The Ibis Hakka MX provides a smooth and fast ride with great handling and space for wide tyres and versatility by way of mudguard mounts, and it’s light on the scales, but it is a pricey prospect in a competitive marketplace. 

While probably best known for its mountain bikes (it’s one of the oldest mountain bike brands having been founded in 1981, before most of you lot were born I bet?) Ibis isn’t immune to the charms of the growing adventure category and two years ago redesigned its cyclocross bike into a much more capable adventure and gravel bike. 

It still retains some of that cyclocross DNA. The ride is fast and direct with the geometry not as slack or stretched as some more progressive bikes in this burgeoning adventure and gravel category. If you want to race CX on a Sunday and ride gravel on a Monday, the Hakka MX would be a good choice.

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ibis hakka mx35 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

From the similarly dropped chainstay to increase tyre/crank clearance to the geometry, there’s more than a passing resemblance to the genre-defining Open UP, the bike that most leapt to mind when riding the Ibis. That’s no bad thing; the UP is one of the best carbon adventure bikes I’ve ever reviewed. The Ibis does have longer chainstays, wheelbase and a steeper hand angle that provides a really nice blend of quick steering but stability on loose rocky surfaces.

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ibis hakka mx49 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Like the Open UP, the Ibis is light and stiff and that means, if you like getting a good return on your energy investment, it’s a rapid bike and very efficient at translating your energy into forward motion. It takes very little effort to keep the Ibis rolling along the road and dirt paths, and when it comes to climbing the 8.3kg (18.2lb) weight ensures it can scamper up even the steepest technical ascent, provided it’s not damp enough to find the traction limits of the tyres. 

It’s pleasantly composed on rough surfaces as well, no doubt helped by the 40mm wide G-One tyres which, if run at 30-45psi to suit different ground conditions, can isolate you from the bigger impacts whilst still retaining good rolling resistance properties. It’s a really good tyre for crossing the divide between road and dirt and while it’s no master of any particular terrain, it’s never overly compromised.

Frame details

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ibis hakka mx24 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The carbon frame weighs a claimed 1kg and provides clearance for up to 700x40c (as tested) or 650b x 2.1” tyres. Mud clearance is also generous but the shelf behind the bottom bracket does collect crud a bit too easily though it never actually clogged up on the muddier rides. 

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ibis hakka mx43 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

It is a smartly designed and well-appointed frame and an ENVE carbon fork is slotted into the head tube, going some way to justifying the price. Disc brakes, naturally, with flat mount callipers and internal routing. You get mudguard mounts on the frame, but sadly none on the ENVE fork which is a bit rubbish, to put it bluntly.

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ibis hakka mx53 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The fork is also showing its age with the post mount disc brake interface, with most new road and gravel bikes adopting the flat mount standard.

UPDATE: We’ve just been notified that Ibis is updating framesets with the latest Enve fork which includes a flat mount disc brake and mudguard eyelets. 

You don’t get any extra bottle cages but Ibis has wrapped the downtube with a protective sheath to protect the carbon against rock and stone strikes.

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ibis hakka mx29 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The ‘hand job’ is a nice nod to the cable hanger on early Ibis bikes before disc brakes took over, with it now serving as a mudguard mount.

There’s full internal cable routing and while the test bike came fitted with a 1x groupset, you can still fit a front mech should you desire. Inside the downtube is a custom Di2 battery mount accessed via a trap door and outside is a protective cladding to protect from rock strikes. The frame will even accept a dropper post if you want to go full gnar!

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ibis hakka mx46 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Ibis has adopted the T47 bottom bracket first developed by Chris King and Argonaut Cycles a handful of years ago. It has the same diameter shell as a Press-Fit 30 bottom bracket, but with the threaded cups of a traditional BSA-threaded bottom bracket. The benefit is an oversized bottom bracket so the chainstays, seat tube and downtube can be correspondingly oversized, while the threads permit easy installation and should prevent press-fit creaking issues.

Build and equipment

The pictured test bike costs £3,349 and for that, you get a full SRAM Rival 1 groupset with a 40T chainring and wide-range 10-42T cassette attached to Stan’s Grail aluminium tubeless wheels and shod with excellent Schwalbe G-One Allround 700x40c tyres. All the finishing kit, bar the WTB saddle, comes with Ibis branding. 

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ibis hakka mx15 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

SRAM’s Rival 1 groupset is a common choice on a wide range of gravel bikes, from the most affordable aluminium bikes to high-end carbon steeds like this Ibis. It works well, the large hoods are good anchors to plant your hands against on steep terrain, and the gear range is effective in a wide range of scenarios, and the brakes are as powerful as you need for maximum control.

