国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

The Stache has eaten up every inch of trail we鈥檝e shown it and the plus-size tires grip the trail like Velcro.
The Stache has eaten up every inch of trail we鈥檝e shown it and the plus-size tires grip the trail like Velcro.

This Bike Will Make Standard Hardtails Obsolete

With its new 29+ Stache, Trek has built a plus-size bike that鈥檚 so nimble and comfy we won't ever go back to skinny tires again

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

The complaint with 29+ to date?聽The wheel size can feel unmanageable and the bikes that use them ride like monster trucks. Three years in development, the new Trek Stache鈥攁 nimble聽hardtail built around 29-inch wheels mounted with three-inch tires鈥攈as none of these issues.聽

Trek managed the feat by engineering the bike with a super short rear end鈥攊ts 420mm chainstays are tighter than those on many standard 29- and 27.5-inch bikes. They went to great lengths to make it so, creating an elevated chainstay on the drive side of the bike so they could suck in the wheel. It makes for a snappy ride, though the design also means this frame can only be run with 1x drivetrains, which is worth considering if you need a bigger gear range.

We took possession of a 聽($3,879) about a month ago, and we鈥檝e been surprised by how versatile it鈥檚 proven on the local trails around Santa Fe. We have a good variety of terrain out the front door, everything from fast, flat, quick-steering desert rippers to high-mountain trails with miles-long, grinding climbs and gravelly descents punctuated by bedded聽rock features and passages of loose baby heads. The Stache has eaten up every inch of trail we鈥檝e shown it and, unlike many hardtails, never felt limited on the rocky stuff. The plus-size tires grip the trail like Velcro, especially on descents, though we have noticed that the rear end of the bike spins out a bit on loose climbs, a fact we attribute to the short chain stays.

Sure, flat-out race bikes will always go聽smaller and lighter. But for the average rider, the additional grip and comfort of the oversize tires can鈥檛 be beat.

Unlike Surly鈥檚 original 29+, the Krampus, which was great for open-mile cruising but had a long top tube and a big turning radius, the Stache is compact and chipper and feels like it wants to play. The top tube is quite short and the head angle fairly slack, at 68.4 degrees, which, combined with a dropper post, make for a bike that鈥檚 stable bombing fast descents and confident on techy bits. We found ourselves looking for every root and kicker to pop off of on the Stache, though once in the air, you do feel the extra weight and, more importantly, circumference of the wheels. Still, it鈥檚 a very different ride than聽the Krampus,聽and a lot more like the聽Niner ROS9+.

Other details that made an impression include the new Chupacabra tires, which at 890 grams aren鈥檛 much heavier than most good trail tires. This contributes to the bikes overall perky feeling, and the traction is quite good in spite of the very small tread, though we鈥檙e also looking forward to more brands bringing out some knobbier, plus-size rubber. The Manitou Magnum 34 Pro fork is聽confident and butter smooth without feeling like an anchor up front. Based on the solid performance, we hope more companies will start taking a look at Manitou鈥檚 offerings.

The only real critique we have is with the wheel set, and especially the 50mm-wide Sun Ringl茅 Mulef眉t rims. These work fine and set up tubeless easily, but they're聽hardly lightweight. They are solid spec for the price, but we can鈥檛 help but feel that this bike will really come alive with a set of light wheels (for instance the ),聽which should add carving stiffness and confidence while cutting a few pounds off bike's聽overall 28.5-pound weight. That鈥檚 an easy upgrade, and Trek wisely leaned toward the budget-minded with the three models, including our model as well as the Stache 7 29+ ($2,519) and Stache 5 29+ ($1,760). In the same vein, however, we look forward to a carbon frame option down the line, which will also up the Stache 29+鈥檚 performance.

Specs聽aside, we鈥檙e left thinking that plus-size bikes are the future of hardtails. Sure, flat-out race bikes will always go smaller and lighter. But for the average rider, the additional grip and comfort of the oversize tires can鈥檛 be beat. Without going into the debate over 29+ versus 27.5+鈥攁fter all, it鈥檚 early days in that competition, and it may just come down to rider size and preference鈥攚e can confidently say that we鈥檙e not likely to own a hardtail without plus-size wheels聽ever again.

Filed to:

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online