Lark DJ Dirt Jump BMX Bike Frame 26″ Mountain Jumper Bicycle Slopestyle Single Speed

(3 customer reviews)

$349.99

  • jumper bike but declined with the common quanlity but high cost,we stepped in with the upper medium design great price to help you in the game more easy;
  • ⚙️ Brand DNA: The “LARK” product line inherited from our brand name story,the slopestyle and The beautiful sounds from our DJ HUBs under the same product line;
  • 🪤 Learning from jumpers: This is the V1 product, we apologize for not completely satisfied you on all it’s feature, angel and the style,please DO let us know where we can improve in the V2 design;
  • 💡 Partnership: we welcome dirt jumper community or bike shops reaching out with us on the dealershhip or business opportunity;

Based on 3 reviews

5.0 overall
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  1. Reid Revilla

    Been riding this bike for 3 weeks now. Haven’t been off “any sweet jumps” yet, just 3 weeks of hard urban bmx riding.
    Welds look good, frame is straight, everything went smoothly during assembly. I’m happy with my purchase. I’m more happy I got a real DJ frame without spending a fortune. I would buy another if I ever needed to build another bike.

    Reid Revilla

  2. Nora Miller

    I like how light it is, solid welds and beefy rear drop outs. I am not a fan of the decals being under the clear coat so can’t be removed for a clean look. Over all worth the money if have parts to build it into complete bike

    Nora Miller

  3. Reid Revilla

    I got this frame as a test to see how I liked it, I originally had a Dartmoor 26 Player built up and didn’t mind it but I was looking for something a little more aggressive for my riding style, and I can sure say it didn’t disappoint! Frame feels great jumping and the rear end is nice and short making manuals nice and easy. The only reason I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 is because I believe the threads in the bottom bracket shell were cross threaded when they were tapped, or the threads were shallow making it a bit of a struggle to get the bottom bracket into the frame.

    Reid Revilla