Specialized haven't changed their designs a lot, cheap as chips to pick up and still rated. Late 90's were good, check out the > 98 section for some late 90's inspiration
Thanks again for all the suggestions....erm, know it hasn't exactly been suggested, although Giant has, but anyone have an opinion on something like this (another one I had a hankering for BITD!)
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What about a Proflex? The 857 I had was more than capable as a full-sus xc trailbike. The 1997 857/957 had coilover shock front and rear, I upgraded mine to a Fox Float rear and more modern air fork up front. Even as standard they give 3" travel and are pretty light even by modern standards.
I have a Cannondale Super V 1000SL that I replaced the Headshok with a Lefty and rear swing arm with one from a Jekyll.
Think it's a very capable bike. You could also fit a normal fork to it with headset reducers.
The bikes I've built for my daughters and building for my wife are late 90's full suspension Marins, Wolf Ridge, Mount Vision, Wild Cat Trail. As my younger daughter grew, I built her the Mount Vision by transferring all the components from the 13.5" c-to-c front triangle Marin frame on to the 17.5" c-to-c Mount Vision front triangle. So there are small frames around if you need one.
I can't tell you enough about how good this is, and how much I love it. My problem was finding a fork from the same era that could balance the performance, and it couldn't, so I used some later SID World Cup forks as a concession.