The new Whyte Kado – an existing design with a new price?

Motor
Bosch Performance CX gen5
Battery
600 or 800 Wh plus 250 Wh extender
Fork Travel
160 mm
Rear Travel
155 mm
Weight
Starting at a claimed 24.2 kg
Price
£4.499-7.499
Don’t get me wrong, the Kado isn’t an old bike. It’s a brand-new model from Whyte, and it comes with the latest Bosch CX motor and batteries of either 600 or 800 Wh. This is a detachable battery, which seems to be less common these days. And you can of course add the 250 Wh range extender too.

The Whyte Kado RSX in silver
The latest Bosch CX motor and the 250 Wh range extender battery.
Will we ever stop seeing that big, plastic blanking plate in the toptube?
Nice! This charge port location seems great. Having the port on the side of the seat tube makes it easy kicking the charge port lid when riding with the extender.

Familiar recipe​

The new Kado is in many ways similar to the Whyte E-160. They’ve both got 29er wheels, the Bosch CX motor and a 160 mm travel fork. Rear suspension on the Kado is 5 mm shorter at 150 mm.

And the same can be said about frame geometry. The 64.5-65* adjustable head angle is just a few tenths steeper than the E-160. The Kado reach is 3-5 mm shorter and chainstays 4 mm longer for sizes M and L. This means there is a slight difference between the bikes, the Kado seems to be a less aggressive bike that is more stable on the climbs for instance.

Kado RSX specs and geometry

Kado S specs and geometry

New price​

I think it’s a good idea to create bikes such as the Kado. It takes less R&D as it seems based on a proven design. This allows Whyte to create a cheaper, yet competitive bike. I believe we will se more bikes like this in the future. It’s time the bike brands start focusing more on cheaper yet well performing emtbs.

Whyte Kado is available with both alloy and carbon frames. Bike weight seems average at a claimed 24.2 kg for the lightest carbon version plus 600 Wh battery. The entry Kado S with the smaller 600 Wh battery has a starting price of £4.499 (€4.999). It’s not extremely cheap, but £1k less than the Whyte E-160 S is significant.

The Whyte Kado RSX in light silver
The Whyte Kado RSX in midnight blue
Is that Cris Akrigg?!

The Kado S is specced for proper trail riding too. Although I haven’t ridden the new Rockshox Psylo Gold fork yet, I assume it will be comparable to a Rockshox Yari. The 11-speed Cues drivetrain is fine, it has a wider and presumably more durable chain than the 12-speed systems. I wish manufacturers would stop using the Shimano M4x brakes with the long lever. But the stopping power is okay.

The more expensive Kado RSX is £7.499 (€8.499). This is of course a well specced bike with Sram Transmission electronic shifting and Fox Performance Elite suspension. Not a cheap bike, but modest for a top-of-the-line model.

The Sram S1000 Eagle is a cheaper wireless T-type electronic transmission, it's found on the RSX.
Nice Magura brakes on the RSX
All photos by Rupert Fowler
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knut7
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Comments

Not overwhelmed by this , for the price the S spec Alloy is ok , but I am happy with my E160 RS-MX which was when I bought it the same price and is even cheaper now , has a Fox 38 and Fox Float Performance DPS and has SRAM AXS, and 750 battery whether the improvements to the Bosch motor offer any real benefit , other than noise reduction , reliability ? , too early to say I'm not so sure it would temp me , obviously if you have to have the latest year model release , go for it and enjoy. :)
 
why is the shock mounted two different ways on each bike?
The shock on the carbon one has a reservoir and is mounted so it sticks out to the side. Mounting it with the reservoir end near the linkage when in this orientation means it's less likely to catch the rider's knee/leg.
 
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