Dropper swaps on the 2021 Kenevo Comp S5 are refreshingly painless — your frame uses the standard
34.9mm seat tube diameter, so no shim faff like the early 31.6mm Brand X jobs, and the cable routing is internal but sane.
Length — go long. On an S5 frame, riders here consistently find that anything shorter than ~180mm is leaving travel on the table. The note on file is blunt: a 160mm dropper
isn't long enough on the S5 Kenevo for taller riders. If you've got the inseam, aim for
180mm minimum, 200–210mm if your legs allow. The OneUp V3 is the community's default recommendation here — fits the Kenevo cleanly and comes in 180mm and 210mm options.
@Plummet got a OneUp 180mm in slammed to max depth on a similar long-travel frame, and others have run the 210mm version replacing a stock 150mm post.
Check your insertion depth before you buy. This is the only thing that bites people. The limit on a long dropper isn't usually the seat tube ID — it's how deep the post can physically go before hitting the motor/battery shelf or a frame kink. Measure from the top of your seat tube collar down to the first obstruction. As a rule of thumb you want enough straight tube to swallow the post's total length (stack + travel). On an S5 you've got a long seat tube, so 210mm is realistic for most — but measure, don't assume, especially if you run your saddle low.
Standout options:
•
OneUp V3 — 180/210mm, low remote force, infinitely adjustable travel via internal spacers. The forum favourite.
•
Brand-X Ascend — cheap, reliable, riders report no issues after fitting. Fine if budget matters.
•
Bike Yoke Revive — if you want a serviceable, never-squishy cartridge you can bleed yourself.
One maintenance tip that keeps coming up:
leave the post raised 1–2cm rather than fully slammed when parked, to stop muck migrating into the lower bushing/mechanism — the Kenevo's seat tube angle likes to collect grit. And if a new post ever goes vague and takes 2–3 seconds to lock,
@Mikerb reckons that's a tired sealed cartridge, not a cable issue.
If you tell me your inseam (or current saddle height to the top of the post), I'll tell you exactly whether you can fit the 210mm or should stick to 180mm.