Karpiel Introduces The New Disco Volante
by Tyler Maine
Jul 21, 2009
Source: Karpiel
Karpiel has long been a brand associated with the extreme side of mountain biking, thanks to the groundbreaking heroics of Josh Bender and his memorable films, which have now passed into cult history. While the Karpiel Apocalypse still bears its signature design and offers 12 inches of travel for the rare extremist, the new Disco Volante has been designed as the world’s most adjustable race bike.
Karpiel has long been a brand associated with the extreme side of mountain biking, thanks to the groundbreaking heroics of Josh Bender and his memorable films, which have now passed into cult history. While the Karpiel Apocalypse still bears its signature design and offers 12 inches of travel for the rare extremist, the new Disco Volante has been designed as the world’s most adjustable race bike.
Karpiel’s new owners, Duncon S.A, and its parent company, investment group TUP S.A, together with frame designer, Jan Karpiel, look forward to the bike’s exciting future as it continues to evolve, both in look and design, for the future of downhill racing.
The 2009 model of the Disco Volante was designed with racing in mind and features a lower bottom bracket height, lower center of gravity and more compact frame design for agility. It is more stable in the corners and over rough, traversing slopes and off-camber turns than its predecessors. Among its many new features, the following offers good examples of how far the frames have come while still retaining their Karpiel style.
The new Disco Volante has a replaceable right side dropout while retaining a fully welded brake side dropout for strength. Also present are recessed heads on the brake mount which increase rigidity and reduce loosening of the brake bolts.
Utilizes two eccentric bolt center barrels. Adjustment of the lower barrels allows for suspension travel adjustment. With the shock mount bolt positioned closer to the front linkage pivot, the suspension is set for maximum travel at 9.5 inches with a 3 inch shock. With the shock mount bolt positioned the furthest away from the front linkage pivot, the suspension is set for the minimum travel, which is 8 inches. In-between positions allow for fine tuning of the amount of suspension travel.
The upper shock mount adjustment utilizes two eccentric bolt center barrels that are much larger (1.5 inch OD) than the lower adjustments. The resulting settings should be: in the long travel, the bike should have a more progressive setting with the upper shock mount bolts closer to the downtube, while in the short travel, a less progressive setting is preferred (shock mount bolt further away from the downtube). The upper shock mount adjustment is also responsible for setting of the initial ride height (bottom bracket height). Also, due to a fairly large eccentric movement of the shock mount bolt, installment of a shorter rear shock (2.75 inch) is possible for those who prefer an overall reduction in suspension travel.
Karpiel bikes make use of extensive, high-quality CNC parts throughout. The use of precision machined parts eliminates the distortion and warping of the suspension pick-up points that occurs during welding. It allows for the precision adjustments and exact alignment of all the suspension moving parts.
The new forked tongue gussets are new and have never been seen on bikes or motorcycles before. Traditionally, the head tube takes the most amount of impacts, causing fatigue related stress cracks and sometimes ovalizing of the steer cup area. Traditional head tube gussets are like band-aids that cover up the most highly stressed head tube welds with an additional piece of tubing triangle in an attempt to add more material to the vulnerable area and very often result in simply relocating the cracks to the end of the gusset. The fork tongue gusset, on the other hand, completely relieves the stress on the weld around the head tube, thus relocating it down the tubes using the flexible, non-stress causing splines of the forked tongue design. Since the material used is relatively thick, it offers maximum head tube protection. It also completely surrounds both ends of the head tube with additional welds, preventing the possibility of ovalizing.
ATP stands for Adjustable Travel and Progression. It is the only system on the market that allows for adjustment of travel, bottom bracket height and progression settings, independent from one another. As the bikes are being used all over the world, in various levels of technical terrain, including very rough courses and smooth trails with sharp turns, different suspension settings become a useful asset for versatile riders.
As the swingarm is responsible for transferring the most shock force to the suspension elements/mainframe and the rider, the composite bushings are the padding that buffers the vibrations, extending the life of pivot bearings and other suspension components
More information on the Disco Volante is available on the Karpiel website at www.karpiel.com and the bikes can be seen in action with sponsored riders like Wil White and Antonio Levia.
