2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (2024)

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Gearing

A bike with lower gearing will be easier to ride up steep hills, while a higher top end means it will pedal faster down hills.

Lowest gear

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26 mph

ONE-SIXTY FR 600

26 mph

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Reviews

2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (1)

Merida One-Sixty 500 mountain bike review

Dec 2023

The One-Sixty is Merida’s recently updated enduro bike. Using the very same frame as the One-Forty, it takes all of that goodness but simply ups the travel, unlocking the frame’s hidden potential and creating an absolute ripper that’s nothing short of capable. While it’s mega proficient downhill, the One-Sixty 500 is equally as impressive when it comes to cranking back up, all while delivering some serious bang for the buck and engaging yet forgiving trail dynamics. Not only is it one of the best mountain bikes on the market, it’s a very solid stepping stone into enduro racing.

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (2)

Merida One-Sixty FR 600 first ride review – built to send

Sep 2023 · James Watkins

Merida’s new longer-travel bike takes the standard One-Sixty aluminum frame and amplifies the fun factor, with more suspension up front and a coil-sprung rear shock

Highs

  • DVO suspension, including coil shock

  • Tried and tested, bombproof aluminum frame

  • TRP brakes

  • 5-year frame warranty

Lows

  • It’s heavy, but this won’t affect intended use

  • Basic drivetrain and wheels won’t last forever

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (3)

Merida One-Sixty FR First Rides, Extending Alloy Enduro Bike for the Bikepark with DVO

Sep 2023

Merida give capable, affordable alloy enduro bike extra-travel One-Sixty FR freeride upgrade with new DVO suspension for bikepark riding…

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (4)

Merida One-Sixty FR 600 first ride review - MBR

Sep 2023 · Mick Kirkman

The Merida One-Sixty FR was launched at September’s EX Enduro in Devon, so our first ride testing and evaluation was carried out on terrain in and around the event with an uplift day in the local area beforehand. It’s familiar testing ground for us and terrain where we’ve previously evaluated the best enduro mountain bikes. With a coil rear shock and a 180mm travel fork, this new Merida is designed to handle new school machine-built jump and berm trails that have increasingly popped up over recent years. It’s targeted at progressive riders taking their riding to the next level as much as younger rippers on a budget looking for a tough durable bike for enduro, DH or uplift laps. Keeping an eye on a lower price point means, unlike the regular Merida One-Sixty trail bike, there is no carbon fibre option. The One-Sixty FR is only available with an aluminium frame, across two different models, topping out at £3.5k on this DVO suspension-clad 600 version. Frame Merida’s basic concept was to bring a tougher, more affordable bike that can be hammered in bike parks or push-to-the-top jumpy DH spots – or even become part of rental fleets in uplift destinations. Its frame shares the updated shape and geometry of the current Merida One-Forty and One-Sixty platforms. The FR carries over Merida’s ‘Agilometer’ geometry philosophy, which (like plenty of other sensible brands) allows riders to choose size based on frame length/reach, rather than seat tube height. Smaller riders can opt for a longer frame to taste and not get penalised by the saddle or top tube getting in the way. Taller riders can benefit too and can run one of the latest-generation dropper posts like Merida’s Team TR 2 here that is infinitely adjustable up to 230mm to achieve the desired saddle height. One thing that’s slightly at odds with Merida’s sizing philosophy though and may affect a small number of riders is the size-specific tuning on the Fast Link, because while it’s easy enough to reduce spring rate for lighter/shorter riders on longer bikes, there will always be slightly more progression in the suspension than on the smaller frame sizes. Merida’s five frame sizes see reach measurement extend all the way from 409mm in XShort up to 519mm in XLong. The chainstay is semi size-specific too, with 434mm in the smaller three sizes growing to 437.5mm in the longest two. There’s a typical-for-this-category 63.5mm head angle and a bottom bracket drop of just 2mm, although this didn’t feel high while riding to me. Smaller details include a removable 4/6mm Allen key in the rear axle and a removable ‘service port’ on the bottom of the BB that makes internal dropper routing much less painful. One-Sixty FR frames use an easy to service BSA threaded bottom bracket and neat features include chunky frame protection and a rear mud guard. The best full-suspension mountain bikes: reviewed by experts Seeing as the FR is primarily gravity focused, it’s no bad thing the alloy …Continue reading »

Highs

  • Suitably robust build kit. Well matched DVO suspension. Modern sizing system. Keenly priced. Bike park ready straight from the box

Lows

  • Internal headset cable routing. Noisy in rough terrain. Heavy

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (5)

First Ride: Merida One-Sixty FR

Sep 2023 · Seb Stott

The FR is aimed at park rats and rental fleets, with mixed wheels, more travel and burlier components.

