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- Evil Bikes Sovereign Frame 2010
Evil Bikes Sovereign Frame 2010
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Evil Bikes Sovereign Frame 2010
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| Black | Extra Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| Black | Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| Black | Medium | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| Kelly Green | Extra Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| Kelly Green | Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| Kelly Green | Medium | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| White | Extra Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| White | Large | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
| White | Medium | Discontinued - no longer available | ||||
Top Features of the Evil Bikes Sovereign Frame 2010
The original EVIL Sovereign hardtail was often imitated but never copied. The ground breaking Sovereign returns with updated geometry to make it even more fun and versatile on the trail or deep in the woods.
- Frame Material: Tange 4130 Custom Butted
- Seat post Dia: 31.6mm
- Seat Clamp Dia: 34.9mm
- BB Shell Width: 73mm
- Brake Type: Disc only
- Rear Hub Spacing: 135mm
- Max Rear Rotor Dia: 185mm
- Designed for 24 or 26" wheels
- Superalloy head tube, dropouts, and chainstay yoke
- XX-Rated adjustable dropouts
- Asymmetrical monostay fits a 26x2.3 tyre at 15.5"
- Low top tube
- 3" wide tyre clearance
- Fork Material: 164
- Frame Material: 150
- Frame Warranty: 405
- Unisex
With a slack head angle, long top tube, and low bottom bracket height the Sovereign's geometry excels in all mountain and trail riding situations. Now featuring a custom butted Tange 4130 cromoly tubeset, ISCG05 chainguide mounting, and geometry based on 140mm suspension forks.
The Sovereign features EVIL's HVS adjustable dropout system that combines the adjustability of horizontal dropouts with the security and ease of traditional vertical dropouts. HVS allows you to build the Sovereign with gears, as a singlespeed, with a chainguide, or even with a Hammerschmidt crank or internal hub.
The Sovereign ships with 8 decal kits in Gold, Silver, White, Yellow, Blue, Green, Lavender, and Red to match nearly every possible part combo. As well as being available in Black, White and Kelly Green.
Sizing information
| Frame Geometry | ||||
| Frame Size | Small | Medium | Large | Ex-Large |
| Seat Tube Angle | 71 | 71 | 71 | 71 |
| Effective Top Tube | 560 | 585 | 605 | 630 |
| Seat Tube Length C-C | 380 | 430 | 480 | 500 |
| Head Tube Length | 110 | 110 | 125 | 125 |
| Wheelbase | 1046 | 1072 | 1091 | 1117 |
About the Evil Bikes brand
Hailing from North America, Evil Bikes are made by people who ride, and who want the world to ride better bikes. This emphasis shines through with their fantastic quality bikes that feature great design and finish. Evil make bikes that will suit the most hardcore dirt jumper through to someone who just wants an agile bike to clock up some miles...
Finance for the Sovereign Frame 2010
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Delivery Information
- This item qualifies for FREE DELIVERY to most of the UK - check your postcode
- We are sorry, but due to your postal destination United Kingdom we can not despatch this item.
- You can update you currency and delivery destination via the International Options feature at the top right of the website.
For more information on product pricing and sales tax visit our product pricing help page. - Need help or unsure? If you have any questions regarding delivery please email Sales@Wiggle.co.uk.
Returns Information
- We will happily refund or exchange any item purchased on Wiggle if returned to us within 30 days, excluding Wiggle gift vouchers and personalised products except when faulty.
- We make no charge for returns - there is no restocking fee.
- Returned goods must be unused and supplied with their original packaging.
- We pay the return postage on any faulty item - Read more.
Magazine reviews for Evil Bikes Sovereign Frame 2010
Review from Bikeradar
Dave Weagle may be better known for his e.thirteen chain devices and dw-link suspension system, but before all that he created this cult classic hardtail. The latest generation Sovereign is still trail royalty if you can afford the relative king's ransom that's required to buy one.
Ride & handling: Pitch perfect design creates an insatiably insane ride character
The Evil's medium length 'effective' top tube measurement on our 'regular' frame is lengthened by the slack seat angle. That means when you're out of the saddle your body weight is actually well forward on the bike, right over the front wheel.
