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Specialized Stumpjumper Alloy Mountain Bike Expired

$2100
$2,800.00
+ $50 S/H
+72 Deal Score
51,136 Views
Specialized.com has Specialized Stumpjumper Alloy Mountain Bike on sale for $2099.99. Shipping is $50.

Thanks community member frozenflame4326 for sharing this deal

Available Colors:
  • Satin Black/Smoke
  • Gloss Ca White Sage/Black
About this Bike:
  • The Stumpjumper Alloy brings all-new suspension kinematics and progressive geometry into a full-alloy package that's both lightweight and extremely durable. Outfitted with a no-fuss SRAM SX 12-speed groupset, the Stumpjumper Alloy is your all-access pass for trail adventure.
Good Deal?

Original Post

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Edited January 21, 2023 at 04:22 AM by
Several bikes from Specialized are on sale but the Stumpjumper Alloy is an especially solid deal. Modern geometry, very upgradeable down the road, and a pretty solid spec as is for this price.

The Status is probably the best deal of the bunch but it's a mullet setup (29" wheel in the front, 27.5" in the rear). Comes with Fox Suspension which will be much lighter and better performing than the entry level Rockshox/X fusion on the Stumpjumper. $2249 marked down from $3k:

https://www.specialized.com/us/en/status-140/p/199765?color=320386-199765

I know I know, it's still a $2k+ bike and mountain bikes are way too expensive. BUT if you're in the market for a full suspension bike this is a killer deal.

https://www.specialized.com/us/en...391-199784
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$2100
$2,800.00

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Featured Comments

Here's my take: I got super into mountain biking last year and have been riding/upgrading my $400, too-small-for-me hardtail since then. I bought the bike to see if the sport was for me and it very much is.

With that said, if I knew then what I know now I would have jumped on this deal for the price. We're in a unique moment where the bike industry grew a ton during the pandemic, then overproduced, and now there are sales ramping up on great bikes because there are too many and the demand can't keep up.

There's some chance that good bikes get a little cheaper, but 25% is a pretty steep discount. Demand will also pick back up in Spring so now is a solid time to watch for deals. From my research, the stumpjumper is a very solid bike if you're looking for a full suspension, ride anything trail bike. Sure you can spend thousands more on a carbon frame, lighter everything, etc, etc but for someone who wants to get into biking or get back into it on a modern geo bike this is a great buy. Though it is on the heavy side for sure.

Most local bike shops are running the same discounts so I would definitely check there first if there's a specialized dealer near you.
The Ripley (AF or not) is indeed an excellent bike, playing up there with the "big boys". It was on my shortlist too and I was tempted to get one, but ended up getting a deal on a '22 Rocky Mountain Element C, to replace the Siskiu T8 I ended up with when ibis postponed deliveries for the Ripmo I had originally ordered laugh out loud And it is not a ding on the Siskiu, I love it still, I just realized that I rarely use the travel (mine is 140/150 with a 36 front) and I would rather have something more pedal friendly. The '22 Element is actually the same geo as the Siskiu T (65 HTA, 480 reach on a L, same stack, just with more pedal-friendly sus kinematics and shaves 6-7 lbs)

On the Stumpy...
The Stumpjumper is the benchmark for mid-travel trail bikes. It does everything above average to great. It is not as sophisticated a platform as the DW Link on Ibis and Pivots and Evils, but it is really nit-picking here. Anyone that insists that "it has to be this or that" and nothing else, is the same as someone saying that "oh, if you don't have an engine with twin overhead cam-shafts, you cannot have fun or you are not a driver" or BS like that.

Yes, the Stumpy build in this config on sale is meh, but it is not atypical.
The Achilles hill with all of these, IMHO, are the deals with Sram: a Shimano Deore build would simply be much better, both in shifting and especially in the brake department. But Shimano doesn't make suspension components, and shimano doesn't make a HG hub based 12s Drivetrain (which marketing demands), so I bet that between the "cheaper than Fox DPS + 34 Rhythm or Bomber Z2", and the package deals Sram can provide for getting an all Sram (Rockshox = Sram) build, Specialized and others opt for that. Remember that Specialized is not a boutique brand like Ibis who de-facto sells all their bikes for $3500+ or w/e is the baseline for the Ripley AF and the Ripmo AF, not orders their base bikes in the hundreds, rather THOUSANDS, so the combined savings are substantial.

