Trek Madone 6.9 radioshack review
|$9985
BikeRadar verdict
"Radioshack may not have won the 2010 Tour but they can’t blame the bike"
Shopping partners
Whatever you think of Lance Armstrong, few professional cyclists in history have made as big an impression on the public as the seven-times Tour de France winner.
Take a look at your fellow riders on the line of your next sportive, and odds on there’ll be someone wearing a faded Discovery Channel jersey or riding a Trek Madone painted in US Postal Service livery.
We’re inclined to think that those on a Radioshack Madone 6.9 will be a little rarer – and not just because of the price. Let’s be honest, the gunmetal grey and red colourway isn’t that lovely.
It is only one of the choices from the Trek Project One Signature range, though, so if you don’t like it you can get the same spec in a different suit. Whatever look you choose, the chances of you being disappointed are slim indeed.
This is a bona fide Tour de France winning machine – Team Astana had this model at its disposal during last year’s race, which Alberto Contador won.
This can sound pretty scary to us mere mortals though. Like F1 cars, MotoGP motorbikes or Robert Green’s goalkeeping gloves, you assume that a top end piece of sporting equipment like the 6.9 can only be handled safely by a highly skilled pro. The Madone, though, will make everyone feel like a sporting god – even if you’re just popping to the shops for some milk.
The Madone does everything a pro needs it to do. The oversized BB90 bottom bracket allied to a chunky down-tube and sturdy, asymmetrical stays means power is delivered without fuss and virtually no loss through flexing, while the handling is pin sharp and as quick as you like. It’s a racing bike, make no mistake, but there’s more to it than that.
Some top race bikes let you know about their intended use by beating you up as soon as you hit rough road, or scaring you stupid if you drop concentration on a curvy descent – not the Madone. It’s comfortable and predictable.
Obviously, pro riders spend hours in the saddle – that’s their job – but it’s still surprising just how cushioned the 6.9 feels. Some of that is likely to be down to the carbon Bontrager XXX bar – with rather short drops on our test bike – and stem combination, which has just enough give to smooth out road buzz at the front, but is plenty stiff enough to cope with out-of-the-saddle honking.
But the XXX carbon clinchers? These are drum tight, take no effort to get rolling and simply fly – it’s hard to believe that there’s much give here.
Comfortable and predictable, of course, sounds like slow and dull. Hush your mouth! The Madone is anything but. Yes you can ride it for hours, but you can ride it very quickly for hours. (Fitness and talent terms and conditions obviously apply here.)
The frame – Trek’s top end Red OCLV carbon blend – is light at just 943g for a 58cm, and takes minimal effort to get moving. Once rolling, it quietly encourages you to explore your speed addiction, and changes pace instantly when demanded. Climbing, even with the standard SRAM Red 53/39 chainset, is not effortless of course, but it’s rarely a chore.
The handling is perhaps not as quick as the most demanding of cornerers may desire, but for everyone else it’s an absolute pleasure. Chuck it into a bend, even a tight one on a descent, and the Madone goes exactly where you want – the cork brake pads working incredibly well with the carbon rims – before flying off to find the next turn. No dramas but plenty of thrills.
What's the score with BikeRadar reviews? You can find a full explanation of our ratings here.
User Reviews
There are 6 reviews on this post
Showing 1 - 6 of 6 comments
-
lauandruss
Posted Mon 23 Aug, 2:52 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
i want no need that
-
lauandruss
Posted Mon 23 Aug, 3:56 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
eh? cork brake pads? thats a joke right?
-
Vegeeta
Posted Mon 23 Aug, 8:00 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
lauandruss you need to run special brake pads on carbon rims, in this instance the cork ones work very well indeed!
At my shop right now there is a 6.9 SSL with Dura Ace Di2 which when one of our usually very quiet customers saw it recieved the reaction F*** My Mouth!
It actually made all of us at the shop very jealous indeed of it's new owner!
-
lauandruss
Posted Mon 23 Aug, 8:52 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
amazing! well i drink alot of wine so i will save my corks, i will never need to buy brake pads again -
-
mythbuster
