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David Harrison

Table of contents, fuel exe 9.5 review (2023).

Fuel EXe 9.5 review

The Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 is the lowest-spec bike in the company’s Fuel EXe series. They’re among the best lightweight e-MTBs you can get hold of; the bikes are easy to handle and fun to ride, without giving away too much on weight.

That’s not to say they don’t offer anything in the electrics department, either, though. They still have a bit of a punch and nicely straddle the two worlds of e-MTBs and conventional MTBs. You can end up paying top dollar for the highest-spec bikes in the range, up to around $14,000.

So, at less than half that amount, does the Fuel EXe 9.5 tick the right boxes? Or should you pay that little  bit extra for some of the other rides in this highly-regarded range? We’ve spent many hours out on the bike to get all the answers you need.

Right, then, let’s get stuck into the Fuel 9.5!

Our Verdict

Another cracking bike from the team at Trek. The introductory bike in the Fuel EXe range doesn’t disappoint, with an excellent motor, lightweight feel and natural ride experience.

The TQ motor, battery and display are real highlights, all elevating the overall ride of the bike. There are elements which could be better at the price tag you’re paying – the suspension and brakes for two – but overall, it’s still a very fun bike to ride, with great versatility.

It shines downhill, copes admirably uphill and loves a twisty trail.

We’re fans!

  • Lightweight
  • Motor display
  • Natural power delivery

Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

Fuel EXe 9.5

Price: $6,499

Weight/frame.

The Fuel EXe 9.5 has exactly the same OCLV carbon frame as the other bikes in the Fuel EXe range. That’s right, even the top spec Fuel EX 9.9 XX1 AXS, which costs more than twice as much.

It’s certainly a good start and we’re sure you’ll also be wanting to know how much does a Fuel EXe 9.5 weigh? The total weight is 19.93kg .

It certainly isn’t feather light, but it still lends itself to being thrown around without too much difficulty, and you still very much feel in full control of the bike.

It’s easy to manipulate through the twisty sections, which is helped by the geometry options which Trek has offered. Like the rest of the Fuel EXe range, the 9.5 comes in 4 different frame sizes, each of which have two geometry settings.

ℹ️ Take your time over selecting your frame and geometry setup, because the ride experience will be elevated by nailing it down first time. It could be an expensive mistake if you don’t feel fully comfortable up there.

The frame looks the part, too, with a really refined finish and a battery tucked down nicely into the downtube, along with internally-routed cabling.

The bike mimics a traditional MTB on the descents; it feels nimble and easy to manoeuvre, yet also feels nice and planted on the trail due to its low centre of gravity.

It’s no slow-coach on the climbs, either. It copes with them well thanks to the lightweight frame and a decent punch in the motor department.

Trek has partnered with (the relatively-unknown) TQ for the electrical components. The company is more renowned within the robotic and aviation sectors, but they’ve really put a decent shift in with this collaboration with Trek.

The Fuel EXe 9.5 has a 360Wh battery supplied by TQ , which is the same size as the rest of the bikes in the Fuel EXe range. This is by no means an insignifiicant battery; you can get a decent day’s riding done out on that 360Wh battery, particularly if you use it more sparingly.

It won’t power you for hundreds of kilometres , but it will offer a welcome helping hand to a fairly capable e-MTB rider, who simply needs a small electrical nudge from time to time. It works intelligently with the motor to release the power conservatively, too.

The charge time is another success story as far as this bike’s concerned – you can get it back up to full juice in around two hours.

Fuel EXe 9.5 battery

The motor on the Fuel EXe 9.5 is another collaboration with the folk at TQ. Like the rest of the Fuel EXe range, the 9.5 comes with the TQ-HPR50 motor , which can emit a solid 50Nm of torque .

ℹ️ This isn’t the punchiest motor on earth, far from it – you can get up to 90Nm on some e-MTBs, but then you lose that natural ride feel. This bike is designed to mimic a normal MTB and feel natural, which you often lose with a big aggressive motor.

It’s important to really think about what you want from an e-MTB. If you want to be thrown up mountains all day long, with little human effort, then this bike certainly isn’t for you. However, if you just want a little leg-up, then this bike offers you a wonderful ride experience

Fuel EXe 9.5 motor

The power is delivered in a very natural way and you always feel very much in control of the bike. It’s important for that natural ride experience to have a motor which softens off nicely and comes to life gently – you can often feel pulled around by some larger motors.

TQ has nailed it with the HPR50 and it complements the other natural ride features of the Fuel EXe 9.5. Oh, and it operates silently , too – a dream out on the trails.

Motor Display

Another round of applause is necessary to the crew at TQ for the motor’s display on the Fuel EXe 9.5. It’s a very-advanced piece of kit, which puts other displays to shame – Shimano and its primitive EP8 display ought to take note.

This is a real beauty. Not only do you have the amount of remaining battery charge presented as an exact figure – something we think should be mandatory on e-MTBs – but you get much more, too.

You can customise your display to add in all sorts of important ride data – such as the estimated number of kilometres riding you have left on the battery, info about how much climbing you’ve done, your RPM, heart rate stats, and much more.

It’s more than just a display, then, it’s a fully-fledged ride companion. You can link all that data up onto your smartphone, too, and really nail down your performance out on the trails. We love it.

Fuel EXe 9.5 motor display

RockShox Deluxe Select+ RT

RockShox 35 Gold RL

RockShox 35 Gold RL

Now this is where things begin to get a little more simplistic and how the Fuel EXe 9.5 differs from some of the more expensive bikes in the range.

The Fuel EXe 9.5 comes with RockShox 35 Gold DR , Debon Air Spring forks – offering 150mm of travel . And there are RockShox Deluxe Select+ RT Shocks at the rear , with 140mm of travel .

The amount of travel is the same as the others in the range, but the components aren’t quite as plush. The best way to describe the forks is “ok”; they don’t offer the comfiest ride by any stretch of the imagination, and they aren’t quite as durable as other forks out on the market.

