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Manitou’s Gen 2 Mezzer Cracks the Air-Fork Sensitivity Ceiling

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<p>For the better part of seven years&comma; Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s Mezzer fork has had a small but devoted following&period; It was light&comma; deeply adjustable&comma; and stiff enough to keep pace with enduro bikes that kept growing heavier and longer in travel&period; It also had one consistent criticism in nearly every review&colon; getting the fork moving off the top of the stroke took a deliberate push&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Gen 2 Mezzer&comma; which Manitou is launching with a starting price of <strong>&dollar;1&comma;199 USD<&sol;strong>&comma; attacks that single weakness with a feature the brand calls the Active Spring Piston&comma; a small coil tucked inside the air spring that handles the first few millimetres of travel before the air system ever gets involved&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>What Manitou Changed and What It Costs<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The Gen 2 launch is not a quiet refresh&period; The chassis&comma; the air spring and the damper have all been reworked&comma; and the lineup has been broadened with two cheaper trims to sit beneath the flagship&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Both flagship forks run 37mm stanchions&comma; share the new MC2-Pro-X damper&comma; and use the updated Dorado Air spring with an integrated coil-sprung breakaway&period; The Pro is aimed at trail and short-travel enduro bikes&comma; the LT at long-travel enduro and eMTB chassis where stiffness matters more than grams&period; Two lower trims&comma; the Expert and the LT Comp&comma; drop in at lower prices with simpler dampers&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<table>&NewLine;<thead>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<th>Model<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Travel<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Weight<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Damper<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Price<&sol;th>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;thead>&NewLine;<tbody>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Mezzer Pro<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>140 to 170mm<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>2&comma;030g<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>MC2-Pro-X &lpar;full cartridge&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>&dollar;1&comma;199<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Mezzer LT Pro<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>150 to 190mm<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>2&comma;220g<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>MC2-Pro-X &lpar;full cartridge&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>&dollar;1&comma;199<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Mezzer Expert<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>140 to 170mm<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Pro-equivalent<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Half-cartridge &lpar;open bath compression&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Lower<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Mezzer LT Comp<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>150 to 190mm<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>&plus;110g vs LT Pro<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>ABS&plus; cartridge<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Lower<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;tbody>&NewLine;<&sol;table>&NewLine;<p>Prices for the Expert and LT Comp had not been published by Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s parent <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;hayesbicycle&period;com&sol;collections&sol;mezzer-forks" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">Hayes Bicycle Group&&num;8217&semi;s Mezzer fork collection<&sol;a> at the time of writing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image aligncenter featured-image" style&equals;"margin&colon;1&period;5em auto&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><img class&equals;"aligncenter" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2026&sol;05&sol;manitou-mezzer-gen-2-enduro-fork-first-ride-review-with-active-spring-piston-tec&period;webp" alt&equals;"Manitou Mezzer Gen 2 enduro fork first ride review with Active Spring Piston technology&period;" style&equals;"width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;max-width&colon;800px&semi;height&colon;auto&semi;border-radius&colon;8px&semi;display&colon;block&semi;margin&colon;0 auto&semi;" &sol;><figcaption style&equals;"text-align&colon;center&semi;font-size&colon;0&period;85em&semi;color&colon;&num;888&semi;margin-top&colon;0&period;5em&semi;">Manitou Mezzer Gen 2 enduro fork first ride review with Active Spring Piston technology&period;<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<h2>Two Chassis&comma; Tuned for Different Bikes<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Both flagships share that 37mm stanchion diameter&comma; but Manitou now treats the Pro and LT as distinct platforms rather than two travel options on one fork&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Pro&&num;8217&semi;s crown gets post-cast machining for a slightly slimmer profile&comma; and its stanchions are tapered with a more aggressive internal bore to shed grams&period; The result is a fork that is a claimed 2&period;1&percnt; less stiff torsionally than the outgoing Mezzer&comma; which sounds bad on paper and is actually the point&colon; short-travel bikes are happier with a forgiving front end&comma; and oversprung stiffness can transmit chatter into the