A new Trek Madone road bike has broken cover for the first time, being ridden by members of the Trek-Segafredo pro team in the Criterium du Dauphine that began in La Voulte-Sur-Rhone this morning.
The Madone is Trek’s aero road bike, sitting alongside the lightweight – and these days also aero – Emonda.
Trek is saying nothing about the new design other than the usual: “Trek is constantly working on product development with our sponsored athletes and when we have anything to communicate we’ll let you know…” Or something. That means we’re relying totally on what we see here.
The key feature is the interrupted aero seat tube. It splits in two at its top to join each of the seat stays. Then it stops abruptly before resuming as more of a seat mast to house the aero seatpost.
What’s the idea? We’re guessing that Trek will be talking about the design adding compliance to the ride because that has been among the Madone’s key features for many years; there’s no sign of the IsoSpeed system – which has been incorporated to smooth the ride in the past. IsoSpeed is designed to allow the seat tube to move independently of the rest of the frame, meaning a degree of movement at the saddle, so we surmise that the new design is intended to do the same job but in a simpler and lighter way.
The IsoSpeed system used on the last Madone was damped by an elastomer and was adjustable for rider weight and ride preference. There’s no sign of any adjustability here.
The gap formed by the interrupted seat tube and the seatstays is called IsoFlow. That name suggests that Trek could be claiming some sort of aero benefit here.
Putting the seat tube to one side, the new Madone incorporates a HUGE slab of frame around the bottom bracket, presumably to provide stiffness down there, and a similarly whopping head tube.
As you’d expect of an aero road bike, the fork blades are deep while all of the frame tubes appear to be shaped to reduce drag with Kammtail profiles.
The bike features a combined handlebar and stem with aero top sections and no brake hoses on show. There’s a very nice bit of detail at the front which could also suggest that this handlebar is specific to the Madone.
Trek-Segafredo uses SRAM Red eTap Axs groupsets so no gear cables are required. The wires for Shimano Di2 systems will doubtless run fully internally.
The stem section is unusual with an added part that sits behind the attachment point with the fork steerer. We’re guessing that this is designed to offer an aero benefit when used alongside the specific headset cover.
Trek-Segafredo bikes are fitted with Aeolus wheels from Trek’s Bontrager brand and Pirelli P-Zero tyres.
We’d be pretty certain that the new Madone is lighter than the previous one because, well, that’s usually the case. Over the past couple of years, it has become increasingly important that top-end road bikes are both lightweight and aero – being one or the other is no longer acceptable – and it looks like this is an effort by Trek to go down that road.
What do you think? This is a design that’s sure to be divisive, so let us know what you think of the new Madone in the comments section below.
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18 comments
Yes, it looks weird. No, it's less complicated than the Isospeed Decoupler and all its variants, and it doesn't require maintenance. No, I don't think my thighs would rub on the wide-track seatstays. I'm sure Trek thought this out first, anyway. Rim brakes? Come on, and bring back those flappy doors at the bottom of the head tube? If any bike was made for disc brakes it's the aero Madone, and I'm not even a fan of road disc brakes. It looks weird but it should all work.
The seatstay design is essentially what Simplon and cervelo did with their handlebars, so it is a somewhat proven concept.
Although you don't have legs going up and down in front of the handlebars unles something has gone dreadfully wrong.
Does anyone remember GT bikes? I thought their triple-triangle frames looked so cool in the 1990s.
GT was my first thought too! They do gravel bikes. Grade is the current model.
https://www.gtbicycles.com/gbr_en/bikes/road
Radical would be if it had rim brakes
Plenty of area for cracks and fractures to start.
Do the UCI regs for road bikes require a straight seat tube? Just thinking that if not the seat tube could be curved around the tyre with the Kamm tail - like the 3T Strada - and the seat tube joining lower down the stays to create a bigger Isoflow hole.
Let's be really silly and suggest slot gaps either side of the head tube with inboard vortex generators and a sculpted underside of the top tube to accelerate more air through the Isoflow hole and away from the legs.
Looks like a place to store 'stuff' - even though I doubt that what it's for.
Kudos to Trek for trying something different.
The Madone isn't here to win beauty contests. It's built to win races.
true, though its a truism often in motor racing that spends even more money chasing every ounce of gain in aerodynamics, that usually the designs that look good to the eye are the quicker, than the ones that hit every branch of the tree falling to the ground.
Id guess its a CFD design, but aero around the seat post is always messed up by the riders legs, be interesting to see what kind of gains claims they make about it when its officially launched.
The whole of cycling has been moaning that all aero road bikes look identical. Well, not anymore. When you've done dropped stays to death it's time for something new.
As a tool for going fast in races, which is what this bike is intended for, it's perfect.
Oh for the love of god, no. Who the frig designed that? MC Escher? Kill it with fire!
Of all the people you could choose from to suggest bad taste you chose Escher…? Really? He made the most, beautiful, wonderfull artworks 🤷🏻♂️
This frame is freakin' ugly, and your remark is an insult to Escher.
One man's art is another man's not art.
Cripes! Looks more like a tri bike than a road bike. Coming soon to the leafy lanes of Surrey no doubt, once it's available from Project One.
It's almost as if tri bikes are designed to be the pinnacle of aero...
Not a fan of that. It's not so much the over-hanging seat-tube, it's more the fact that the seat-stays have been brought forward and join halfway up the top-tube "Lapierre style" (which I also don't like the look of).