Can you tackle the enduro and XC-style trails you want to on the Fuel EXe 9.5? Yes. Is it a dreamy experience bouncing through those trails and up and over obstacles? Not really.

They’re ok and do the job, but not magnificently.

It’s a similar story with the shocks; for the price you’re paying for the full bike, you could get a higher spec component – it doesn’t mean the bike is bad, not at all, but Trek could have offered more here.

Overall, the suspension setup doesn’t live up to the high-level frame, battery or motor.

Wheels/Tyres

Fuel EXe 9.5 wheel

The Fuel EXe 9.5 comes with 29in wheels at both the front and the rear, with a Bontrager Line, 6-bolt Boost110 at the front end and a Bontrager alloy, 6-bolt at the rear.

This differs from some of the more expensive bikes in the Fuel EXe range, where you have fully-carbon OCLV wheels.

This is one of the factors that has raised the overall weight of the bike.

You don’t feel a great deal of difference out on the trails, they’re fairly robust and help soak up a lot of pressure when carving about.

The tyres are produced by Bontager too, with XR5 Team Issues at both the front and the rear. They offer a decent level of grip into the corners and hold up well overall. No complaints on the tyre front, they do the job you would hope of them.

The Fuel EXe 9.5 is fitted with TRP Slate Evo Hydraulic disc brakes . This is a big step down from the SRAM components on some of the more expensive Fuel EXe bike.

It’s another case of being just “ok” – they aren’t powerhouses and they do get a little hot, but then again the bike isn’t the most powerful on earth. They do an adequate job, but we think you can get much better in this department.

Fuel EXe 9.5 disc brake

The Fuel EXe 9.5 comes with a Sun Race CSMZ800 11-51, 12-speed cassette and Shimano Deore M6100, 12-speed rear derailleur .

This is an adequate pairing, but they’re far from being all-singing all-dancing.

The shifting is fairly swift, but by no means as responsive as some on the higher-spec bikes in the Fuel EXe range. Again, Trek could have offered more here

We certainly aren’t aghast at that price. You can get a lot worse for this kind of price and you’re still getting those magnificent TQ electrical components and the OCLV lightweight frame.

You’re making compromises in other areas, such as the suspension, brakes and drivetrain and maybe we could argue Trek could have knocked the price down a bit. But overall, it’s a good bike at a fairly decent price

Fuel EXe 9.5 Facts & Figures

Size configurations.

* All measurements provided in cm unless otherwise noted.

How Does it Compare?

There are a few big players in this half-and-half, MTB and e-MTB market. Specialized, Orbea and Pivot are among the manufacturers who have been pumping money, time and effort into the sector.

A fair comparison to the Fuel EXe 9.5 is the Specialied Turbo Levo SL Comp .

Turbo Levo SL Comp

It comes in at a very similar price currently, due to a big discount on the Specialized website, and you can now pick one up for $5,429, down from $7,000. It weights in at 19.4kg, half a kilogram under the Trek in this review, but it has a smaller battery, with only 320Wh, compared to the Trek’s 360Wh.

The motor on the Turbo Levo SL Comp is also lacklustre in comparison, only emitting 35Nm of torque compared to the Trek and it has a much less advanced display.

The Specialized’s FOX suspension set-up is more forgiving, though, and, overall, provides better value for money in that department – the same applies with the SRAM brakes and drivetrain that it comes with, as standard.

It’s a very close call here – you’re either getting a better electrics set-up with the Fuel EXe 9.5 or a better suspension, drivetrain and brakes set-up on the Specialized.

Both deliver their power in a natural way, but we just love the TQ motor set-up, it’s one of the best we’ve used in recent memory.

With that in mind, the Trek just sneaks it.

Final Thoughts

The Fuel EXe 9.5 is quite the introductory bike into the Trek Fuel 9.5 range. It offers some excellent features, which you find on the much more expensive bikes in the range, such as the motor, battery and frame.

It rides beautifully on the trails, with a seriously fun and natural ride experience. And although you lose out on some components, with a downgraded suspension, drivetrain and brakes, we still think it’s a very fun bike to ride, on the whole.

Could Trek offer more in those latter departments for the price tag? Yes, probably. Does it ruin the overall ride experience? Not really.

It still gets a big vote of confidence from us. Now give it a whip round the trails for yourselves.

If you enjoyed this review then make sure to check out our reviews of other Trek e-MTBs.

Fuel EXe 9.9 XTR Review

Fuel EXe 9.9 XTR Review (2023)

Fuel EXe 9.8 XT review

Fuel EXe 9.8 XT Review (2023)

Fuel EXe 9.8 GX AXS review

Fuel EXe 9.8 GX AXS Review (2023)

Fuel EXe 9.7 review

Fuel EXe 9.7 Review (2023)

+1 (918) 393 4169, [email protected].

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  • Trek Fuel EXe reviewed (finally)

by Ben Haworth November 6, 2022 56

The new Trek Fuel EXe is an important bike. It’s attracting a lot of attention from the e-curious who don’t think much of the current e-bike offering from elsewhere.

NB: Ignore the price tag of this model. Let’s talk about the bike behind the bling.

  • Brand:  Trek
  • Product:  Fuel EXe 9.9 XX1 AXS
  • Price:   £13.250.00 £14,350
  • From: Trek Bikes
  • Review by:  Benji for three months

trek fuel exe

Three things I loved

  • Looks great
  • Less scary on technical terrain than heavier e-bikes
  • Rides like a normal bike

Three things I’d change

  • Range anxiety
  • Wish we’d tested a more affordable version

trek fuel e

A warning. I’m not going to go into great detail about the nuts and bolts of this bike. You can read our ‘ 5 reasons the Trek Fuel EXe is most important bike of the decade ‘ from when the Trek Fuel EXe was announced for that stuff.

Another warning. Nor am I going to talk much about this particular £14,350 showpiece model. It’s a distraction. It actually gets people’s backs up (mine included to be honest). It doesn’t give the Trek Fuel EXe concept a fair chance.