bars&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The LT goes the other way&period; Its crown is polished as forged&comma; its stanchions are thicker-walled and parallel&comma; and it lands <strong>8&period;3&percnt; stiffer<&sol;strong> than the previous Mezzer&period; Manitou says the fore-aft stiffness delta between the two chassis is 9&period;7&percnt;&comma; which is roughly the difference between a 36mm and a 38mm fork from a competitor&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The reverse arch is still there&comma; and so are the 2&period;5mm bleed screws on the back of the lowers for topping up oil in the field&period; Less visible is a new piece called Micromanager Bushing Alignment&comma; a machined aluminum spacer in the dropout that takes up any tolerance slack between the lower casting and the axle&period; Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s argument&colon; without it&comma; clamping the front wheel can preload the bushings just enough to add stiction&comma; and stiction is the enemy of the small-bump performance the Gen 2 is built around&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Coil Inside the Air Spring<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The headline mechanical change sits inside the spring leg&period; Air-sprung forks have always traded a slightly notchy top of stroke for the tunability and light weight that air gives you&period; Even premium seals add measurable breakaway force&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Active Spring Piston is Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s workaround&period; It is a short coil spring stacked under the air piston&comma; so the first few millimetres of fork travel happen against the coil rather than against the air seals&period; The air system only engages once the coil is preloaded&comma; which means the fork&&num;8217&semi;s initial response is mechanically decoupled from the friction of an air spring&&num;8217&semi;s main seal&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>Top-end suppleness<&sol;strong> comes from the coil handling the very start of the stroke without air-seal friction in the way&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Mid-stroke support<&sol;strong> comes from the main air chamber&comma; rebalanced to be naturally more linear than the previous Mezzer&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Bottom-out control<&sol;strong> comes from a hydraulic bottom-out circuit that affects only the final 30mm of travel and has no external adjustment&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Shape adjustability<&sol;strong> comes from the IRT &lpar;Infinite Rate Tuning&rpar; chamber&comma; an independent secondary air volume that lets riders dial the ramp-up curve with a shock pump instead of internal volume spacers&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>Travel is still adjustable in 10mm increments via plastic clip-on spacers&comma; with one proprietary tool needed to unthread the air spring from the stanchion&period; That keeps the LT useful as a single fork across multiple bikes&comma; which matters at a &dollar;1&comma;199 price point&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>A New Damper with High-Speed Rebound<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The MC2-Pro-X damper went through nearly <strong>70 internal iterations<&sol;strong> before Manitou settled on a production tune&period; The headline change for riders is the addition of high-speed rebound adjustment&comma; a feature the previous Mezzer never had&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Adjustment ranges are&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li>8 clicks of high-speed compression<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>10 clicks of low-speed compression<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>8 clicks of high-speed rebound<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>10 clicks of low-speed rebound<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>The damper is still a bladder design rather than an internal floating piston&comma; which is unusual at this travel bracket&period; Bladder dampers have lower breakaway force than IFP designs&comma; which is why they show up in cross-country forks where small-bump sensitivity matters more than absolute high-speed control&period; They are also lighter&period; The drawback is cavitation at high shaft speeds&comma; where the bladder cannot react fast enough to oil flow and the damping briefly drops out&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s fix is a pressurized chamber wrapped around the bladder&comma; charged through a Schrader-style valve adapter that ships with the fork&period; The pressure resists cavitation at the speeds where it would otherwise appear&period; Manitou positions the chamber as a service step rather than a daily-fiddle adjustment&comma; which is the right call&colon; most riders should not be touching it after the first setup&period; Oil flow has also been increased on both circuits&comma; which lets the high- and low-speed adjusters work with less crossover between them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Where It Sits Against the Fox 38 and RockShox Zeb<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The Mezzer LT&&num;8217&semi;s 2&comma;220g claimed weight is competitive in a category where the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;bikeradar&period;com&sol;reviews&sol;components&sol;forks&sol;suspension-forks&sol;rockshox-zeb-vs-fox-38-fork" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">measured weights of the Fox 38 and RockShox Zeb Ultimate<&sol;a> have settled around 2&comma;300g to 2&comma;500g depending on configuration&period; The Pro at 2&comma;030g is genuinely light for a 37mm-stanchion fork with this much adjustability&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The pitch against