We take a look at some of the bikes to grace the first Red Bull Hardline Australia

By Nick Clark

Published: Thursday, 29 February 2024 at 16:00 PM


Last weekend saw the first iteration of Red Bull Hardline Australia, with riders meeting in Maydena Bike Park, Tasmania, for one of the gnarliest downhill races on the calendar.

This year was the first time the event had taken place away from its home country of Wales, where Dan Atherton set it up in 2014.

Hardline attracts talent from the worldwide freeride and downhill community but, unlike other races, the event is invitation-only, with select riders battling it out for the prestigious win.

In a continuation of firsts, we saw Gracey Hemstreet become the first woman to finish a Hardline course, and the first person to win the category since its inception.

She posted a time of 3 hours, 56 minutes, ahead of Scottish shredder Louise Ferguson.

The men’s category was taken by Ronan Dunne, who pipped three-time Hardline champ Bernard Kerr by 1.876 seconds after a masterclass run.

Thanks to its unique nature, Hardline usually produces some interesting setups as riders balance downhill technical ability with impact-absorbing suspension setups to tackle the enormous drops, jumps and compressions.

Here are seven of the bikes that caught our eye, with both winning bikes detailed and analysed.