I’m going to focus on the frame, the motor, the battery and the controls. The stuff that’s exactly the same on the £6,400 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 .

In this review I’m going to focus purely on how a Trek Fuel EXe bike rides.

trek fuel e

For those who do need a quick refresher, or understandably don’t want to click open another browser window for a reminder, the Fuel EXe is Trek’s mid-power e-bike. 50Nm of torque, compared to the 85Nm of full-power e-bikes and the 35Nm of Specialized’s SL low-power e-bikes.

The ostensibly similar – and surely the current main rival – Orbea Rise has 60Nm of torque by the way. And there’s also the new Fazua Ride60 equipped e-bikes with 60Nm too (check out the Pivot Shuttle SL as an example).

The battery is a 360Wh capacity one (same capacity as Orbea Rise). Some full-on ebikes have 700Wh+. A common capacity is 500-600Wh. Specialized SL e-bikes have 325Wh batteries.

trek fuel e

There is also a range extender battery available for the Trek Fuel EXe which gives a further 160Wh, for £450. I would have really liked to have had one of these for this test period but they have yet to land in the UK in large enough numbers to get hold of one. Believe me, I tried.

Perhaps the two main USPs of this bike are its weight and its appearance. It weighs around 40lbs. And it looks like a normal mountain bike. Both of these factors cannot be understated as to their importance with the mountain bike market.

There is a third USP too but it’s only once you’re on the bike and riding that it appears: it is pretty much silent. Honestly, once off-road you can’t hear it. You can only just hear it when riding on the road but even then you have to be going pretty slow for the wind noise not to drown it out.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

The Trek Fuel EXe can pass for a regular mountain bike. And while this might partially be about hiding the ‘shame’ of riding a pedal assist bike, I actually think it’s more to do with people’s existing fondness for their current mountain bike.

Existing experienced mountain bikers like how their mountain bike looks and sounds. The Trek Fuel EXe totally nails the remit of looking and sounding like a normal mountain bike. Massive kudo to Trek for that alone.

Trek Fuel EXe review

I’ll come out and say it. I still don’t really know how I feel about this bike. I’ve been dithering and delaying writing this review for quite some time. The only thing I am sure about is that the Trek Fuel EXe is not for me.

The thing is, I also think it is brilliant. And it will be perfect for loads and loads of riders out there.

In a nutshell, after passing it round as many other riders as I can convince to get on it, everyone says the same thing: “it’s just like a normal bike”. That is exactly what I say too, although I mean it in a confused head-scratching way. Everyone is saying it in a giddy enthused way.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Despite everything, the overarching experience of the Trek Fuel EXe is one of subtlety. It does not blow your mind upon first pedal stroke. Indeed because of the silence and the instant and super natural way the motor assist comes in, a lot of the time you can’t tell you’re getting any assistance at all. There isn’t a visual display confirmation of the assistance level you’re getting either (a la Shimano or Bosch displays).

It feels like not a lot is happening. But it is.

Finish a ride on the Trek Fuel EXe and then instantly hop on a normal mountain bike and the assistance is instantly noticeable by its absence. The Trek Fuel EXe is like riding with a massive tailwind. Or on ascents that have had a few degrees of gradient removed from them. Or you’ve suddenly become twenty years younger. It’s not that climbing becomes whistle-while-you-work easy (which it can do on full-power e-bikes), it’s still pretty strenuous activity on the Trek Fuel EXe.

I’d go as far to say that, unlike full-power e-bikes, the Trek Fuel EXe cannot do things that normal mountain bikes (and/or mountain bikers) can’t do. You won’t be scrabbling up preposterous trials-y techno climb challenges on the Fuel EXe. You won’t be trebling your usual altitude gain. What you will be doing is riding for that extra hour, and doing that extra hill.

What about descending then? Despite ‘only’ weighing 40lbs or so, the Fuel EXe does definitely exhibit some of the suspension flattery that you get with the extra weight of e-bikes. The Fuel EXe is an excellent descender. It’s pretty long and acceptably slack, which helps, but it’s the weight that is the most significant thing at play here.

The suspension on this bike works excellently. So calm. Very supportive. Very grippy. Sure, some of that may be due to the fancier dampers in the top-end suspension parts specced, but my gut feeling is that it’s to do with the sprung/unsprung help that comes when the frame is heavy, particularly the placement of that weight (central and relatively low down).

Compared to full-power (heavier) e-bikes on descents, the Trek Fuel EXe wins some and loses some. It does lose out on some of the super stability and speed-holding of heavier e-bikes. But on the whole, I think I prefer the nimbler handling of the Fuel EXe. Particularly when things are loose. It feels much less scary. Less like the bike is careering away out of control. More confidence inspiring.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Which brings us to the real surprise arena. Flat stuff.

The Trek Fuel EXe feels most at home on contouring terrain. Or rather, its assistance is more overly felt and appreciated on flatter trails. It’s when you’re not fighting gravity, or using gravity, that the Fuel EXe feels like a rocketship. It feels amazing. It makes you feel like a World Cup XC bod.

It’s also really good fun and capable on technical traverses. Off-cambers. Teetery stuff. Gamble do-you-don’t-you decisions. Ledges, Stream crossings. I felt much less fearful of stumbling and ending up being trapped under a bike, compared to the experience of full-power big-battery e-bikes.

A word here about the motor. They lack of delay is really, really impressive. There’s none of the fear of stopping pedalling (and the subsequent stall/dabbing) as there is with other e-bikes.

There’s also no detectable overrun either (where the motor is still assisting for a brief time even though you’ve stopped pedalling). Whilst some experienced e-bikers will miss the overrun (I did), there is no denying that the combination of instant engagement and instant disengagement really helps make the bike feel incredibly normal.

The controls and the display are fine. Totally intuitive and clear. Again, as an experienced e-biker I did miss the extra info of Shimano and Bosch (even Specialized) displays. But if you’ve never had the info, you’ll not miss it. Again, the Fuel EXe is not for experienced e-bikers. It’s very much a My First E-Bike.