The 2009 model of the Disco Volante was designed with racing in mind and features a lower bottom bracket height, lower center of gravity and more compact frame design for agility. It is more stable in the corners and over rough, traversing slopes and off-camber turns than its predecessors. Among its many new features, the following offers good examples of how far the frames have come while still retaining their Karpiel style.
The new Disco Volante has a replaceable right side dropout while retaining a fully welded brake side dropout for strength. Also present are recessed heads on the brake mount which increase rigidity and reduce loosening of the brake bolts.
Utilizes two eccentric bolt center barrels. Adjustment of the lower barrels allows for suspension travel adjustment. With the shock mount bolt positioned closer to the front linkage pivot, the suspension is set for maximum travel at 9.5 inches with a 3 inch shock. With the shock mount bolt positioned the furthest away from the front linkage pivot, the suspension is set for the minimum travel, which is 8 inches. In-between positions allow for fine tuning of the amount of suspension travel.
The upper shock mount adjustment utilizes two eccentric bolt center barrels that are much larger (1.5 inch OD) than the lower adjustments. The resulting settings should be: in the long travel, the bike should have a more progressive setting with the upper shock mount bolts closer to the downtube, while in the short travel, a less progressive setting is preferred (shock mount bolt further away from the downtube). The upper shock mount adjustment is also responsible for setting of the initial ride height (bottom bracket height). Also, due to a fairly large eccentric movement of the shock mount bolt, installment of a shorter rear shock (2.75 inch) is possible for those who prefer an overall reduction in suspension travel.
Karpiel bikes make use of extensive, high-quality CNC parts throughout. The use of precision machined parts eliminates the distortion and warping of the suspension pick-up points that occurs during welding. It allows for the precision adjustments and exact alignment of all the suspension moving parts.
The new forked tongue gussets are new and have never been seen on bikes or motorcycles before. Traditionally, the head tube takes the most amount of impacts, causing fatigue related stress cracks and sometimes ovalizing of the steer cup area. Traditional head tube gussets are like band-aids that cover up the most highly stressed head tube welds with an additional piece of tubing triangle in an attempt to add more material to the vulnerable area and very often result in simply relocating the cracks to the end of the gusset. The fork tongue gusset, on the other hand, completely relieves the stress on the weld around the head tube, thus relocating it down the tubes using the flexible, non-stress causing splines of the forked tongue design. Since the material used is relatively thick, it offers maximum head tube protection. It also completely surrounds both ends of the head tube with additional welds, preventing the possibility of ovalizing.
ATP stands for Adjustable Travel and Progression. It is the only system on the market that allows for adjustment of travel, bottom bracket height and progression settings, independent from one another. As the bikes are being used all over the world, in various levels of technical terrain, including very rough courses and smooth trails with sharp turns, different suspension settings become a useful asset for versatile riders.
As the swingarm is responsible for transferring the most shock force to the suspension elements/mainframe and the rider, the composite bushings are the padding that buffers the vibrations, extending the life of pivot bearings and other suspension components
More information on the Disco Volante is available on the Karpiel website at www.karpiel.com and the bikes can be seen in action with sponsored riders like Wil White and Antonio Levia.
Link to News Story
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94 Comments
- + 41 Show
Can't wait to send the 240ft cliff huck to flat I've been eyeing up. Looked a bit sketch on my Specialized P2, hopefully this should do the job.
- + 5 Show
hmm looks like they might actualy be getting away with the bender images that seem to follow kapriel looks sick
- + 2 Show
Bender doesnt suck. he gives it his all, if thats not good enough for you guys to watch, then stay away. ill back bender any day. hes a legend.
[Reply]
- + 3 Show
What are you talking about Duckster? I'm Wil White, I was talking about my disco frame...how is that weird??
- + 13 Show
hence where he said "While the Karpiel Apocalypse still bears its signature design and offers 12 inches of travel for the rare extremist"
- - 2 Show
well it is perfect for racing, however they miss some top DH racer in the team to make the bike "one of the guyzzz" (like V10, Supreme DH, Sunday etc.)
