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TECH NEWS

Trek launches radically redesigned Madone + video

9 Series Madone offers best-in-class aerodynamics, says Trek, along with enhanced comfort from IsoSpeed design

Trek has launched a new 9 Series of Madone road bikes that boasts what the brand describes as ‘unparalleled aerodynamics’ along with the tube-within-a-tube IsoSpeed system first developed for the Domane for increased comfort.

The finished product is a radical-looking design with an amazing amount of integration. It has been raced by Trek Factory Racing in the Critérium du Dauphiné and will see extensive use in the forthcoming Tour de France.

There’s a lot of new technology here, so buckle yourself in.


Aerodynamics

Cast your eye over the new Madone and you’ll notice several obvious features designed to improve the aerodynamic efficiency. The direct-mount centre-pull front brake, for example, is integrated into the fork, the bar and stem are a one-piece arrangement, and there’s a ‘Control Centre’ on the down tube that houses either a barrel adjuster for the front mech of a mechanical setup or the battery and junction box of a Shimano Di2 electronic shift system.

The designers have modified the shapes of many of the frame elements, using Kammtail profiles (Trek calls its Kammtail profiles Kammtail Virtual Foil, or KVF) in certain areas, and they’ve altered several key components.

The redesigned front brake and fork, for example, are intended to ensure continuous airflow towards the down tube. The new handlebar/stem combo hides the cables completely in that area so there’s no cable drag, and its smooth profile is designed to keep the air moving efficiently.

Trek reckons that the new bar saves 34g of drag (the average over 0-20°) compared to the current Bontrager XXX Aero bar (normalised to 30mph).

The water bottles have been sited to minimise drag with the one on the seat tube positioned as low as possible, and Trek says that even the 3S chain keeper (the little device that stops the chain coming off the inner chainring) has been designed with aerodynamics in mind.

Trek says that with water bottles in place, the average drag of the new Madone across a range of yaw angles from 0-20° (in each direction) is lower than that of the Cervélo S5, the Giant Propel and the Felt AR. The engineers say that the Specialized Venge is not a competitor in terms of aerodynamics (although a new Venge has been announced very recently that Specialized says is considerably more aerodynamically efficient than previously).

Trek’s data says that the S5 is more aerodynamically efficient when the apparent wind is at 0-5°, but that the Madone takes over at higher yaw angles.


Integration

Many brands have been pushing integration over recent years as a means of improving the aerodynamic performance of their bikes, but Trek have gone further than ever before with the new Madone.

Check out the front end that Trek says is critical to the bike’s overall aerodynamic performance.

The crown and legs of the KVF-profiled fork are notched so that the proprietary centre-pull front brake can integrate with it, and the brake cable is fully internal, routed down the front of the steer tube and through the head tube. The fork steerer tube is proprietary as well, shaped to allow that internal routing.

The rear brake is in a traditional position on the seatstays (higher end models of the last Madone design had a chainstay-mounted brake, but Trek has re-sited it for convenience), and like the front brake it’s a centre-pull design, the cable passing through the top tube with a stop at the seat tube.

Both brakes have quick release levers – they’re more tabs, really – that you flip open to provide the clearance you need to get wheels on and off.

You get independent spring tension adjustment screws on each brake arm to centre the brake pads, and two more screws allow you to adjust the pads as they wear.

Those strange-looking flaps at the bottom of the head tube are called Vector Wings and they’re designed to protect the brake from the elements. They flip open when you turn the wheel very sharply, providing more clearance for the brake.

The combined handlebar/stem is made to Trek’s existing KVF tube shaping. In order to keep the cables fully internal through the head tube, Trek uses an integrated headset top cap and the spacers. It’s designed for performance rather than appearance but it does look very, very cool.

Those spacers are a two-piece clamshell design that you can add or remove without the need to re-route any cables.

The seatpost is KVF-profiled too, with a head that allows infinite tilt and setback adjustment. You get snap-on rear reflector and light brackets.

The new Madone also features a very neat little device on the down tube that Trek calls the ‘Control Centre' (well, it’s actually called a ‘Control Center’ because Trek is American). This allows you to make gear adjustments.

It houses the front derailleur adjustment dial on bikes with mechanical setups, and it’s where the Di2 battery and junction box live on bikes with electronic gears (it is not compatible with Campagnolo EPS). You get access to the trim button through a window in the top. A one-tab release exposes the charging port.

It’s about time more brands started hiding that Di2 junction box. Look, for example, squirrels it away at the front of the top tube on its 795, but most other brands still leave it exposed.

The potential downside to all this integration if you’re a perennial component tinkerer is that in certain areas you’ll be limited to Trek/Bontrager kit for the whole of the bike’s lifetime.