Which bring us to the battery. And here I think there is a bit of an issue. Fundamentally I don’t think the battery is big enough to play to this bike’s strengths. Namely, big days out doing normal mountain biking. I’m not even that sure the aforementioned range extender battery will add enough extra range (for what and where I’d like to go anyway).

On one hand, the Trek Fuel EXe feels very much like a step into the future in terms of aesthetics and acoustics. On another hand, the return of range anxiety feels rather retro.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

I appreciate that the whole battery capacity versus system weight is something of a vicious circle. Would adding one or two kilograms to the bike’s weight significantly impair the bike’s handling? Maybe it would. You do have to draw the line somewhere and it can’t have been an easy or quick decision made by the Trek team.

I think personal preferences come into play a great deal here too. I am a bit of a Boost* fan. I can’t help it. I don’t have the discipline to stay in Eco or Trail modes. With a different rider on board, one who switches to Eco for flat road linking sections, and keeps it in Trail for pretty much everything else.

(*Trek don’t actually give their three different power levels names, so I’m using the common e-bike parlance of Eco, Trail and Boost.)

The top power mode certainly does seem to really rinse the battery significantly more than you’d think. It doesn’t feel (there’s that word again) like it’s giving you that much more assistance, yet it certainly gets the battery bars dropping faster.

Ultimately, I did eventually end up doing rides pretty much keeping it in middle/Trail mode and just leaving Boost well alone. But is that like buying something and then putting it away and never using it? You’ve paid for a bit with 50Nm/300W of assist. Surely you should be able to use it?

Again, I’d like to point out that I haven’t had a range extender battery to test out to see what difference that makes to the Fuel EXe’s MPG.

I did use the top/Boost setting under certain circumstances. Those circumstances being going for a ‘Power Hour’. Those sort of sub-20km lunchtime blasts. Stick the bike in Boost and leave it there until you’re on fumes and need to Eco back home. That felt like a good use for Boost. And certainly opens up that short-but-intense type of ride that is pretty unique to e-bikes. Similarly, Boost was great for de-harshing and funning-up night rides (my night rides are always on the short side).

test trek fuel exe 9.5

This may sound stupid obvious but if you only want a bit of help, that’s what this bike is for. It’s for normal rides. Normal riders. It is a very subtle bike. That subtlety is easily mistaken for being underwhelming. It’s arguably a waste of time to compare the Fuel EXe to full-power e-bikes. Trek do a full-power e-bike (a really ace one called the Trek Rail). Full-power e-bikes are like a new type of vehicle. The Fuel EXe is much closer to a regular unassisted mountain bike.

Fundamentally the Trek Fuel EXe is a beautifully executed machine that is going to be exactly what a great swath of experienced mtbers are looking for. Folk who are just finding mtbing too hard, but still want it to be strenuous. Something that takes the unpleasant edge off but doesn’t remove the ‘joys’ of Type 2 fun altogether.

Ignoring the motor aspect of it altogether, the ride and handling of the Trek Fuel EXe is brilliant. It’s a fantastic trail bike. Nimble and fun but with great stability and planted-ness.

Right. That’s my review finally done. Although I’d quite like this to be the start of an ongoing conversation about this bike. ‘Cos it’s interesting and I’m sure there are things I’ve not covered here.

Questions please! Comment below.

Specification

  • Frame //  OCLV Mountain Carbon 140mm
  • Motor //  TQ-HPR50, 50Nm, 300 watt peak power
  • Battery //  TQ 360Wh
  • Head unit //  TQ handlebar-mounted, TQ LED Display
  • Shock //  RockShox Super Deluxe Ultimate AirWiz RCT2, 205 x 60mm
  • Fork //  RockShox Lyrik Ultimate AirWiz Charger 3 RC2 150mm
  • Wheels //  Bontrager Pro Line 30 OCLV Mountain Carbon
  • Front Tyre //  Bontrager SE5 Team Issue 29 x 2.5in
  • Rear Tyre //  Bontrager SE5 Team Issue 29 x 2.5in
  • Chainset //  E*Thirteen E*Spec Race Carbon 34T 165mm
  • Shifter //  SRAM Eagle AXS 12-speed
  • Rear Mech //  SRAM XX1 Eagle AXS 12-speed
  • Cassette //  SRAM Eagle XG-1299 10-52T
  • Brakes //  SRAM Code RSC 200/200mm
  • Stem //  Bontrager RSL Integrated bar/stem 45mm
  • Bars //  Bontrager RSL Integrated bar/stem 820 x 27.5mm
  • Grips //  Bontrager XR Trail Elite lock-on
  • Seatpost //  RockShox Reverb AXS 170mm 34.9mm
  • Size Tested //  L
  • Sizes Available //  S, M, L, XL
  • Weight //  19.3kg

Geometry of our size L test bike

  • Head angle //  65º
  • Effective seat angle //  77º
  • Seat tube length //  435mm
  • Head tube length //  110mm
  • Chainstay //  440mm
  • Wheelbase //  1,245mm
  • Effective top tube //  630mm
  • BB height //  343mm
  • Reach //  485mm

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  • This topic has 56 replies, 27 voices, and was last updated 1 year ago by julians .

Great technical summary and introduction – but should I buy one. Or rather what rider / riding would I be to go for a great half day ride?

Soz, that was supposed to say half fat ride….thanks again 👍

I bought the 9.5 version (and upgraded a few bits) , and posted some thoughts here

New (e)bike day – Trek fuel exe 9.5

Not quite sure what you mean by this bit

There isn’t a visual display confirmation of the assistance level you’re getting either (a la Shimano or Bosch displays).

There is a permanent part of the display showing what assistance mode you are in , plus you can switch to a screen that shows what power you are generating and what power the motor is generating.

Or rather what rider / riding would I be to go for a great half day ride?

