Steel frame stalwart Cotic has brought fresh updates to its Jeht mountain bike, but with a bit of a twist. With the brand’s founder, Cy Turner, liking the Rocket e-mountain bike so much, the Jeht now features a suspension platform that’s been inspired by that very e-bike. Let’s dive into the details.
The Jeht sits in Cotic’s range as the mid-travel full susser that’s inspired by its smaller FlareMAX but built to bring that character to more demanding tracks. But now, its latest incarnation gets a might shake up as the brand’s famous droplink suspension platform has been binned, in favour of Rocketlink, the layout found on Cotic’s unique e-MTB, the Rocket… almost Santa Cruz style, but the opposite (cough, Vala, cough).
This move came from Cotic owner Cy’s love of the Rocket e-MTB, but of course, it brings it to a lighter bike overall, and there’s been a focus on pedalling efficiency. While it looks remarkably different to droplink, the brand says that this is more of an evolution of that design. The change in shock location also means that the Jeht now features enough space for a large bottle and an accessory mount in the front triangle.

Where old versions of the Jeht boasted 140mm of rear travel, it gets a useful boost up to 150mm, and the brand says that the bike can play ball with a fork of matching travel, or a 160mm option. That rear suspension is then compatible with coil and air shocks, but as before, this is a dedicated mullet bike, so it gets a 650b wheel at the rear, and a 29in wheel up front, another Rocket-inspired move. Committing to a mullet wheel size means that there are no flip chips or weird geometry wizardry to allow users to throw in a 29in rear wheel. Instead, the new Jeht is more about simplicity.
As for geometry, expect a 64-.5 degree head tube angle, a 450mm chainstay, a 76.3-degree seat tube angle and a 482mm reach on the middling C3 size, with a 150mm fork. But the bike benefits from proportional geometry, so the chainstay and seat tube angle will change depending on the size you choose.

Oh, and this bike is built from Reynold 853 tubing, T45 steel and 6082-T6 aluminium.
Prices for the new Jeht start at £2,999 for the frame only, whereas full bikes start at £4,850. If you’re happy to throw in another £300, you can pick custom paints.
