T
Trek
In production2019–

Supercaliber

mtb
01

Origin

Supercaliber is Trek's purpose-built World Cup XC race bike, launched in 2020 as a radical answer to the question 'what if you could have rear suspension without the weight and lateral flex of a four-bar linkage?' The original Gen 1 used 60mm of rear travel via the IsoStrut — an integrated shock that doubles as the upper seatstay, with a SRAM/RockShox-co-developed damper hidden inside a carbon tube that pivots only at the bottom bracket area. The frame had no traditional rear pivot; instead the seatstays flex. Gen 2 (model years 2024-2026) bumped rear travel to 80mm, front to 110mm, kept the IsoStrut architecture, and shaved further weight. Jolanda Neff won Olympic gold on a Supercaliber at Tokyo 2020, and Trek riders have podiumed at World Cup and World Championship XC events on the platform. Production is exclusively at Trek's Asian carbon partners; no alloy version exists.

02

Specifications

Frame
SLR OCLV Mountain Carbon (race-grade, ~1950 g frame+shock) or SL OCLV Mountain Carbon (standard). Integrated structural IsoStrut shock.
Weight
kg
Drivetrain
1×12 — Shimano XTR Di2 / XT (flagship) to SRAM GX/Shimano Deore by trim.
Brakes
Hydraulic disc — Shimano XTR M9200 (flagship) / SRAM DB6 4-piston (entry).
Wheels
29"; Bontrager Kovee carbon (flagship) or alloy, Boost, tubeless-ready.
Lineup
Top-tier XC race platform in Trek's mountain bike lineup
Signature technologies
  • IsoStrut structural suspension
  • Pivotless flex-stay rear triangle
  • Floating rear brake mount
  • Two frame tiers: SLR and SL
  • Dropper seatpost on all models
03

The verdict

+Strengths
  • IsoStrut provides effective bump absorption with hardtail-like efficiency
  • Exceptional climbing performance — traction, position, and pedaling efficiency
  • Clean, race-focused aesthetics with integrated shock design
  • Gen 2 geometry is meaningfully more capable on descents vs Gen 1
  • Olympic and World Cup proven platform
Weaknesses
  • Frame is heavy for an 80mm-travel bike (SLR frame+shock ~1950g)
  • Complex cable routing — many cables to manage
  • IsoStrut serviceability — proprietary system requires specialist knowledge
  • Limited suspension travel (80mm rear) may feel inadequate on increasingly technical modern XC courses
04

Who it’s for

Competitive cross-country riders seeking full-suspension advantage with minimal weight penaltyWorld Cup-level athletes seeking race-proven platformRiders prioritizing pedaling efficiency and climbing over descending capability
05

Buyer’s notes

01
Gen 2 (2024+) is a significant improvement over Gen 1 — if buying new, go Gen 2. The extra travel, slacker geo, and RockShox SIDLuxe IsoStrut are meaningful upgrades.
02
SLR vs SL frame choice: SLR saves ~80g+ at frame level and uses higher modulus carbon, but SL retains cable routing guides for easier maintenance. For club racers, SL may be the smarter value choice.
03
When buying used Gen 1: check IsoStrut service history carefully. The Fox IsoStrut is proprietary and has been flagged by suspension specialists for potential reliability issues. Factor in a professional service.
04
Entry at €3,999 (SL 9.6) offers SRAM Eagle 70 Transmission and dropper post — competitive spec for the price among XC full-suspension bikes.
05
BB90/BB92 bottom brackets on Trek bikes can develop creaking — this is a known issue across Trek's carbon lineup, not specific to Supercaliber. Budget for periodic BB service.
06
Flight Attendant models (from €9,999) include RockShox/SRAM electronic suspension with automatic lockout — a genuine race advantage but at significant cost premium.
07
If considering Gen 1 used: Knock Block headset removal is a popular mod. Gen 2 eliminated it entirely.
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Generations

  1. 2019–2023
  2. 2023–present
07

Tags

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