Again, Sram is not bad, the contrary, and all of the components can serve well and are an upgrade to anything you could find on a big-box store (other perhaps the Sram 11s NX on that unicorn Nishiki Colorado Comp+ that was selling for $400 back in 2019 (?), and I will argue every time that the 11s NX was superior to the Eagle NX, especially for its time). The Fork and Shock on this are fine. The vast majority of their buyers will not need more. It is like a 3-series BMW...all the forum warriors will think "nothing less than 6-cyl turbo or M3 can cut it, but 99% of the 3-series sold are probably 4-cyl or older undertuned 6-cyl NA and are more than enough. Actually, just like this bike, these cars will have more to offer than what the avg. driver/owner will ever need.

Yes, this Stumpy is not light and I'd bet will be 32-35lbs ready to ride, but nothing much lighter in this price range, unless you go for a XC focused hardtail and gradually upgrade the heavier parts as it makes sense. Specialized Chisel, Marin Team & BMC Two Stroke are really nice platforms to build from. Plus as soon as you get the Stumpy and if you start forum/reddit-warrioring on what to upgrade, most will jump straight into DH focused tires, like Maxxis Assegai & Minions etc, that are pigs to pedal around and super heavy to boot, so...moot.

If you are thinking into getting in MTB, this is not a bad bike. It is not a great deal, but this is indeed a good "do it all" starter. Other options to keep in mind in the same class would be the Polygon Siskiu T7 (or T8 if you want to stretch the budget), the Giant Trance 29 3 or Trance X for a bit longer travel. The Trance 29 (non X) is probably one of the more pedal-friendly FS designs you can find (and it is not DW link). For a bit more $, you can also look into an Alloy Rocky Mountain Element for more XC-ish trail, or RM Instinct for bit worse pedaling, bit better DH performance. Specialized doesn't make something much better than the Stumpy for pedalling before you jump to an Epic Evo, which ofc is much saltier in price. The Status is more of a cheap enduro bike, i.e. definately DH oriented and if you ride a lot, will be tiresome. If you are a weekend warrior, riding once a week or so for 10-15mi, it matters less. If you ride a lot of miles a week, getting the zippier, lighter bikes becomes more important (and you put down the miles/experience to tackle staff without the help of lots of suspension travel).

Finally, just to finish my morning rant, a significant portion of the people who can afford even the 2K bikes like this, are in their mid-30s or even 40s. and up. Unless you have a lot of experience in MX or were riding 10y ago MTBs etc, might get intimidated by "teh gnar", the jumps and the steep DH in blue and black rated trails, or at least I know this is the case in SoCal and other areas. So over-biking to "be ready" for when the "heroics" come into play, is too often the case. Too often I see people on mid/long travel Pivots or Specialized enduros etc, and they ride mellow blues that I know are easily rideable on a Chisel or even a well shorted gravel bike...they are people my age, that know that they have to go to work tomorrow and cannot afford the "heroics"...duhh...so don't go too far into the "not good enough" critiques. Get a bike that can grow with you, but be realistic and realize that maybe your ceiling is far lower than that of the bikes, so overspending on stuff you will never need will only be useful for flexing to your friends, not actual riding. This doesn't mean "go HT, no need for FS", FS is easier and more forgiving = safer for beginners to learn on, I strongly believe that, but little bit gan go a long way. You don't need the stupid-expensive bikes to enjoy cycling, just like you don't need a Porsche or a M3 to enjoy driving.

Cycling is amazing, decompressing on even easy fire roads is amazing, MTB can be risky as you see in YT but doesn't need to be and is a low-impact exercise vs. running etc. Much better for your joints if you don't have the muscle structure to support it or already have strained joints. Look into it.
this is a stumpy though, not an epic.