the incumbents is sharper than the weight&period; Fox and RockShox have spent the last three generations chasing chassis stiffness and stroke support&semi; sensitivity at the top of travel has improved&comma; but mostly through seal compounds and damper tuning&period; Manitou is taking a different route&comma; treating the air spring&&num;8217&semi;s breakaway friction as a problem the air system itself cannot fully solve&comma; and putting a coil in front of it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The competitive risk is twofold&period; Manitou is a smaller distribution operation than either of its rivals&comma; which means dealer support and service-centre coverage are thinner in many regions&period; And the Gen 2&&num;8217&semi;s bladder-plus-pressurized-chamber damper architecture&comma; while clever&comma; adds one more service touchpoint than a sealed IFP cartridge&period; Whether that matters in practice will depend on how the long-term service life shakes out&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>On the Trail&comma; Suppleness That Reads as Softness<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Pinkbike&&num;8217&semi;s first-ride testers ran the LT at 170mm on a Frameworks Enduro and the Pro at 160mm on a Santa Cruz Bronson&period; Both have been ridden in wet and dry conditions on familiar trails&comma; which is the kind of testing that surfaces the difference between a chassis upgrade and a marketing slide&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>The LT Initiates Travel With Almost No Force<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The Gen 2 LT&&num;8217&semi;s break-in feel is the line every Mezzer Gen 1 owner will want to read&period; The previous fork needed a deliberate push to start moving&semi; the new one initiates travel as easily as anything the testers had ridden recently&period; The flagged risk is that riders who chased the outgoing Mezzer&&num;8217&semi;s high-and-supportive feel may read the new fork as soft and immediately add pressure&period; Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s advice&comma; echoed by Pinkbike&comma; is to ride with the suppleness for a few sessions before chasing perceived support&comma; because the IRT chamber and hydraulic bottom-out together prevent the fork from giving up travel cheaply&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>The Pro Tracks Roots and Wet Roundness<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Mike Kazimer&comma; riding the Pro on a Santa Cruz Bronson&comma; noticed the small-bump traction first while climbing&comma; where roots and rocks were disappearing under the fork in a way that initially made him check his tyre pressure&period; On wet descents over slick roots&comma; the Pro had the kind of ground-hugging behaviour usually associated with coil-sprung forks&period; The lack of perceptible lag between tyre contact and fork compression is the on-trail signature of the Active Spring Piston&comma; and it is the feature most likely to convert long-time Fox and RockShox riders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Setup Pressures Are Lower Than the First Mezzer<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Both testers settled on pressures below Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s chart for their weights&period; The LT tester is running 68psi main and 106psi IRT with damper settings of LSC3&comma; HSC3&comma; LSR7 and HSR5 at the time of publication&period; Kazimer is at 55psi main and 83psi IRT on the Pro at 160 pounds&comma; with LSC4&comma; HSC4&comma; HSR3 and LSR5&period; Both expect to creep pressures up as familiarity grows&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Quirks Worth Knowing Before You Order<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The Gen 2 is not flawless&comma; and a first ride is the right moment to flag the small annoyances before months of trail use blur them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>Top-out clunk<&sol;strong> is audible and faintly tactile on both chassis when the fork extends fully&comma; most noticeable on slow technical climbs and when the bike is unweighted off jumps&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Climbing clicks<&sol;strong> from the rebound circuit are audible on both forks&period; Some riders will not hear them&semi; others will find them grating on long fire-road climbs&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Pro fork rebound<&sol;strong> skews fast across the full adjustment range&period; Even with both rebound dials fully closed&comma; the Pro still extends quickly&comma; which lighter or slower riders may find limiting&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>Service complexity<&sol;strong> sits one step above a sealed cartridge damper because of the pressurized chamber around the bladder&period; Home mechanics will need a shock pump and Manitou&&num;8217&semi;s adapter to recharge it&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>None of those are deal-breakers at the Gen 2&&num;8217&semi;s price&comma; and several may disappear with break-in or firmware-style production refinements&period; The top-out feel in particular is the kind of detail that brands often quietly revise within the first production run&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Gen 2 Mezzer&&num;8217&semi;s full test is still to come&period; Pinkbike has confirmed back-to-back rides against the current Fox 38 and RockShox Zeb generations&period; If the small-bump advantage holds up next to those forks on identical trails&comma; Manitou will have done something the brand has not managed in years&colon; pull a real performance lead&comma; not just a value proposition&comma; against the two companies that have owned this category since the 36 and Lyrik first showed up&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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