Rumours of a new gravel bike from Specialized have been circulating ever since it was leaked on Annika Langvad’s Instagram stories. It didn’t look like much, but new mounting points were a clear giveaway. Now, the brand has fessed up as it unveils the new Diverge 4 that boasts an updated version of Specialized’s Future Shock design. Here’s everything you need to know.
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Announcing the start “of a new chapter”, Specialized reckons that the new Diverge turns the way in which the bike has set gravel standards up to 11. And the driving point behind that is a new version of Future Shock 3.0, as the brand furthers suspension’s growing importance in gravel.

Now in its third iteration, Future Shock 3.0 is pretty much the same as before, being a headset-integrated system that offers 20mm of squish, but this time, rather than a unit found in the top tube that decouples the seat tube, which made the old bike rather divisive, Future Shock 3.0 relies on seat post flex. According to spesh, when the rear wheel hits a bump, the Roval Terra seatpost can deflect up to 18mm, dubbing the action ‘vector compliance’.
Touching back on the headset bit of the system, the brand claims that it’s more adjustable than before, allowing it to deliver all of its travel to a wider range of riders, regardless of their weight. The system as a whole is then said to weigh 200g.

Becoming part and parcel of nearly every modern mountain bike, the new Diverge also gets downtube storage. Named SWAT 4.0, Spesh reckons it’s the most advanced internal storage system to be found on a gravel bike. In a bid to live up to those expectations, it uses a flush-mount door, lever-operated door with a large opening that’s said to make space for tubes and CO2s, through to jackets, tools, and nutrition.
Keeping up with current gravel trends, the bike offers space for up to 700x50c tyres, too.
As for the geometry, the Diverge 4 takes more inspiration from mountain bikes in that it goes longer, lower and slacker. Now, a size 56cm Diverge gets a reach that’s eight millimetres longer than before. Then, to make up for any bottom bracket height deviations that come as a result of larger rubber, it’s been lowered by five millimetres.

In numbers, that means a 56cm frame gets a 392mm reach, a 71.75-degree head angle, a 432mm chainstay length and an 80mm BB drop.
Models and prices
Specialized’s new Diverge will be available in a whopping seven models in a range made up of four carbon frames and three alloy frames. Interestingly, the latter still offers downtube storage, making it the first alloy gravel frame to do so, says Spesh.
Across the range, expect a mix of Shimano and SRAM groupsets from the CUES, GRX, Apex AXS, Red AXS and mechanical variants. Of course, Specialized provides the tyres in the form of a pair of 45mm wide Tracers, and each bike gets Supacaz bar tape.
Prices start at £1,299 and go up to £6,999.