IsoSpeed

Trek has taken the IsoSpeed technology that it developed for the Domane and incorporated it into the Madone for the first time.

In brief, IsoSpeed is a "decoupler that isolates the movement of the seat tube from the rest of the frame". It’s easiest if you just watch the video:

Check out our review of the Trek Domane 2.0 to see what we thought of IsoSpeed in action. 

For the Madone, Trek uses an aero outer tube shape with a tube inside that’s fixed in place only at one point: just above the bottom bracket. The inside tube is free to flex as you ride. Trek claims the result is 57.5 per cent more vertical compliance than the Madone’s nearest competitor, the Giant Propel.

Trek began developing this version of the Madone way back in October 2011 and it has been through 48 CAD models and three production frame iterations.

Following extensive in-house testing of several kinds, the Madone prototype was ridden by Trek Factory Racing from January 2014 and feedback from the team was used to decide upon the laminate structure of the production bike.

Here's a little video we did to show some of the Madone's key features:

 

Pricing

The new Madone 9 Series will be available in four different versions, the range including models in Trek’s H1 (low and aggressive) and H2 (slightly more relaxed) fits, and also a WSD (Women’s Specific Design) model.

The Race Shop Limited (main pic at top of page), in an H1 fit, will be priced at £9,750. This model comes with a Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 groupset and Bontrager Aeolus 5 wheels.

The Madone 9.9 (above), with the same groupset and wheels, will be priced at £9,000. It will come in both H2 and WSD versions. Why the price difference from the Race Shop Limited version? Trek uses its 600 Series carbon here rather than the 700 Series, and it charges a premium for the Race Shop Limited program. 

The 9.5 (above), with mechanical Dura-Ace and Bontrager Aura wheels, will be £6,000, while the 9.2 (below), with a Shimano Ultegra mechanical groupset and Bontrager Paradigm Elite wheels, will be £4,500.

You can also get the new Madone through Trek’s Project One scheme where you can choose your own components and paint job.

The new Madone is available as a frameset only. The H2 version is priced at £3,350 and the H1 version is £4,100 (again, Trek uses its 700 Series carbon for the H1 version and 600 Series carbon for the H2 version).

Models come fitted with 25mm tyres although there is space for 28s. Despite what you might have been expecting, there is no disc version.

We don’t have the timings on UK availability yet.

We have already ridden the new 9 Series Madone. Check out our First Ride to find out what we think. 

www.trekbikes.com

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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24 comments

Avatar
demolitionspecial | 8 years ago
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That grimace, that possibly started life as an intended smile, at the end of the YouTube video that accompanies the line "... comes in at about 9 grand"

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J90 | 8 years ago
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^ If Trek offered an 'entry level' version they'd clean up. Something like Merida do with the Reacto range, some alloy models and some cheaper carbon ones.

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Iamnot Wiggins | 8 years ago
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I often wonder how many average Joe's will be able to hold & maintain a pace where the aero benefits of a bike such as this become apparent and useful.

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robthehungrymonkey replied to Iamnot Wiggins | 8 years ago
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Iamnot Wiggins wrote:

I often wonder how many average Joe's will be able to hold & maintain a pace where the aero benefits of a bike such as this become apparent and useful.

Actually, if you take a distance the time saved will be about the same whether it's you, me or Wiggo riding. As long as it's flat anyway. Obviously, if you do that distance in an hour and save a couple of minutes, it's huge, whereas me doing it in say two hours and saving the same amount of time is less drastic. But, if you're trying to improve your PB in a time trial or triathlon it's probably as relevant.

Although the aero doesn't interest me massively in a bike (I love it from a geek point of view, but wouldn't base a purchase too heavily on it). The iso speed, and the cable integration i'd love to see on lower priced bikes in the future.

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Scoob_84 | 8 years ago
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No one in their right mind wound buy and then race one of these surely!

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Must be Mad | 8 years ago
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Quote:

At £9.75k, a bike for bankers if ever there was one - that is seriously TTP.

Its a professional level bike for professional level riders - and about the same as rival bikes. (how much of an F1 car will £9.75k buy you? A lot less than carbon than on this bike I'm sure!)

OK, its a bike for professional level riders... and rich show-offs!

But its not really a bike 'for the majority' of us. Yet. What bikes like this do is show us the technology which will trickle down to us over the next few years.

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hkrpk | 8 years ago
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At £9.75k, a bike for bankers if ever there was one - that is seriously TTP.

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fukawitribe | 8 years ago
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From the article

For the Madone, Trek uses an aero outer tube shape with a tube inside that’s fixed in place only at one point: just above the bottom bracket. The inside tube is free to flex as you ride.