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jacksons98
01-24-2023 at 04:11 PM.
01-24-2023 at 04:11 PM.
Quote from lenser :
You're not supposed to be going 60mph on a mountain bike.
Also I wanted to add the only thing bad about disc brakes is they seem to wear out without much warning. You should make a habit to visually inspect the brake pads once a month. If the front one goes out you realize how little the rear does all by itself.

For a quick review on this bike: I have an older version of this Stumpjumper. Mine is at least 6 or 7 years old. I ride it on average 1-3 times per week. It's been solid. The only thing I've changed is one brake rotor, pads, the cassette on the rear and the chain a few times due to wear. Other than that just a once a year maintenance.
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Last edited by jacksons98 January 24, 2023 at 04:18 PM.
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Dimitris
01-24-2023 at 10:13 PM.
01-24-2023 at 10:13 PM.
Quote from Tarzanman :
Lol at bicycle prices.

You can get a brand spanking new Yamaha R3 for $5500 which has 10x the mass of one of these mountain bikes and way more technology integrated
Then how do you explain the prices Yamaha charges for their MTBs? Because it does make MTBs (or at least designs/brands some)...

Why doesn't Honda, Kawasaki and all others mass produce bikes if it is "so easy" and cheap or the margins so high?

This is an old trope coming from people that don't understand machining tolerances, what is perceivable and acceptable on a machine that interfaces solely and directly with the rider that demands single digits % of total watt losses in the drivetrain, vs. interfering a vibrating monster between your legs that has like 50% drivetrain efficiency and rattles so hard you cannot feel the play in your steering or your braking or the slack in your tranny or your chain needing lube or your disc brakes rubbing...

Piece for piece, a shock, a fork etc that has the machining tolerances of these BOTTOM OF THE BARREL suspension components for this "stupid bicycle" that are like 40-50% of its MSRP, are same to top-shelf street aftermarket options for superbikes, and materials surely as if not more exotic. I.e. there is technology there, you just don't care to know about it.

As for the "racing" suspension components for "real" super-motos or MX racing bikes, that sell for 5+ figures for a fork alone? Yamaha doesn't manufacture those, just like none of the above "bike" factories do...they have the usual suspects, Fox, Öhlins (and many others tbh) that specialize in this and sell them for a hefty premium...same for the racing drivetrains and gearboxes etc, which lead to factory supported racing bikes being in the high six and for MotoGP 7-figures...and this is where you see tolerances and technologies used in "toy bicycles", come into play in Motos, not the cheap 4-fig bikes you go buy in the dealership. You can buy them, it is not some secret sauce, but it will cost you far, far more.

An R3, amazing as it is, is a mass produced street bike. Bit more special than a $200-400 Walmart bike is, but not much more. Even a vanilla Yamaha YZ450F, is almost 2x as expensive as a R3...wondered why? "It is less kg", 1/4 the cylinders, much smaller and weaker brakes, less tire, "less everything"...they don't even have all the "technology" for instruments and lights and certificates etc to be street legal, and still cost more? Is it just robbery or is there indeed something "more" engineered in there that you simply don't care for?
  • Things are not sold by the kg/mass
  • Good "pedal" bikes are hard to make, but good bike components even harder.
  • Do some research before you "mic drop"
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Last edited by Dimitris January 24, 2023 at 10:20 PM.
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Tarzanman
01-25-2023 at 07:50 AM.
01-25-2023 at 07:50 AM.
Quote from Dimitris :
Then how do you explain the prices Yamaha charges for their MTBs? Because it does make MTBs (or at least designs/brands some)...
Are you seriously asking me why a corporation charges as much as the market will bear for a product? Here's a primer on the answer to that question - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalism

Quote :
Why doesn't Honda, Kawasaki and all others mass produce bikes if it is "so easy" and cheap or the margins so high?
There could be a dozen reasons. They don't have the equipment; they don't have the spare manufacturing capacity; opportunity cost is too high; they don't have any personnel that know the market; etc. You might as well ask why Fiat doesn't make passenger aircraft.

