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Today’s DealsSupercaliber SLR Gen 2 Frameset
A 29″ carbon frame full suspension crosscountry frameset.
Manufacturer Price
$3,999| Weight | 4.3 lbs (frame) |
|---|---|
| Frame | Carbon |
| Suspension | Full, 80mm rear |
| Shock | RockShox SIDLuxe IsoStrut |
| Wheels | 29″ |
5'1" – 5'6"
5'4" – 5'10"
5'8" – 5'11"
5'9" – 6'3"
6'1" – 6'5"
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Summary
The Trek Supercaliber is a high-performance cross-country bike praised for its superb pedaling efficiency, surprisingly effective suspension, and great handling. It's noted for being blisteringly fast and includes a dropper post, though some reviews mention it isn't super light and has an overly stiff cockpit. The bike's IsoStrut suspension offers improved sensitivity and grip, making it a standout in its category.
Superb pedaling efficiency
Surprisingly effective suspension
Great handling
Blisteringly fast
Dropper post included
Still isn’t super light
Overly stiff cockpit
Questionable rear shock reliability
The Supercaliber has never pretended to be something it’s not.
Despite the improved suspension performance, it’s clear that the new Supercaliber has lost none of its ruthless efficiency.
It’s truly a racer’s mountain bike, and this was proven multiple times at the highest levels.
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Dec 2023 · Robin Weaver
With razor-sharp handling and ridiculous urgency under power, the new Supercaliber is an incredibly capable cross-country machine in the right hands
Taut and direct feel under power
Efficient
Mutes bump impacts effectively
Capable geometry that enables you to descend at speed
Lots of cables to deal with
One-piece bar and stem won’t suit everyone
2.2in tyres too narrow

Oct 2023 · Guy Kesteven
Trek’s new Supercaliber is very much an evolution of the original ‘revolutionary’ design. As a result, it feels like a very sorted, balanced and predictable XC bike, its eagerness for speed clear from the first pedal stroke, and that makes it one of the best XC bikes we’ve tested. And it’s by design. Because apart from a significantly slacker head angle (67.5º down from 69º) the Gen 2 Supercaliber doesn’t look dramatically different to Gen 1. Frame and geometry Trek even made a conscious decision not to alter the rest of the geometry much (reach and seat angle are slightly increased) so as not to disturb the riding position for their finely tuned pro athletes. Scrape away the multiple paintwork options though (three alone on the flagship SLR 9.9 XX AXS model) and there’s a completely new set of tube profiles. The SLR frame uses a more exotic carbon fibre construct than before and the internal ‘trunking’ for the frame routed brake hose and dropper cable have been removed. Also seeing as Trek’s pro racers generally removed the Knock-Block steering limiter puck from the top tube, that’s no longer fitted either. Taken together, these updates give an average weight saving of 200g (depending on size) compared to the Gen 1 bikes. Which puts the frame right on the 2kg mark that most serious racers would consider the competitive ceiling. Racers will also be pleased to hear you can fit a 38 tooth chainring and the bike comes with two carbon bottle cages fitted as standard. Trek is still sticking with its extra wide PF92 bottom bracket as it says the stiffness to weight gains from the bigger tube junctions are too good to ignore. The bottom bracket height also raises 10mm to reflect the increased travel and the main pivot position also comes up 10mm in relation to the BB to increase the anti-squat, so the bike pedals better too. Suspension The heart of the Supercaliber’s 80mm rear suspension is Trek’s unique IsoStrut design. This is essentially a small RockShox SIDLuxe based shock hidden inside a 38mm diameter alloy tube (IsoStrut) that bolts into the top tube at both ends. Then the carbon seat stay head forms a larger tube that slides along the IsoStrut on a bushing borrowed from the RockShox ZEB fork; it has 38mm diameter legs. The slider then connects to the inner shock through a slot to stop it rotating, so the whole unit acts as a structural frame member. Hence the increased stiffness. Despite claims of it being lighter, the IsoStrut element alone without the seat stay head, bushings etc. is over 100g heavier than a standard SIDLuxe shock. Talking to the Trek design team during testing they assured us that achieving similar stiffness from a conventional linkage system like that seen on the 120mm travel Top Fuel, would incur a significant weight penalty. Thankfully things are a lot simpler up front where the latest RockShox SID SL Ultralight 110mm travel fork is hardwired to …Continue reading »
Conventional, predictable, race-ready package. Dropper post as standard.
Press Fit BB servicing sucks. No power meter as standard.

Sep 2023
The Trek Supercaliber has been completely overhauled for 2024 with two new frames, updated geometry, an increase in travel & a new IsoStrut.
Beautifully sleek & distinctive frame design
Ruthless pedal efficiency
Hardtail-like handling response
Great small-bump sensitivity & grip
Dropper post standard on all models
Unrivalled mud clearance
IsoStrut lacked lubrication oil from factory
Insanely tight tyre & rim interface
Expensive for the spec
Cockpit ergonomics aren't great
Messy cables
Aug 2023 · Guy Kesteven
Trek’s dedicated, XC racer has had a complete overhaul so just how Super is the Supercaliber now?
Super efficient pedaling
Firmly fast ride feel
Balanced XC handling
200g lighter than before
Dropper post on every bike
Smart race and servicing details
Heavier than some longer travel bikes
Multi cable chaos
PF92 BB
Skinny tires on the XX AXS

Aug 2023
The revised Supercaliber has more suspension travel, a lower weight, and a dropper seatpost comes standard. Plus it’s an absolute rocket up hills.
Lightweight and an absolute rocket up hills
IsoStrut rear suspension by RockShox provides 80mm of rear wheel travel
New RockShox SID Ultimate fork offers 110mm of travel, but riders can swap to 100 or 120mm
No cables through the headset
Press-fit bottom bracket
Not as light as some bikes with more travel
Aug 2023 · James Huang
Trek’s premier XC racing platform, updated with more suspension travel and a more versatile geometry.
Superb pedaling efficiency
Surprisingly effective suspension
Great handling
Blisteringly fast
Dropper post included.
Still isn’t super light
Overly stiff cockpit
Questionable rear shock reliability.

Aug 2023 · Tyler Benedict
Trek's top race bike gets a bit more travel with geo to stretch those legs, and drops up to 250g off the frame!

Aug 2023 · Ron Koch
Trek has introduced a second generation of the Supercaliber with a completely new frame with more travel and evolved features to take on the highest levels of racing.
| Frame | SLR OCLV Mountain Carbon, IsoStrut, UDH, 80mm travel Hanger Standard: UDH Tire Clearance: 2.4" Colors: Deep Smoke; Carbon Red Smoke |
|---|---|
| Shock | Trek IsoStrut, RockShox SIDLuxe, 2-position remote damper Travel: 80mm |
| Headset | FSA IS-2, 1-1/8'' top, 1.5'' bottom |
| Tires | Frame: 29x2.40", Fork: See manufacturer |
|---|
First added August 11
Last updated November 25
Not listed for 559 days