I would say that if you find on a full fat ebike you’re usually coming back from a ride with 25-50% battery remaining , or you think that you dont get enough of a workout on a full fat bike, then something like this bike could be for you.

or if you do quite a lot of lifting the bike over stiles & gates, or possibly a lot of hike a bike , or you prioritise downhill handling and playfullness over the ability to fly uphill – but not so much of a priority that you’ll stick with a bike with no motor…

I get that some of the above is quite hard to determine, if you havent actually ridden a full fat bike for a while in the first place.

I think a full fat bike will please more people more of the time, but in an ideal world you’d have a full fat and a lightweight ebike (along with a normal bike or two;-) )

but it’s the weight that is the

Birrova typo?

Thanks for that – helpful 😊

I had a think about this in it’s cheapest spec, but in the end went for the alloy Rise- it’s 540Wh battery, coupled with the Trek price increase, simply made the Trek less attractive.

Further to that, I like my bikes to feel individual- my uplift bike doesn’t have much overlap with my 29+ which is substantially different to the gravel bike. I’d like my e-bike to still feel like an e-bike.

Maybe one day I’ll read a review on a bike with a new motor where somebody provides info about out of warranty motor support, clarifies if the motor is rebuildable, if motor spares are available, if there is a uk motor repair centre, if they’re going to partner with an existing uk repairer etc etc, even how much a new motor costs, and how (*if required) any manufacturer/bike model specific settings get applied to the motor.

As an xc map explorer who prefers long term ownership I was really interested in this bike – lighter (so easier over fences/stiles etc), removable battery (charging at hotel/b&b), large brand so hopefully spares available but I’ve not managed to get any info on how out of warranty support will go so going to sit on the fence till that gets clarified or something else similar comes along.

Similar to Vinnyeh, I looked at these Treks but decided to go with a base model Hydro Rise (540wh battery and under £4k). I was put off by reports of early motor failures on the Trek, but also by the smaller battery (That put me off the carbon Rises too). I don’t want a lot of assistance, but I do want to ride a long way.

Lighter is always nicer imho, but the Trek is really only slightly lighter because of that new (and unproved) motor. And if you are going to save a bit of weight, the bottom bracket area is the last place to save it from: weight here doesn’t make much difference, and it’s where durability is needed most. The Trek keeps the rest of the weight down through having a small battery and a £14k price tag!

Sounds like it pedals nicely, but so does the RS motor. A £5k Trek EXe with a 500+Wh battery, option of range extender and solid warranty support would be more attractive 🙂

Those are really good points and ones which I intend to address in a series of online articles in this fine publication when I do a long term test on the Pivot Shuttle SL. Range, repairability, support post warranty, cost to fix, suitability for big mountain adventures, how it handles, fun – all matter to me. I’ve held off on buying one as the technology is advancing so quickly. I suspect that the technology from bikes like the Trek will filter down to a much more affordable price level. For me, full fat e bikes are generally just too darn heavy for the riding I do.

There is also a feature in the next issue where Mark, Nick Craig and I rode High Street and Skiddaw as a day ride where Nick and I were on normal bikes and Mark on a Levo SL.

^^^ that will be an interesting read Sanny 👍. I love my Levo SL but reckon if I tried the Trek I’d be hankering after one !

£14k…ha, ha, ha. Perfectly suited to the new economic climate. How many 1%ers are keen mtb’ers I wonder. Plus that guy up thread with half my username, are you my brother from another mother?

Ianc and Sanny, we’ll anybody really

See also the haibike Lyke – lower weight e, with removable battery – fazua 60, more power and battery – *seems** to have better range – seems to be cheaper – probs? Well motor as my post above Cables thru headset, but this seems to be getting more common Frame Plug hole appears to be in a ‘well’ at the bottom of the frame – ? Water ingress Weird air hole above motor on frame tube up to seatpost – ? Mud/water ingress onto motor

Those haibike Lykes are a bit 2018 in their geo, long seat tube for any given size,relatively short reach,longish chainstay, but they look decent value if the geo suits what you want.

They’re also using very lightweight tyres on them to hit those headline weight numbers.

The focus jam2 sl looks really good though, fazua 60 motor, decent geo, decent value etc. But they have takenthe bizarre decision to not put a charging port in the frame , meaning that you have to remove the battery from the frame in order to charge it.

Maybe one day I’ll read a review on a bike with a new motor where somebody provides info about out of warranty motor support

It’s brand new so far too soon to know anything about out of warranty support. I also think it’s unreasonable to be quizzing a magazine that gets or loses the chance to test new bikes on the whim of the manufacturers.

I know it’s “not about the price” but honestly, how is that bike £14 grand, really?

There’s more than a few bikes out there that don’t have motors, or even suspension in some cases, that cost the same. It’s absolutely ridiculous, regardless of the economic climate, but as long as the bikes sell the manufacturers will keep on making them.

It is crazy pricey though. I have a 2020 Levo SL carbon expert. It now has XT four pots, a Fox 36, AXS shifting and dropper and all in, allowing for selling the bits I upgraded, was around 10k…

Yeah, it is a daft price but you aren’t supposed to buy it. It’s like an S Works Levo. Twice the price of a normal one just to act as a halo and attract attention.

Tell that to what must be dozens of folk I’ve seen riding sworks and plenty other 5 figure ebikes in the wild. Not just ‘1%ers’ buying them either.

Can’t wait for a year or two when all these pop up on the second hand market so I might have a chance of actually affording one 🙂

Crazy how many <1 year old e-bikes on pinkbike and other FB sites etc. With very few miles are popping up now (mind you might be out of the lockdown impulse purchase period so maybe not)

Trek have opened a store really near me and they offer transferable warranty to subsequent owners (as long as bike is registered) and I also have a spesh turbo store also local so for me I would only consider either of these two brands currently as for such an expensive purchase I would want to be able to take it back to a real shop.

Oh well, in that case the price still isn’t crazy then as they seem to fly off the shelf into normal punter’s hands.

Interest free credit,init

I think an article on warranties and future support is vital.