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (6)

Merida One-Sixty 6000 review

May 2023 · Robin Weaver

With impressive geometry, well-balanced suspension and a great parts package for the cash, the Merida One-Sixty 6000 offers a seriously exciting ride and feels incredibly capable just about everywhere

Highs

  • Great geometry helps inspire confidence

  • Well-balanced suspension

  • Parts well-considered for the money

  • Easy on the eye

Lows

  • Headset cable routing won’t be for everyone

  • Seatpost scores easily

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (7)

2023 Merida One-Sixty Review | A futuristic enduro bike that ticks almost every box

Mar 2023

The new Merida One-Sixty packs in almost every feature you could want in a modern enduro bike. So how does it ride? Read on for our review.

Highs

  • Fantastic contemporary geometry

  • Supple & poppy suspension performance

  • Huge 230mm travel dropper post

  • Wheelsize flexibility

  • Awesomely grippy & tough tyre spec

  • Loads of frame protection with an effective mudguard

  • Great range of build kits with impressive pricing

Lows

  • Our replacement dropper post failed

  • Active suspension bobs while sprinting

  • Internal storage needs refining

  • Headset cable routing

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2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (8)

The MERIDA ONE-SIXTY 8000 – In our big 2023 enduro bike group test

Dec 2022 · Simon Kohler

The new MERIDA ONE-SIXTY 8000 enters the “Best enduro bike of 2023” group test with a clean look and unique geometry concept. But how does it fare against the competition on the trail?

Highs

  • Excellent spec

  • Cool suspension provides tons of traction, support and reserves

  • Harmonious concept

Lows

  • Front-heavy pedalling position on level ground

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Geometry

2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (9)2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (10)

Specs

Build
Frame

ONE-SIXTY FR LITE III, 171 mm suspension travel mullet, material: aluminium, 29x2.5" max. wheelsize, 148x12 mm axle standard, BSA bottom bracket standard

BB Standard:BSA, 73mm, Threaded

Fork

DVO Onyx 38 D2, Air, 180 mm suspension travel, tapered, 44 mm Offset, 29"

Travel:180mm

Spring Type:Air

Shock

DVO Jade X D2, coil, spring rate per size XSHORT and SHORT 300 lbs, MID: 350 lbs, LONG: 400 lbs, XLONG: 450 lbs

Travel:171mm

Bottom Bracket

Shimano BB-MT-501, 24 mm

Headset

Acros ICR MERIDA EXTERNAL neck, Upper and lower IPS sealing

Stem

MERIDA EXPERT eTRII, material: aluminium, 35 mm diameter, 0° stem angle, 40 mm

Handlebar

MERIDA EXPERT TR II, material: aluminium, 780 mm width, XS/S 18 mm rise, M/L/XL 30 mm rise

Saddle

MERIDA COMP SL, V-mount, incl. MERIDA minitool

Seatpost

MERIDA TEAM TR II, 34.9 mm diameter, 0 mm setback, all sizes 30-230 mm travel seatpost

Type:Dropper

Groupset
Rear Derailleur

Shimano Deore M6100, SGS

Crank

Shimano Deore MT512, 32 teeth, 170 mm for all sizes

Shifters

Shimano SL-MT500-IL / Shimano Deore M6100

Cassette

Shimano Deore M6100, 10-51 teeth, 12 speed

Chain

KMC X12

Chain Guide

MERIDA EXPERT TR ISCG05

Brakes

TRP Trail Evo HD-M843, 4 piston

Type:Hydraulic Disc

Wheels
Rims

MERIDA EXPERT TR II, 110x15 mm width front hub, 148x12 mm width rear hub, 28 mm inner width, material: aluminium, Tubeless ready (tubeless tape and valves not included), front 29", rear 27.5"

Spokes

Double Butted Black stainless

Front Hub

Shimano TC500-B / Shimano TC500-MS-B, 110x15 mm width front hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock, 148x12 mm width rear hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock

Rear Hub

Shimano TC500-B / Shimano TC500-MS-B, 110x15 mm width front hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock, 148x12 mm width rear hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock

Tires

Front: Continental Kryptotal-F, 29x2.4", fold, TR, Enduro casing, Soft Compund, Rear: Continental Kryptotal-R, 27.5x2.4", fold, TR, Downhill Casing, Soft Compound

Disc Rotors

TRP RS01E / TRP RC01E, 220 mm, 203 mm

Rider Notes

2024 Merida ONE-SIXTY FR 600 – Specs, Comparisons, Reviews – 99 Spokes (2024)
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