Review: Brand-X Ascend Dropper Seatpost

Ascend: Dropper lever
The Ascend Dropper lever
Cycle magazine editor, Dan Joyce, puts the Brand-X Ascend Dropper Seatpost through its paces

£139.99 hotlines-uk.com

Dropper seatposts are great. Being able to lower (then raise) the saddle while you ride along makes a mountain bike much more manoeuvrable. A dropper post can also help cyclists with mobility issues, being lowered for mounting and dismounting then raised for riding along.

If you’re not already sure you need one, however, the price might put you off; the iconic RockShox Reverb has an RRP of £284 and upwards. This Brand-X Ascend is just £139.99. It’s almost cheap enough to buy speculatively.

What’s perhaps surprising is how good it is. I’ve used RockShox Reverbs, as well as droppers from KS, and the Brand-X Ascend compares pretty well.

It works in the usual way, which is to say: like an office chair. You press the release lever and your weight pushes the seat down – either fully or, if you prefer, partially. Press the lever when you’re not sitting and pneumatic pressure pushes the seat back up to its original position.

The Ascend is actuated by a remote lever on the handlebar, which is a much better option than a lever under the saddle. Not having to ride one handed means you drop the saddle more easily and more readily; on some rides, I use the dropper remote nearly as much as the gear shifter. It’s operated by a standard gear cable.

This version is a ‘stealth’ one, designed for internal routing through the seat tube and (on suitable frames) the down tube. Fitting is a bit of faff as you need to get the cable length just right, but the cable end attached to the seatpost yoke isn’t easily accessible like a gear or brake cable would be: it’s in the frame.

Measure twice, cut once! And don’t forget a spoke for fishing the cable out of the frame… It would be easier to fit if the cable could be trimmed at the lever end.

Brand-X Ascend dropper seatpost

Once set up, the Ascend works well, smoothly descending and ascending through 115mm of its nominal 120mm travel. I’ve been using silicone spray after rides to prevent stiction and have had zero problems. Keeping it clean obviously helps; I’m using a Mudhugger rear guard.

There’s a little rotational play between the upper and lower shafts, but not enough to bother me.

The only issue is that, like most droppers, it’s an inline post. As I normally use a layback post, that shortened the distance to the handlebar by about 20mm, making it feel cramped.

I fitted an 80mm stem in place of the existing 60mm, but would prefer a shorter stem and a layback dropper. A longer frame would work too but would be more expensive to buy than a different dropper.

The Brand-X Ascend is available in 30.9 and 31.6mm diameters and with a 120 or 150mm drop. There’s an Ascend XL with a 170mm drop, as well as an Ascend II, for bikes without internal routing, in 27.2, 30.9, and 31.6mm diameters, and in 105 and 125mm drops. There’s also a CX one (27.2mm only) in 85 and 105mm drops with a drop-bar lever.

The 31.6, 120mm Ascend post I tried weighs about 640g, including lever and cable. It’s a penalty of 300-400g over a rigid post but one that’s worth paying. If it came to a choice between a suspension fork and a dropper, I’d pick the dropper.

Other options

KS Eten Integra £130

KS Eten Integra dropper seatpost

Cable-operated layback post available in 30.9 and 31.6mm with 125mm travel and in 27.2mm with 100mm travel. KS eTen Remote version is externally routed.

Rockshox Reverb Stealth £328

Rockshox Reverb Stealth dropper seatpost

Hydraulically actuated, internally routed post available in 30.9, 31.6 and 34.9mm diameters, with 100, 125, 150, and 170mm travel. External version is cheaper.

First published in Cycle magazine, December 18/January 19 issue. All information correct at time of publishing.

Our test promise

At Cycling UK and Cycle magazine, we are proudly independent. There’s no pressure to please advertisers as we’re funded by our members. Our product reviews aren’t press releases; they’re written by experienced cyclists after thorough testing.

Pros and cons

+ Inexpensive 
+ Surprisingly good 
- Like most, inline only