I’ll be on an e-bike at some point. I don’t need something for nothing or a warranty that covers crashes. But I’ll need to know I can keep the thing running. A fixed cost motor exchange program. Send in you motor and get back a used rebuild for £500 available for say 8 years from purchase

Without wishing to be rude, just because you can’t afford it or, rather, you have other things you’d rather spend your money on, doesn’t make a price crazy. The average price of a new car in the UK is £42k. I would never spend that on a car (well, I would, but I can’t afford it now and am unlikely every to be able to. Plus I can’t drive.), but I’m not gonna call anyone that would crazy.
Without wishing to be rude, just because you can’t afford it or, rather, you have other things you’d rather spend your money on, doesn’t make a price crazy. The average price of a new car in the UK is £42k. I would never spend that on a car (well, I would, but I can’t afford it now and am unlikely every to be able to), but I’m not gonna call anyone that would crazy.

+1 and have you seen how much ordinary folk spend on phones/contracts, watches, holiday to Disney etc etc

The prices are a bit crazy though,when you can buy the bottom of the range version of the bike, then buy all the other bits at full RRP, fit them to the bottom of the range version that you just bought and have the exact same bike for several grand less than buying the ‘official’ version
Without wishing to be rude, just because you can’t afford it or, rather, you have other things you’d rather spend your money on, doesn’t make a price crazy.

Agreed, however the price is crazy. Objectively speaking it is nuts.

The average price of a new car in the UK is £42k

Wow! That’s proper bonkers

that was the figure quoted on top gear last week, so as sure as that.

Is that from the same shop, or does that take some savvy shopping around, finding stock, navigating possible compatibility pitfalls etc. not everyone has the time for that. Hell, my last couple of bike builds took between 6 & 12 months just assembling the parts, two year wait for brakes not included so if I were as minted as some of you think I am, an extra few quid just to have everything I ultimately want, right from the off would be a price worth paying. But I’m not, so it isn’t. It may be to others.

Pricing it so not enough folk would buy it is crazy.

I don’t know… When you can get one of these for the same price… Seems crazy to me!

https://www.ducati.com/gb/en/bikes/monster/monster-sp

Or a Rolex with the Dominos pizza logo on it.

Different people have different priorities.

Very true Tom. That watch is hideous! Preowned too. Different strokes for different folks.

Is that from the same shop, or does that take some savvy shopping around
No need to seek bargains,just pay full retail pricing and you still save a truckload over buying the top end bike.

Each to their own though, they obviously do sell the top end versions or they wouldn’t make them.

I did edit to say just finding stock, which has been a challenge of the past few years. So a whole top end bike with top end parts (not just what you can get hold of) is more of a commodity.

Reading my post back again I can see that my wording comes across as being sarcastic when that wasn’t what I intended.

If indeed every other bike out there is a range topper then I’m wrong and so is anyone who says it’s crazy because people are buying them!

I appreciate that the whole battery capacity versus system weight is something of a vicious circle. Would adding one or two kilograms to the bike’s weight significantly impair the bike’s handling? Maybe it would. You do have to draw the line somewhere and it can’t have been an easy or quick decision made by the Trek team. I think personal preferences come into play a great deal here too. I am a bit of a Boost* fan. I can’t help it. I don’t have the discipline to stay in Eco or Trail modes. With a different rider on board, one who switches to Eco for flat road linking sections, and keeps it in Trail for pretty much everything else

I think a lot of people reviewing bikes like this or the Rise, coming from full power e-bikes, kind of miss the point. I’m guessing it probably gets a very similar range to an Orbea Rise if you don’t thrash it in Boost. That equates to about 1400m climbing (+/- 200m) which is a good chunk more than most people would ride on an unpowered bike on a full day out. For really big days add the 252wh range extender and you’re well over 2000m at which point you’re going to be exhausted anyway. (This might be where Trek *have* missed a trick – their range extender looks expensive and undersized at 150wh). So you only carry the extra weight when you plan to use it.

What these bikes are *less* suited for is shuttling up a fire road to ride downhill runs or chasing people on full-fat e-bikes. That’s when the temptation comes to whack it in boost to keep up and you rinse the battery. But I think they’re a lot more ‘bike like’ and a lot more fun to ride the rest of the time.

This might be where Trek *have* missed a trick – their range extender looks expensive and undersized at 150wh
its actually 160wh, but your point still stands. I suspect there will be a larger range extender in the works. The Trek rationale for this says that the range extender has been sized at 160wh because that is the max size that is allowed in aeroplanes, so you can take your bike abroad, leaving the main battery at home of course, and still get some assisted riding in.

a modular battery would be a great idea- 2, even 3 160wh batteries that could be connected in parallel, clipped together like lego, and separated for air flight

and separated for air flight

you’re only allowed a total of 160wh per person, so you’d need to get someone else in your party to carry any additional batteries

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test trek fuel exe 9.5

  • Cycling Magazine

Long-term review: Trek Fuel EXe shifts the standard for eMTB

Nearly silent and so fun to ride.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Electric mountain bikes are rapidly maturing, in design and technology. When Trek launched the EXe, the lightweight eMTB with its TQ motor represented a big step forward in what was possible for the electric category.

I was really impressed with the EXe out of the gates. After spending several months on Trek’s new bike, that hasn’t faded in the slightest. Here’s what makes the EXe so great, where it could improve as well as what to expect – and what not to expect – from this lightweight eMTB.

We covered a lot of details about what set this eMTB apart when the EXe launched and there is a lot to cover in the review. So for details on the bike, hit the launch . For details on how it rides – which, really, is the important part – read on.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Review: Trek Fuel EXe

The EXe follows the design of Trek’s new Fuel EX closely. Very closely. Or, rather, leads that design, since it was released first. Both bikes feature 140mm of rear wheel travel with 150mm front suspension, modern (slack, low, long reach) geometry, but with efficient suspension that keeps the bikes quick and snappy on the trail. The ability to run a 27.5″ rear wheel with the 29″ front gives the option to make the bikes even more playful in corners and controlled on steeps. The main difference, other than a drive unit, is that the EXe only has a Mino-Link while the EX has several other geometry adjustments.