Quote :
This is an old trope coming from people that don't understand machining tolerances, what is perceivable and acceptable on a machine that interfaces solely and directly with the rider that demands single digits % of total watt losses in the drivetrain, vs. interfering a vibrating monster between your legs that has like 50% drivetrain efficiency and rattles so hard you cannot feel the play in your steering or your braking or the slack in your tranny or your chain needing lube or your disc brakes rubbing...
Fluff it up however you want, but you're speaking to an engineer who absolutely understands design tolerances, and what you say makes no sense. Yamaha designs, prototypes and manufactures engines as small as 49cc, as large as 1.9 L and many in between. All of them are reliable. If you think that the tolerances for your bicycle (which ships in a carboard box to ultimately be assembled by a trade school dropout) are tighter than the manufacturing tolerances required for an engine that pushes valves and pistons at 14,000 RPM then you are beyond delusional (or very ignorant).

Quote :
Piece for piece, a shock, a fork etc that has the machining tolerances of these BOTTOM OF THE BARREL suspension components for this "stupid bicycle" that are like 40-50% of its MSRP, are same to top-shelf street aftermarket options for superbikes, and materials surely as if not more exotic. I.e. there is technology there, you just don't care to know about it.
Hmm, maybe you're on drugs. You must be if you think that a bicycle shock (whether spring, air or whatever) undergoes anywhere near the testing or design revisions that a motorcycle shock does. Here's just one example of one of the types of testing that the components are always undergoing - https://www.asphaltandrubber.com/...tomatters/ . Suffice it to say that just the rider's salary is probably more than the entire R&D budget for a bicycle manufacturer.


Quote :
As for the "racing" suspension components for "real" super-motos or MX racing bikes, that sell for 5+ figures for a fork alone? Yamaha doesn't manufacture those, just like none of the above "bike" factories do...they have the usual suspects, Fox, Öhlins (and many others tbh) that specialize in this and sell them for a hefty premium...same for the racing drivetrains and gearboxes etc, which lead to factory supported racing bikes being in the high six and for MotoGP 7-figures...and this is where you see tolerances and technologies used in "toy bicycles", come into play in Motos, not the cheap 4-fig bikes you go buy in the dealership. You can buy them, it is not some secret sauce, but it will cost you far, far more.
There is so much hand-waving in this statement that its difficult to decipher the non-existent point that you're not making. Are we talking about the prices of forks or of bicycles and motorcycles? Are you trying to say that the ridiculous cost for a bicycle is justified because the stock forks are nicer than the stock forks on a motorcycle? Dude, really? You apparently not only drank all of the Kool-aid, but went back for seconds laugh out loud Are you really trying to convince me that the $2500+ margin on a mountain bike is justified because it essentially has nicer springs on it?

Quote :
An R3, amazing as it is, is a mass produced street bike. Bit more special than a $200-400 Walmart bike is, but not much more. Even a vanilla Yamaha YZ450F, is almost 2x as expensive as a R3...wondered why? "It is less kg", 1/4 the cylinders, much smaller and weaker brakes, less tire, "less everything"...they don't even have all the "technology" for instruments and lights and certificates etc to be street legal, and still cost more? Is it just robbery or is there indeed something "more" engineered in there that you simply don't care for?
Way to miss the point. You and people of your mindset are being robbed blind because you've either bought into or have been brainwashed by Specialized's marketing department. The 'value' you're getting for the premium price of bicycles is imaginary. While I understand that you have a subjective and emotional stake in the belief that a $4000 bicycle is somehow a superior analog to a $5000 motorcycle, even a cursory analysis demonstrates that belief is false.

P.T. Barnum wasn't wrong.
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Dimitris
01-25-2023 at 09:20 AM.
01-25-2023 at 09:20 AM.
Dunning & Kruger are also not wrong...we have huge blind-spots, and you clearly have yours.

And I did not say ever that a bicycle is "superior analog" to a motorcycle, just that its components are REQUIRED to be of tighter tolerances, and thus are harder to mass-produce. This is the reason huge manufacturers that do produce "analogs" in many ways, don't. And yes, if a fork and a shock alone are $1000 or so on basic models, or $1500-2000 on more advanced models, the price of the "thing" gets higher. Woo-hoo, wiki quote me.

