Supercaliber
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.
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
- IsoStrut structural suspension
- Pivotless flex-stay rear triangle
- Floating rear brake mount
- Two frame tiers: SLR and SL
- Dropper seatpost on all models
The verdict
- 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
- 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
Who it’s for
Buyer’s notes
Generations
- 2019–2023
- 2023–present
Tags
Related models
Want one?
Find this bike on the marketplace, or compare notes with riders already on one.
