![]() 1.5mm is the thickness of a US penny (or a smidge more than the thickness of a dime), so you can use a couple dimes to measure. ![]() If the 7.2 works with a 35mm tire, the 7.3 will almost definitely work with the same 35mm tire on the rear, and very likely work with the same 35mm tire on the front.Ī 35mm wide tire should be 1.5mm wider on each side than a 32mm tire, and will have a similar increased outer radius. All the geometric specs are identical for all sizes between the two models. The wheels are different, but it's a small enough tire size change that it's not a problem. It's hard to be sure from the online description, but probably also the same brakes. The 7.2FX and 7.3FX are the same frame, but a different fork. It's not going to make a huge difference in ride quality and because it's a small change, any bike that comes with 32mm tires is very likely to handle 35mm tires with no difficulties. Amongst other tweaks, Moseley’s bike runs 1x Di2 XTR with a 46t cassette at the rear, a Fox Float X shock and prototype Bontrager tyres.32mm to 35mm is a small change. You can read more about the new Slash in our first look article.Īlso on show was Trek Factory Racing rider Tracy Moseley and her stunning new Slash race bike. The transmission is none other than SRAM’s flagship Eagle 12-speed, meanwhile braking also comes from SRAM in the form of Guide Ultimate Carbon stoppers. This, the spendiest of two builds at £6,000 / US$9,000 pairs the Slash’s carbon frame to a Fox 36 TALAS fork and Factory Float X2 rear shock. All of this amounts to more stiffness and better tyre clearance. The frame is 1x specific, and rather than using Trek’s full-floater linkage, the shock is now mounted at the front triangle. ![]() ![]() With a 65-degree head angle this is a seriously slack bike. You only have to glance at that enormous new downtube, a part that actually manages to dwarf that of Trek’s Session downhill bike, to realise how serious this machine is. Picking up where the Remedy 29 left off, Trek’s new Slash is the company’s latest long-travel 29er. The new Slash 9.9 Race Shop Limited picks up where the old Remedy 29er left off Oliver Woodman / Immediate Media For 2017 there are also a couple of women-specific versions of the Remedy, one using a carbon frame and the other being an alloy version. This model is the spendiest of three alloy bikes, while two carbon Remedys sit above it. Other spec highlights include a Bontrager 780mm bar and 35mm stem and a 125mm version of Bontrager’s Drop Line dropper post and SRAM Guide RS brakes. Trek’s in-house brand Bontrager provides most of the finishing kit including the new 30mm wide Line Comp wheelset and SE4 Team Issue tyres, both of which should go tubeless with very little difficulty. The transmission consists entirely of SRAM’s X1 components. The rear end provides 150mm of travel through a Deluxe RT3 shock. Up front there’s a dual-position Rockshox Lyric RC, it’s boost spaced and offers either 160mm or 130mm of travel. Should the crown still hit the frame, the impact will be cushioned by two large rubberised sections. When you stack it, the alloy wedge snaps, taking the brunt of the force and preventing the crown from impacting the down tube at speed. The Remedy also gets Trek’s Knock Block system, which stops interaction between its fork and frame in a crash scenario through the use of a sacrificial alloy wedge that integrates below the upper headset cup. For 2017 there are also a couple of women-specific versions of the Remedy, one using a carbon frame and the other being an alloy version
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