With your chin right over the Maxle axled fork and the big wide Race Face Atlas bars squaring your shoulders against the trail, you can't help but charge down the singletrack as aggressively as possible.
We can still clearly remember the last Sov we tested four years ago, for its permanent sensation of insolent disrespect and impending disaster that only tube surfers normally experience.
This 'win it or bin it' attitude is still the overwhelming emotion of the Evil, but however hard and headless we pushed it we never actually came unstuck. The rear wheel was rarely going the same direction as the front, and both wheels being on the ground for any length of time was also a rarity.
In fact, every test ride on the Evil was just a string of goofy slides, giggling skin-of-your-teeth escapes and consistently blasting through or off stuff that we thought about twice on other bikes.
It's got the muscle to turn savagely enough to rip tyres to shreds but the slack seat means it'll manual instantly. Up front, the in-your-face handling means it'll flick the rear and let the front fall into long, dirty drifting slides that'll make you feel like an Atherton, and punch up short climbs or out of corners like Peaty.
The steel stays skim the sharper edges off big blocks enough to retain control and tyre pressure, and this slight compliance rather than the clatter of aluminium makes a tangible difference to tyre adhesion and overall confidence, which goes a long way to offset the ferrous weight penalty on more technical trails.

Frame: Indulgent detailing and DIY decal individuality makes owning one a privilege
The Sovereign has changed a fair bit since we last tested it. The frame is now made from double-butted Tange Prestige steel rather than the original Reynolds 853/725 mix, which knocks £255 off the price, although it's still expensive for a steel bike.
This ain't no ordinary frame though. A smoothly flared (rather than conventionally ring-reinforced) head tube mitres onto a down tube of the same diameter and the radically sloping top tube.
An oversized bracing pipe supports the extended seat tube, which also penetrates through the top tube, which continues on to form the centrepiece of the seatstay wishbone.
The chainstays also use a wishbone arrangement, but while the offside is a conventional curved pipe, the initial section of the driveside is a machined plate.
Evil signature plates seal off the diagonal stay ends ahead of the cantilevered frame terminals. Here twin bolts in sliding slots with track bike style stop screws mean the 'XX-Rated' dropout plates can slide back and forwards 18mm to adjust the chainline on singlespeed systems or run 24in or 26in wheels.
Either way, there' absolutely massive tyre clearance for up to 3in rubber. Not surprisingly, given the e.thirteen design link, there's also an ISCG05 chainguide mount on the bottom bracket shell.
The finishing quality is fantastic, right through to the surreal skull/penny farthing head tube badge, and the three colour options come with eight different DIY decal kits. It only comes in regular and long versions though, and the seat tube is the same length on both.
Equipment: Pick your own, but our spec was ideal for singletrack thrashing
The Evil is another 'frame only' deal so build-up is in your hands, but this spec is as good a template as you'll get. Race Face's Atlas AM cockpit kit and double-and-bash cranks are tough but not too heavy, and SDG's innovative I-Beam saddle and seatpost system shaves grams.
The RockShox Revelation fork with Maxle screw-through axle is the toughest, tightest steering 140mm (5.5in) fork around. Hope SP-AM 4 and Mavic EX521 hubs are very accurate for their weight, and Intense's System Four dual compound tyres are fast, tough all-rounders.
In conclusion...
Extremely expensive for the hardcore hardtail breed, but nothing rides the ragged trail edge as well as the Sovereign can
Rating: 4/5
Review from Bikeradar
It may be unconventional, but Evil's Sovereign frame is a stunning ride that's now cheaper than it's ever been.
Tange tubing saves money over the previous Reynolds 853 steel, but it rides just as well. Same-diameter tubes form the top tube, brace tubes, down tube and wishbone rear stay tubes.
A machined plate chainstay section gives big tyre and chainring clearance without excess bending. Sliding HVS dropouts with adjuster screws for security allow for singlespeed or altered geometry options and there are ISCG tabs too.
Eight different coloured decal packs complete the custom finish. It's not light (2,790g/6.15lb) and it's premium priced, but every time we ride a Sovereign, its insolent responsiveness and unruly low-slung, high-strength confidence blows us away.
In conclusion...
High cost and weight, but the Sov still rules on technical trails.


Available to UK residents only.

