Canyon Exceed CF 6 vs Santa Cruz Blur 4: geometry and fit comparison
Matched sizes, stack and reach deltas, and a fit check against your own body instead of guessing from two separate size charts.
The Canyon Exceed CF 6 is built as a cross-country geometry frame, the Santa Cruz Blur 4 as a cross-country geometry frame. Across matched sizes, the Canyon Exceed CF 6 stack sits about 25.399999999999977 mm taller than the Santa Cruz Blur 4, which generally means a more upright position before spacers. Reach is nearly identical across matched sizes.
For the Canyon Exceed CF 6 in L, XL there is no Santa Cruz Blur 4 size with a comparable position: the range simply does not reach there.
Switching from a Canyon Exceed CF 6?
Your closest Santa Cruz Blur 4 size, and what will still feel different about the position.
| You ride the Canyon Exceed CF 6 in | Take the Santa Cruz Blur 4 in | The position will feel |
|---|---|---|
| XS | S | 21.700000000000045 mm lower · 17 mm longerDifferent position |
| S | S | 25.700000000000045 mm lowerDifferent position |
| M | M | 25.399999999999977 mm lower · 3 mm longerDifferent position |
Which one fits you better?
Run the same measurements through both frames. The likely size and the full fit report can differ more than the spec sheets suggest.
What Canyon Exceed CF 6 size fits you?
Get an instant frame estimate, then continue into the full fit report to check cockpit reach, bar drop, and setup risks before you buy.
No account needed for this check. The full report keeps this bike preselected.
What Santa Cruz Blur 4 size fits you?
Get an instant frame estimate, then continue into the full fit report to check cockpit reach, bar drop, and setup risks before you buy.
No account needed for this check. The full report keeps this bike preselected.
FAQ
Which has the taller front end: Canyon Exceed CF 6 or Santa Cruz Blur 4?
Across matched sizes, the Canyon Exceed CF 6 stack sits about 25.399999999999977 mm taller than the Santa Cruz Blur 4, which generally means a more upright position before spacers.
Can the same rider take different sizes on these two bikes?
Yes, and it happens often: frame labels are not standardized. Use the matched-size table for geometry, then run the fit check below with your own measurements for each bike.
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