Honestly, the EXe is really fun to ride. It’s quicker and nimbler than any other eMTB I’ve ridden. It is way closer to the easy movement and balanced weight of a full-powered mountain bike than any electric bike on the market right now. You don’t have to hit the gym before you ride if you want to pull the front end up for mid-trail manuals. You can actually move the back end around with ease, instead of forethought and effort. Basically, all the skills you have on a normal mountain bike transfer over with little to minimal adjustments. You just also get a motor. One that is so small, it sometimes took people a while to realize I was on an eMTB.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

There's a motor hiding behine that drivetrain.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

A slightly wider downtube isthe only other hint that the EXe is hiding a drive system

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Trek also launched an updated Central app to customize the TQ system. . Photo: Sterling Lorence

test trek fuel exe 9.5

TQ HPR50: The little motor that could

The heart of Trek’s EXe is TQ’s HRP50 system. The German brand takes a completely different approach to motor design for bikes and it changes the game. It doesn’t render larger motors irrelevant, but it makes a different kind of bike possible. To start with, the harmonic pin ring transmission is light. The motor weighs just 1.85kg and, with a 360Wh battery and controls, the entire system weighs just 3.9kg.

TQ’s HRP50 is also much smaller. Small enough that, when I ran into other riders in the woods, it often took them a while to notice I was on an electric bike. The wider downtube on the EXe is more of a giveaway, really, than the diminutive HRP50.

Finally, the harmonic pin ring transmission design is quiet and smooth. Really, the only downside, compared to traditional eMTB at least, is that it only carries 50Nm of torque. For many, though, that will be all the support you need, or want, from a mountain bike.

Trek Fuel EXe review - TQ HRP50 motor

Sound of silence

I don’t need a fancy graph or sciencey words like “tonality” to tell you that the EXe is quiet. It’s barely perceptible unless you’re in the highest support mode. Even then, it’s quiet. That’s when I was riding the bike for review purposes, so I was intently focusing trying to hear the bike. I verified that it was actually quiet by riding with a few analog friends. They confirmed they rarely noticed any noise coming from the motor.

Sounds that are louder than the motor include, but are not limited to: the tires, when rolling on basically any surface; the Line Pro 30 hubs freewheeling; the AXS shifting; the sound of wind in your helmet; casual conversation. Bottom line, the TQ HRP50 does make a noise, but you have to be paying attention to notice it.

Power and poise

The TQ doesn’t just sound good, though. It feels good to ride. Every rider will have a different idea of what a “natural” assist feels like, but the TQ tops the ranks in my books. It’s far and away better than any other drive unit when pedalling out of the saddle, delivering smooth and consistent power without surges. That’s the same for pedalling seated. The HRP50 comes on smooth and tapers off in a way that feels similar to how you would lose speed on a normal bike. The power engages quickly, but without any of the jolt or kick of some higher-powered motors. With 50Nm of torque, you’ll still have to put in some effort to get the EXe up steeper grades, of course. But on all but the steepest trails, its an impressively smooth support that makes you feel like a fitter rider, not feel like you’re riding a mini-moto.

The only minor issue I had with the motor’s performance came when, during the odd time spinning the cranks through tight corners but not actually putting power down, it would stutter as it re-engaged. It would still engage just fine, but a half-second later than expected. This wasn’t every time, and it didn’t happen when I coasted or when I kept power on through the corner, but something about spinning the cranks seemed to confuse the system slightly.

All in all, the way TQ’s drive unit works doesn’t just feel better, it makes technical riding easier. You don’t have to factor in when and how the motor will engage as  you approach a root or rock move.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Hardwired wireless AXS shifting.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Rock Shox Super Deluxe Ultimate AirWiz shock keeps the EXe tracking smooth.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Bontrager Line Pro 30 carbon fibre wheels with built-in TireWiz pressure gauges

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Rock Shox Lyric Ultimate with AirWiz

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Bontrager RSL integrated carbon fibre bar-stem looks sharp, especially with the wireless set-up.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Trek EXe 9.9 AXS

Trek pulls no punches for the top-end EXe. There’s a few curiosities and fancy features exclusive to the 9.9 AXS. Most notably, the wired SRAM AXS rear derailleur. While there’s something ironic about adding a wire to a wireless derailleur, I’ll admit I loved having it automatically charge when I charged the main battery. The trade-off is that the bike needs to be turned on to shift at all. So if you run out of juice, or just want to shift down the cassette to take a wheel off, you need some power. The Rock Shox Reverb AXS, though, still uses its own battery.

Trek equips the 9.9 AXS with its carbon fibre RSL bar-stem combo and the carbon fiber Line Pro 30 wheels. In combination with the stout EXe frame, it is a very rigid build. This is great when you’re carving manicured berms. But I found it overly harsh, to the point of being tiring, on any sort of sustained rough trails. Switching out the bars or the wheels to more forgiving options helped take just enough of the edge off (I tried both, in various combinations. We Are One’s Convert wheels were just forgiving enough to balance out the EXe for my personal preferences) making the 9.9 a rocket ship, but one that I could control.

There are also TireWiz and ShockWiz gadgets built into the Line Pro 30 rims and the RockShox suspension. I’m neither here nor there on that feature. If you like it and use it, great. I’m not that particular, or that irregular with checking pressures, that I ever found it useful. But the Wiz’s didn’t cause any problems during the test period, either.

The only difficulty I had with the EXe was that, eventually, some bolts holding the TQ motor did eventually loosen off. That is with a complete lack of service or maintenance over weeks of hard riding, though. So the minimum of regular maintenance should prevent that from becoming an issue at all.

All this comes in for a shocking $18,300. That is comparable to what other top-end eMTB are going for but still a lot of money. If you don’t have that kind of scratch kicking around, the EXe 9.5, at $8,400, still features a carbon fibre frame and TQ’s mini motor.