Not sure quite how to read this sentence or what the intent was. The Isospeed on this Madone has a tube pivot in exactly the same place as the Domane and Boone however - where the top tube intersects the seat post. Edit: That's the second fixed point (apart from the bottom bracket), but the tube can flex and 'rotate' around it.

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SNS1938 | 8 years ago
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I'm sorry, but I don't care how fast that bike is, it's freaking ugly! The last Madone looked nice, and some aero bikes look nice ... but this one takes the cake for bad looks.

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adam900710 | 8 years ago
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Not familiar with OCLV 600 & 700 carbon,
but the number makes me to remember the Toray T600 & T700...

Are they the same?

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Al__S replied to adam900710 | 8 years ago
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adam900710 wrote:

Not familiar with OCLV 600 & 700 carbon,
but the number makes me to remember the Toray T600 & T700...

Are they the same?

Not at all, the fibres used are Hexcel, not Toray.

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freebsd_frank | 8 years ago
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Centre-pull brakes were useless. It's why they came up with dual-pivot brakes.

9000 quid? I'll give it a miss.

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Welsh boy replied to freebsd_frank | 8 years ago
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freebsd_frank wrote:

Centre-pull brakes were useless. It's why they came up with dual-pivot brakes.

No, centre pivot side pull brakes were not as good as old (good) centre pull brakes. That's why they came up with dual pivot brakes which are effectively centre pull brakes with the arms offset to one side.

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Al__S | 8 years ago
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working for their carbon prepreg supplier, the claims around their materials do make me chuckle. Don't get me wrong- the materials are top-notch (but I would say that). It's just the claims are rather hyperbolic, and untangling what the actual difference between OCLV 600 & 700 is tricky even from this side of the curtain. Um. Yeah. I'll come back if I can say more...

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Ginsterdrz | 8 years ago
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So for £3350 I get second rate carbon and no integrated bar/stem!

Where do they dream the prices up from?

Hello, is that Canyon.

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Yorky-M | 8 years ago
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"Vector wings" look like they have a best before date of two washes.

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TrekBikesUK replied to Yorky-M | 8 years ago
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Regarding the Vector Wings:

They might look fragile, but they are far from it. The Vector Wings are made from the same material as the 3S chainkeeper, and are quite robust. Also, we've made them replaceable in the event that the bike isn't packed properly for travel.

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cat1commuter | 8 years ago
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This looks the nicest of the new aero bikes to me.

If only they had a superstar multiple Tour de France winner to ride it...

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Must be Mad | 8 years ago
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Quote:

Is it me or are all bikes converging to more or less the same shape?

Of the recent bike launches - this, Scott Foil, Canondale Evo and Spesh Venge, all look visually different to me.

But all are presented in black paint jobs. Which beings me onto my point - these aero bikes with the large aggressive tube profiles really benefit from brighter colours. The red Domane at the top looks so much nicer then the black bikes below.

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DaveE128 replied to Must be Mad | 8 years ago
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Must be Mad wrote:

The red Domane at the top looks so much nicer then the black bikes below.

Yes. This. The black bike looks awful. And that's from someone who rides a black bike.

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robthehungrymonkey replied to Must be Mad | 8 years ago
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Must be Mad wrote:
Quote:

Is it me or are all bikes converging to more or less the same shape?

Of the recent bike launches - this, Scott Foil, Canondale Evo and Spesh Venge, all look visually different to me.

But all are presented in black paint jobs. Which beings me onto my point - these aero bikes with the large aggressive tube profiles really benefit from brighter colours. The red Domane at the top looks so much nicer then the black bikes below.

I disagree, I wasn't too fussed by the red being raced, but LOVE the black version! IMO, it just works with this frame.

As a current Madone owner, I really like this. The Iso speed in a "proper" race bike is interesting and integration is the way forward. I imagine it's also the reason the brakes have been moved back, I believe comfort is the main reason that they were below the seat stays before (as Scott suggest with their new foil).

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dnmvisser | 8 years ago
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Is it me or are all bikes converging to more or less the same shape?
Much like cars that are 99% the same these days.

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jollygoodvelo replied to dnmvisser | 8 years ago
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dnmvisser wrote:

Is it me or are all bikes converging to more or less the same shape?
Much like cars that are 99% the same these days.

Fish that swim quickly are mostly the same sort of shape too, with some variation that's generally explained by specific purposes.

Wonder if there's a reason for that...

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joules1975 replied to dnmvisser | 8 years ago
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dnmvisser wrote:

Is it me or are all bikes converging to more or less the same shape?
Much like cars that are 99% the same these days.

Yep, the do all seem to have frames that are roughly made of two triangles, and the bars and saddles all look to be in roughly the same place, as do the pedals... oh, hang on...

These new bikes look more different from each other than the old steel bikes did back in the day!

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