And you did quote me sentence by sentence, but conviniently not answer why for example the YZ is more expensive than the "more complex" R3 that revs to the sky (and ofc it is a masterful engineering piece in itself)

Is there marketing involved in setting up $ for toys that are aimed to enthousiasts? Ofc...lots of smoke is blown up there.

Yet it is also true that manufacturers involved in high grade bike components, have carved a niche that you cannot replicate at a fraction of what they charge - this is why you won't find anything that REMOTELY performs like the OP Stumpjumper in walmart for $500, heck, even $1000. It is not for the lack of trying.

You can get excellent frames for 1/3 what Specialized asks for their frame, but you will pay a close equivalent for the rest of the build-kit. So yes, "that fancy spring" and fancy gears and derailleurs command a high price.
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ForgotMyOwnName
01-25-2023 at 12:58 PM.
01-25-2023 at 12:58 PM.
Quote from George_P_Burdell :
Meanwhile I bought the Axxum for $229 and it never left my neighborhood. Glad that I didn't spend $2k to test my likelihood into biking. All I have is walnut creek in Austin area to bike. Nothin much
link for the Axxum bike please?
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bustaone
01-25-2023 at 01:27 PM.
01-25-2023 at 01:27 PM.
Quote from BryanZ3488 :
I actually get a better workout on the turbo levo. I probably go 4x as far and average speed is probably double. Mountain biking is also a significant upper body workout but most people probably run out of legs before they do upper body and they might not notice.
I probably the same workout on my legs, and a much better workout on my upper body.

I hope you're not one of those man children that hates ebikes because it's not fair the riders didn't pay their dues.
Significant upper body workout? What kind of posture you working from?
Ebikes... Meh. Just build up stamina and you get 3x the workout in the same time. And the reason people don't like ebikes on our mtb trails is the nerds full torquing around the switchback climbs and ripping the trails up. More of a throttle VS assist issue, but my local trails have gotten quite ripped up since the arrival of the ebikes.
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lindseyp2655
01-26-2023 at 06:06 AM.
01-26-2023 at 06:06 AM.
To prices dropping, friend bought Revel Ranger last year for sticker $7k, Revel today selling that version at $5600.
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Atl golfer
01-26-2023 at 07:45 AM.
01-26-2023 at 07:45 AM.
3k doesn't get you carbon anymore?

Several bike manufacturers offering discounts. Looks like they all overshot demand thinking Covid demand would last forever.
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polyspecific
01-30-2023 at 07:07 PM.
01-30-2023 at 07:07 PM.
Grab the 140mm Status instead. Better hardware all around. Much better.
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jeff34270
01-30-2023 at 07:14 PM.
01-30-2023 at 07:14 PM.
Quote from polyspecific :
Grab the 140mm Status instead. Better hardware all around. Much better.
Not if you want to climb well...
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albumleaf
01-31-2023 at 09:15 PM.
01-31-2023 at 09:15 PM.
Quote from jeff34270 :
Not if you want to climb well...
Pretty easy if you aren't fat.
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jeff34270
02-01-2023 at 06:13 AM.
02-01-2023 at 06:13 AM.
Quote from albumleaf :
Pretty easy if you aren't fat.
It doesn't really matter what you weigh, too many people are just comparing the components between the bikes but missing the design differences.
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montrose
02-01-2023 at 07:17 AM.
02-01-2023 at 07:17 AM.
Deal is over. No more discount.
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raven066
02-01-2023 at 01:16 PM.
02-01-2023 at 01:16 PM.
Quote from montrose :
Deal is over. No more discount.

Yeah, personally decided to hold out to see if we see steeper discounts, or FS ebike instead.
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Last edited by raven066 February 1, 2023 at 03:22 PM.

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fishstick98
02-11-2023 at 06:14 AM.
02-11-2023 at 06:14 AM.
Looks like deal is back. They are desperate to get rid of some inventory
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