Posted Tue 24 Aug, 3:23 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Don't think so. The new Madone is a noodle.Trek claimed 90 N/mm is not very good at all for HT stiffness, combined with the narrow crown and thin blade fork, and the new undersized rear triangle, the 2011 Madone ceased to be a high performance bike. It is just too flexible regardless of the unsubstantiated claims about its apparent stiffness.
Additionally the new miracle carbon fiber that the Madone is made of is nothing but a new high fiber density pre-preg carbon fiber that is made available to all manufacturers for the 2011 season by a carbon fiber manufacturer. One to two layers of this fiber in a layup is sufficient to mitigate some of the performance loss due to removal of carbon layers (cheaper and lighter), but not all. And this is not special, or secret.
The 2011 Madone may be light, but at a cost of handling and efficiency. The 2009/2010 Madone was a vastly superior frame. Trek engineers must be banging their heads against the wall just about now, but such is the force of the marketing department....
Everybody knows that the 2011 is the year of ultralight bikes. One has to hope that 2012 will bring back some sanity to the large brands.
-
stoecs
Posted Thu 21 Oct, 12:04 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Neal Stoeckel
Specification
- Name:
- 6.9 Radioshack (10)
- Built by:
- Trek
- Price:
- $9985.00
- Available Sizes:
- 50cm, 50cm, 60cm, 54cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 50cm, 54cm, 52cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 56cm, 58cm, 54cm, 60cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 50cm, 60cm, 52cm, 52cm, 54cm, 52cm, 58cm, 52cm, 50cm, 54cm, 58cm, 62cm, 58cm, 52cm, 58cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 50cm, 62cm, 50cm, 58cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 62cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 54cm, 54cm, 60cm, 58cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 52cm, 56cm, 62cm, 50cm, 50cm, 54cm, 56cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 52cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 50cm, 50cm, 58cm, 50cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 50cm, 56cm, 62cm, 50cm, 56cm, 50cm, 56cm, 62cm, 50cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 50cm, 54cm, 50cm, 54cm, 58cm, 62cm, 50cm, 60cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 52cm, 52cm, 52cm, 52cm, 52cm, 52cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 62cm, 56cm, 54cm, 54cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 54cm, 56cm, 58cm, 60cm, 56cm, 56cm, 56cm, 58cm, 58cm, 58cm, 58cm, 60cm, 60cm, 62cm
- Weight (kg):
- 6.24
- Weight (lb):
- 13.8
Frame & Fork:
- Frame Material:
- Full carbon with alloy BB inserts, forged alloy dropouts, replaceable gear hanger.
- Frame Weight (g):
- 943 g
- Fork Model:
- Full carbon with forged alloy dropouts, 1 1/8in x 1 1/2in steerer
- Fork Weight:
- 369 g
- Headset Type:
- Cane Creek 1 1/8in x 1/1/2in differential aheadset, sealed cartridges
Geometry:
- Seat Angle:
- 73.5 Degrees
- Head Angle:
- 74 Degrees
Brakes:
- Brakes Model:
- SRAM Red forged alloy dual pivot
Transmission:
- Cranks Model:
- SRAM Red carbon 2-piece, 175mm arms, 130mm bcd, alloy rings, steel spindle
- Bottom Bracket Model:
- BB-90 integrated sealed cartridges
- Rear Derailleur Model:
- SRAM Red
- Front Derailleur Model:
- SRAM Red, braze-on
- Shifters Model:
- SRAM Red Double Tap carbon
- Chain Model:
- Shimano Dura-Ace
- Cassette:
- SRAM Red, steel cogs
Wheels:
- Front Wheel Weight:
- 828 g
- Rear Wheel Weight:
- 1187 g
- Rims Model:
- Bontrager XXX shallow carbon clinchers
- Front Hub Model:
- carbon shell sealed cartridge
- Rear Hub Model:
- carbon shell sealed cartridge
Contact Points:
- Saddle Model:
- Bontrager Inform, hollow Ti rails
- Seatpost Model:
- Bontrager carbon single bolt seat clamp
- Stem Model:
- 11cm Bontrager XXX carbon, 2-bolt steerer clamp, 4-bolt o/s bar clamp
- Handlebar Model:
- Bontrager XXX carbon shallow anatomic, 44cm c-c
:
- Bottom Bracket Height (cm):
- 27 cm
- Chainstays (cm):
- 41 cm
- Seat Tube (cm):
- 49.5 cm
- Standover Height (cm):
- 80 cm
- Top Tube (cm):
- 56.5 cm
- Wheelbase (cm):
- 99.5 cm
Related links
Also on BikeRadar
Racing

Vision Metron time trial groupset – First look
New aero kit makes its debut...
Fitness

Buyer's guide to cycling energy products
What to look for and when to...
News

BikeRadar Training 1000 mile challenge leaderboard
First rider hits target...
News

Commencal Meta SL and AM 29 – First look
Plus Supreme FR, Meta SX and...
News

Magura launches TS8 and TS6 forks
29in, 27.5in and 26in options,...
Magazines

Hone your skillz at Glentress
The skills area on the 7Stanes...