- + 1 Show
HAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAHHAHHAHAAHHAHAHAHA
- - 9 Show
looks solid and ready to rip. my only complaint would probably be the "Karpiel" logo on the bike, like, they're just so ugly 
- + 1 Show
Gash, pretty sure on a really hard landing those eccentric shock mounts could rotate... I can see that being a real pain. Also those 'pinch' fitments (surrounding rotating pieces) the would get worn over time and crack i reckon. You'd better buy a torque wrench if you buy one of these!
- + 5 Show
Nope, they don't move. The WAY early Armageddons had problems with slippage, but from 2003-present, no problems & no torque wrench needed.
- + 4 Show
Great bike, but i still hate Duncon though... they'e bloody lucky Karpiel wanted to work with them - as Walter Sobczak says in BL... bunch of f*** amateurs...
- + 2 Show
i do think karp. bikes are sick ( especailly this one ) but i just find them unattractive.... just a thought.
- + 11 Show
Straight lines, low tucked shock, motocross look. I think its gorgeous!!
Two thumbs up for a DH rig that looks like it wont break!!
Two thumbs up for a DH rig that looks like it wont break!!
- + 3 Show
I've been riding one for almost a year, if anyone is interested in one or have questions, please feel free to contact me. brian.g@karpiel.com
- + 8 Show
Better than the last article posted.Definatly more to the point and real. Nice looking bike but nervous about the eccentric shock mounts. I would like to demo one.
- + 2 Show
I love the idea. I do hope they dont slip. But i assume they have tested them, what great tuneability!
- + 2 Show
Maybe it has something to do with the fact that this article wasn't written by a fifteen year old.
- + 3 Show
Wil White (suicidedownhiller) has one at 38.9 pounds with 888's! Which are probably one of the heaviest from high end forks. But then again there is no point putting a breakable fork on an unbreakable frame.
- + 4 Show
Yeah like all Giant's Maestro frames, La Pierre Dh950, Zumbi F-44, and many more - these companies make similar designs and get them patented (bit stupid for me) but it's only Dave Weagle making so much noise about his uniqueness - good marketing
He should keep it lower or get better lawyers like Santa Cruz or Specialized - nobody tries to make something similar to VPP or FSR without paying 
- - 3 Show
LOVE karpiels! I've had 2, currently got an apocalypse, and they're just the best bikes ever! so nice to look at and even better to ride!
- + 3 Show
bizarre - the volante and the armageddon are almost identical in design, weight, travel and geometry, except the Armageddon has an adjustable seat. Can anyone tell me why these are two different models?
- + 3 Show
You are correct, they are virtually identical with the exception of the seat tower. The Armageddon allows you to fine tune the cockpit.
- + 1 Show
ok, thanks for the confirmation. Why make two different models instead of just make the adjustable seat mast stock? Is there a major price difference?
- + 1 Show
I believe it will be a few hundred dollars different. Again, just allows you more fine tuning ability.
- + 2 Show
lets see how that holds up the barrel thing on top of shock.. is there any teeths? wont it rotate a little if bottom out hard?
- + 3 Show
Like I said above those cams have been in use since 2000 when the first Armageddons came out, very early models did move, however I have not seen or heard of any cams slipping on the newer bikes for many years.
- + 3 Show
how come all the pics suck, why can't there be a decent full frame shot from not on an angle
- + 0 Show
it's about time Jan rolled out some new stuff! looks sweet! are the new frames any lighter? the old stuff was heavy as hell.
- + 2 Show
The old Disco weighed 9.5 lbs and the old Armageddon weighed 10.9 lbs. Was that considered "heavy as hell"? People have the misconception of Karpiel's being heavy bikes. Any bike can be a heavy bike. Back in the beginning when Karpiel was big with the Armageddon people ran Double wides with 3.0 Gozzolodi's, Profile cranks and a Risse Big Foot or Monster/Super Monster T fork. You put that stuff on any bike and it too will be heavy as hell.
- + 1 Show
i wonder is bender will use this as a signature bike for sending of the empire state building to flat.
the gussets on the head tube should stand up to that.
huckers for ever

the gussets on the head tube should stand up to that.
huckers for ever
- + 1 Show
Seems like everyone from the nineties are returning, still waiting on Hannebrink and Zzyzz forks 
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