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ibis hakka mx39 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

The G-One Allround tyres are a lower profile offering in the G-One range and well suited to lots of road riding interspersed with hardpack off-road tracks, gravel tracks and bashing across the plain. They’ll struggle in the gloopiest mud but you’ll be surprised just how much you can push them in muddy conditions if you’re delicate with weight balance and power output. Run them at 35-40psi and they’re good for whatever terrain you’ll encounter.

The Ibis aluminium handlebar and stem complement the frame nicely, but a carbon bar might be nice at this price. Also, while I’m no massive fan of extreme flared drop bars, a slight flare to the drops might have been appreciated for technical trails and to get away from the roadie focus. 

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ibis hakka mx32 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

You could always buy the frame and fork for £2,099 and build it up with your own parts, or spend more – a lot more – and get a Shimano Ultegra Di2 groupset with Ibis carbon wheels for £6,099. Worth knowing is the 7-year warranty on the frame.

Rivals

It’s a lot of bike for a lot of money. For £350 less you could lay your hands on the similarly specced Bombtrack Hook EXT-C, which also combines a carbon frame with big tyre clearance and an SRAM Rival 1 groupset, and while there’s similar ride quality, it could be argued, subjectively of course, that the Ibis is a better-looking bike. There’s also 30 years of heritage with the Ibis.

For another £100 you could look at the Specialized Diverge Comp which gets the Future Shock for really smashing gravel tracks and potholes. 

And if you don’t mind swapping carbon for aluminium, you could consider the Nukeproof Digger which gets the same SRAM Rival groupset and costs just £1,850.

Verdict

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ibis hakka mx1 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Judged on its own, the Ibis Hakka MX is a fast and very capable bike that leans towards thundering along roads, gravel tracks and singletrack rather than ambling through the undergrowth. The low weight and stiff frame begs to be ridden and raced hard and fast so if you have an eye on some fast solo bikepacking quests or gravel races, this could be a bike worth taking a closer look at, provided you don’t mind paying for it.

You might also like:

Test report Ibis Hakka MX review £3,349.00

Frame & Fork

Overall rating for frame 


Riding

Rate the bike for sprinting: 


Rate the bike for high speed descending 


Rate the bike for technical descending: 


Rate the bike for flat cornering: 


Rate the bike for technical climbing: 


Rate the bike for climbing efficiency: 


Rate the bike for agility: 


Suspension

Rate the fork for performance: 


Rate the fork for durability: 


Rate the fork for efficiency: 


Rate the fork for value: 


Bikes

Product purpose: 

The Hakka MX is our answer to the Swiss Army Knife.
It’s the bike we’d choose if heaven forbid, we could only have one bike. The Hakka MX is a gravel bike. It’s also a cross bike and a road bike. We’ve logged a few bike packing trips on the Hakka too.
With its ultra versatile geometry and 1000g frame weight, the Hakka MX is just as happy crushing the local club ride as is it is jumping barriers or camping out
It’s good to have options. With the Hakka MX, you can run road, cross and gravel friendly 700c wheels, or if you are into burlier backcountry exploration, go with 27.5/650b. With the Hakka MX, you don’t have to pick one tire option or the other. Our subtle sculpted chainstays give the frame clearance for up to 700 x 40c or 27.5 x 2.1” tires.

Product construction 


Product performance 


Product performance extra: 

Very fast and capable on the road and in the woods on gravel tracks

Product durability 


Product durability extra: 

The downtube is suitably protected from rock strikes

Product weight 


Product weight extra: 

At 8.3kg this Rival 1 build is an impressively low weight

Product comfort 


Product comfort extra: 

Big tyres at low pressures provide a lot of cushioning

product value 


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Product value extra: 

No doubt about it, it’s a high-end bike with a price to match, but it’s no insanely expensive in this build but you are still paying a premium

Overall performance: 

For mixing road and off-road roads and paths, with a strong focus on going fast on gravel, the Ibis is spot on

Product likes: 

Great riding quality and performance, smooths out the bumps and cracks well

Product dislikes: 

It’s a bit pricey and there are no mudguard eyelets on the fork

Enjoy: 

Yes

Buy: 

Possibly

Recommend: 

To the right friend, yes

Conclusion: 

The Ibis Haxxa MX is thoroughly impressive and capable gravel and adventure bike, and if I didn’t have to worry about the price, I’d be happy to continue riding it