Trek Fuel EX 8 review
|$2629.99
BikeRadar verdict
"Trek’s all-rounder is a superb showcase of enjoyment boosting technology. It's responsive and efficient enough for epic cross-country but more than tough and confident enough for technical descents"
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Trek’s Fuel EX family has been around for years now, gradually evolving to become more capable and confident every season. We’re not totally convinced by the new tech for this year, but the overall bike is still one of the best all-round trail machines available.
It's keen enough to race your skinny mates up the climbs on, but more than happy to take the fight to lardier, longer-travel bikes on fast and furious descents. More confident angles for 2012, plus confidence boosting tubeless-ready rolling stock and excellent Shimano stop/go gear complete an inspiringly ‘can do’ package.
Ride & handling: Tackles everything from epic cross-country to black-run descents with efficiency and enthusiasm
The Fuel EX is a bike that’s very comfortable riding outside its cross-country/light trail orientated 120mm travel category. The screw-through fork and 68-degree head angle encourage a faster approach to rocks and technical descents, and impressive frame stiffness means accurate and predictable follow through.
It’s one of the few bikes on test that we didn’t want to change the tyres on, although something faster might be in order come summer. That’d help it pick up the pace on smoother sections, where the reasonable weight and excellent pedalling manners make it a naturally efficient and raceable rig on the right rubber.
We’re big fans of the DRCV/Full Floater/ABP back end. It takes longer to set up accurately because you have to cycle the shock to equalize pressures. But the end result is a great balance of stable pedalling but seamless repeated hit-and-drop damping that matches most 140mm bikes in terms of control and speed sustain.
We’re less convinced by the DRCV fork introduced for this year, though. There’s marketing logic for transferring a well reviewed and rated rear suspension technology to the front of the bike, and getting “more travel, more of the time” sounds good. But on the trail, less sensitive small bump response reduces comfort and traction.
Its habit of diving deep, rather than maintaining a predictable ride height under cornering and braking loads, undermines tight tracking and balanced steering geometry. The basic smoothness and control of the Fox fork still shines through though, and given the outstanding get-on-and-go performance of the complete bike it’s not a deal breaker, but we'd score the Fuel higher with a conventional fork.

Frame: Excellent proprietary suspension technology built into a stiff, future-proof chassis
The Fuel EX is a well-established chassis but it’s still loaded with more innovation than most. The angular E2 tapered head tube stiffens up the front end, and for the first time this year the EX 8 model gets a screw-through-axled fork to carry the carving advantage through. Rear dropouts with their concentric ABP pivots get the option of a screw-through axle upgrade too, although the bike comes as standard with a quick-release skewer.
Joining it all together is Trek’s proprietary DRCV-design Fox shock and Full Floater mounting system which squeezes it between extended chainstay tips and the single-piece upper rocker. This not only tunes the spring rate to Trek’s liking but also keeps stress off the main frame tubes.
Trek’s introduction of an 18.5in size between their existing medium and large frame options is something that a lot of other brands would do well to copy to serve the large number of riders stuck halfway between two options. This year semi-internal cable routing joins the feature list too, with a stealthy black/dark grey finish available as well as the more vibrant silver/red/white colourway here.
Equipment: Very good overall kit selection, from screw-through fork to tubeless-ready wheels
As well as colour matching the Bontrager stem and other kit, Trek have thought about the capability of the bike as a whole, rather than going for easy shop floor scores of low weight or easy car park speed. Okay, like most brands the supplied inner tubes are so thin they’ll burst at the sight of the first rock, but the 2.2in wide XR4 tyres are grippy, year-round rubber, and like the broad rims are tubeless ready so all you need is some sealant.
The mixed Shimano Deore XT/SLX drivetrain is a great showcase of how well the Japanese gearing lasts. Even after a winter of lousy weather the only blot on a super-smooth shifting copybook is the scuffing on the XT crank arms. The composite middle ring is still running fine, shifts are still effortless and the SLX brakes have massively impressed everyone who’s tried them. The saddle is comfy, the seatpost is secure and the bar is a decent width. While overall weight is reasonable there’s potential to upgrade and lighten the bike.
This bike was tested as part of What Mountain Bike magazine's Bike of the Year shootout. You can read the full feature in this month's mag, in shops now, and available on Apple Newsstand and Zinio.
Trek Fuel EX 8
Trail Bike of the Year preview
The testers reflect on this year's crop of bikes
What's the score with BikeRadar reviews? You can find a full explanation of our ratings here.
User Reviews
There are 4 reviews on this post
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 comments
-
Too old for this
Posted Fri 20 Jan, 4:53 am GMT Flag as inappropriate
I have the EX8 in Titanium, absoluteley gorgeous, brilliant all round bike, climbs really well.
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johnmu
Posted Thu 19 Apr, 8:32 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
this is great bike but it's not true to say the wheels are tubeless ready and all you need is some sealant. what you actually need is the proper bontrager moulded rim bands (they aren't really tape). and the proper bontrager tubeless valves. i spent hours trying to gte to grisp with these rims and since it was my first time i mistakenly assumed it was my poor technique. B'larks this is not possible unless you buy the right rim trims. you'll also notice the valve holes are not central on the rim which does make a bit of sense when you consider the dish but truthfully it's bloody annoying and misleading. But the real issue is that you can't use stans' universal valves.the other thing i realised is that with this setup the tyres are a right sod to get onto the outer edge of the riim anfd unless you perserve you end up with very eccentric rims. Like a numpty i thought the bike had come with badly built rims, but the LBS nor Trek actually pointed out my mistake. the solution is to inflate to about 60 psi and they do pop out properly. once done you can drop the pressure.all in all i love this bike and it really flatters an average rider like me. 10/10
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bluechair84
Posted Thu 19 Apr, 8:37 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Their isn't an EX8 'in' titanium :)
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bluechair84
Posted Thu 19 Apr, 8:38 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
I wish you could edit these as I now look a plank > there
Specification
- Name:
- Fuel EX 8 (12)
- Built by:
- Trek
- Price:
- $2629.99
- Weight (kg):
- 12.8
- Weight (lb):
- 28.2
Frame & Fork:
- Frame Material:
- Alpha Platinum aluminium
- Fork Model:
- Fox 32 Float RL Taper QR15, 120mm (4.72in) travel
- Rear Shock Model:
- Fox Float RP2 DRCV shock, 120mm (4.72in) travel
- Headset Brand:
- FSA
Geometry:
- Seat Angle:
- 72.5 Degrees
- Head Angle:
- 68 Degrees
Brakes:
- Brakes Model:
- Shimano SLX hydraulic disc 180/160mm
Transmission:
- Rear Derailleur Model:
- Shimano XT
- Front Derailleur Model:
- Shimano SLX
- Shifters Model:
- Shimano SLX
- Chain Model:
- Shimano HG63
- Cassette:
- Shimano HG62 11/36T
Contact Points:
- Saddle Model:
- Bontrager Evoke 2
- Seatpost Model:
- Bontrager Rhythm Elite 31.6mm
- Stem Model:
- Bontrager Race Lite 31.8mm
- Handlebar Model:
- Bontrager Race Lite Low Riser 31.8mm
- Grips/Tape Model:
- Bontrager single lock-on
:
- Tyres:
- Bontrager XR4 Expert TLR, 26x2.2in
- Description:
- Wheels: Bontrager Rhythm Comp 15mm front, QR rear hubs, Bontrager Rhythm Comp tubeless ready rims, black stainless steel plain gauge spokes, Chainset: Shimano XT 42-32-24T,
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