropper travel in the largest size, 150 mm in S2 and 125 mm in S1.
Availability Unno say the DASH will be in stock and ready to be shipped by about the time you read this. "We will prioritize the S2 sizes," says Cesar. "The S1 and S3 will be ready to ship in 2-3 weeks."
Unno’s choice not to highlight what is undoubtedly the most significant single improvement the MTB world has seen in the last two decades, is a strange one indeed.
Forget the dubious & questionable benefits of droppers, tubeless, modern geo, etc - this is The Good Stuff that we’ve all been waiting for….
Nah its the rubbish Acros internal cable routing headset as seen on Mondraker bikes and the Transition Repeater.
The water ingress concern is probably legit if you live somewhere super wet - personally I've never had to swap a headset bearing. It's dry here but I've done plenty of sloppy winter gravel rides/races... gone through several BB bearings but no headset bearings.
At least this design doesn't seem like it will turn every bearing/cable/housing swap into a multi hour job (plus front brake bleed), or put harsh bends in the cables like the through-the-stem systems. Idk, to me it looks more like regular internal routing than like the systems we're seeing on road and XC bikes. Doesn't matter though, because I'd never buy this hideous thing.
It can be pretty moist where I live at times, so the ingress is probably more of a concern for me. One thing's for sure, we're certainly on common ground as far as your last statement is concerned. lol
Wow - wireless brakes - now thats a battery you wouldn’t want to run out halfway down a steep run!
and THIS is what THAT gets us...
*crickets chirping*
ebike-mtb.com/en/unno-booes-race-2022-exclusive-review
I wish you and Joaomc were right. But Unno state it doesn’t run through the cockpit (ie the bar/stem combo. Not the headset.
Its a Acros internal headset. Looking at the frame on photos you can see that there are no holes above the bearing cups.
... Kill it with fire!!!"
Happy to see you!?
Guess Unno isn’t wild?
Complex head tube cables and anything with a Rebuild (sorry Reverb) is defo not for me.
That said, in this day and age and given its very boutique nature, I thought the lower end one quite reasonable. Thought it was frame only initially.
Riders with lots of money: yea, really nice, I'll buy it!
Bike mechanics: I'll give up my job...
-the person who designed this bike, probably
That's not superficial. Superficial would be like Fox Factory vs Fox Perfomance Elite (only diff is Kashima or not), or color matched wheel stickers vs plain. Alloy rims to carbon rims is a whole can of worms (IMHO it's just overall strength: if you break a good carbon rim, you wouldn't be bending back an alloy rim, it would also be quite broken). Cable dropper to wireless dropper is a pretty functional change as well, besides the lever/button action you now have 2 more batteries to worry about!
Unno says this is in case you’d like to run a traditional handlebar and stem combination, provided you keep the guide underneath. The brand further adds that all of the routing is guided inside to avoid any unnecessary fishing.
Source: www.bikeradar.com/news/unno-dash-all-mountain-bike
Its a Acros internal headset. Looking at the frame on photos you can see that there are no holes above the bearing cups, which means the cables have to go through the upper bearing.
that thing would work for me. I would really love to see, that rear shock set up filled with wet mud, grit and
ridden for some time in such conditions, theres no where for it to go, it'll just build up hold there til hosed out,
and the average joe remove rear shock and bearings for service, whats the service life, weight limit of the frame seat tube? it looks like it needs support, and yeh the stem. In all the headache to service alone puts me off.
please show after 3-4 years of real world use, a maintanance diary perhaps, how did getting replacement parts
after 3 yrs work out, was it even supported, this is where things hold for me
Your telling me there are folk out there that dont live in mud huts and have to wear wellies to ride ?
I dont for one minute believe you, next you will be saying its sunny in texas
then i can Run the reach/hta exactly where i want.
Then make it so i can run my Chainstay from 330 to 445ish with extensions.
Several shock locations similar to the Rocky altitude and including a range of different front mounts/links so i can run diff length shocks/mullet etc.
4kg with air shock. Ill pay alot of money for a frame like that - that weight should be tough as, last me 10 years. well worth it.
Its seriously dumb we have to buy bikes that have "set" geo... like we dont live where the bike was designed, we dont ride like the designer/tester....(im talking on a more adjustable stage not a stupid marketing "flip chip"
Honestly as someone who is 5'9" with a 30" inseam, I would struggle to ride the S1 even with a 125mm dropper.
For more mainstream brands, I hope voting with our wallet works, but given the light availability atm, I’m willing to bet it won’t.
So the smallest size is actually aimed at above the average female height in many countries?
How???
Who is going full send AND sitting at the same time? Are you guys such badass climbers that the seat tube can't handle all the immense torque you're putting out??
Just add on 15mm reach and ditch the cable routing and I’d have one!