Trek Fuel EXe review - TQ black-and-white display showing battery life

Lightweight eMTBs – Battery life, power, weight: choose two

There’s an old saying in mountain biking: “Light weight, durable, inexpensive: choose two.” The idea is that you can’t have everything you want, for free. A modified version for lightweight eMTB would be “Range, power, weight: choose two.” (Because, well, there’s no lightweight eMTB’s that could be reasonably described as “inexpensive,” yet). With the EXe, Trek deliver’s on weight and sacrifices a little on power and weight. Depending on how you like to ride, this bike either hits the sweet spot or leaves something to be desired.

Personally, I really like where Trek landed. It gets you enough support for a reasonably big ride – more than I’d do every day. It has enough power that  you can get a lot more out of your ride, without feeling like it does everything for you. And, most importantly, it feels more like a mountain bike than an electric bike than any other eMTB I’ve ridden at this point.

Trek Fuel EXe review

Range anxiety and riding with friends: where does a lightweight eMTB fit in?

To stick with the dime store philosophy, my family has a saying passed down (repeatedly) by one uncle in particular: “You can pick your friends, and you can pick your nose, but you can’t pick your friend’s nose.” What does that have to do with mountain bikes? Well, the mid-power, mid-range of the EXe might, depending on your friends, change group ride dynamics. Because you can pick your friends and how you ride, but you can’t pick how they ride. And you definitely can’t stop a friend on a full-power eMTB from hitting turbo mode and dropping you on a climb.

The problem is similar to the problem with all ebikes: one of power differences. Since lightweight eMTB’s are still relatively new, they’re also sort of exclusive. Can you ride with full-power e-friends? Or analog buddies? The answer to both is “it depends.”

Trek’s EXe is the first eMTB that is still exciting to ride with unassisted friends. Turn down the power to match the unassisted pace of your buddy and it isn’t quite like riding without a motor, but the feeling is actually really close. Just a bit easier. And, of course, it’s really quiet. Point downhill, and the sensations are, again, really close to what your freind is riding. That, on its own, will be exciting to any eMTB converts that have struggled riding with analog friends.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Riding with full-power eMTB is a different beast. If your friends are nice, you can keep up fine, but just won’t be able to cover the same distance. If your friends are a bunch of bros that just want to blast up the fireroad or steepest trail around to get to the top as fast as possible, you’re going to struggle to keep up. Either way, you’re going to be experiencing some “range anxiety” as you watch the EXe’s power bar deplete before full-battery friends even start thinking about conserving fuel. So, pick your friends wisely, because you can’t pick how they’ll ride.

That’s not to say the EXe doesn’t have enough range. It just doesn’t have the over-the-top range of some modern eMTB. With a 360Wh battery, Trek supplies enough juice to get through rides that would be big efforts without the assist. Exact range will vary by terrain and rider, of course. But, at roughly 80kg, I’d get over 1,000m out of a charge, regularly using full-power. After learning to work with the TQ a bit better, I could regularly get more.

That is a long-winded answer, admittedly, but it’s a question I think a lot of riders will be asking before pulling the trigger on a newer line of eMTB.

Trek Fuel EXe review

Conclusions: Trek EXe and TQ shift the standard for lightweight eMTB

Trek has done an excellent job with the EXe, designing a mid-travel trail bike that fully takes advantage of the opportunities TQ’s small-but-powerful HPR50 creates. The EXe is capable of taking on all kinds of challenging trails, but its also light and snappy enough, for an eMTB, to be fun on a really wide range of trails.

I rode this bike a lot, over a long period and in a wide range of different places. And certainly a wider range of trail types than I’d usually take a full power eMTB on. That is, in part, because it made a wider range of trails fun. Since it is lighter, more maneuverable and more playful, the EXe is more fun on lower-angle, tighter trails than heavier bikes.

Trek’s also made it durable. This bike went through a week straight of big days in the Okanagan and, other than needing to tighten down a few bolts and a scratch to the paint, it came away clean.

The result was that it made the choice between pedaling and taking the assist a lot harder because, well, I knew it would feel more like a mountain bike when I wanted it to. Sure, I had to learn to live with a little range anxiety. Easily worth the trade-off for the performance of the EXe and TQ combo.

Trek EXe 9.9 AXS retails for $18,300 at Trek stores and online through Trekbikes.com .

test trek fuel exe 9.5

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4 upgrades & 7 updates on our Fuel EXe long-term test bike | Trek Fuel EXe Review

The not-so-minor details.

2023 Trek Fuel EXe

https://www.trekbikes.com

$9,499 AUD - $12,999 AUD

The Trek Fuel EXe was launched just a few months ago, arriving to much fanfare thanks to its unique TQ-HPR50 motor and clean aesthetics. We were totally captivated by the smooth and quiet motor performance, while the low weight, balanced geometry and supportive suspension gave it an impressively playful and agile character on the trail.

We’ve since spent a load more time aboard our test bike, and have made a few key changes and upgrades along the way. For those who are curious about this lightweight e-MTB, or for those who already own one and are looking to delve a bit deeper into its capabilities, here’s a look at what we’ve learned from our long-term review of the Trek Fuel EXe.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

There’s an app for that

The release of the Fuel EXe has been accompanied by a new app called Trek Central.

Designed specifically for the Fuel EXe, the app incorporates a number of features including ride tracking, navigation and range estimation. It allows you to tune the performance of the TQ HPR50 motor, and it provides recommendations on suspension and tyre setup. You can pair the app with a heart rate monitor, and it’ll even talk to SRAM TyreWiz and AirWiz modules to provide live pressure readouts.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

It’s easy to tune the TQ-HPR50 motor

The most interesting component of the Trek Central app is the Perfect Tune function. This lets you adjust the motor’s power output and assistance behaviour across each of the Eco, Mid and High assist modes. Within each mode you can adjust the Maximum Power, Assist Factor and Pedal Response using a simple sliding scale.

Our main interest here was to see if we could give the TQ motor a little more punch for shorter rides. Although the High mode already comes with the Maximum Power set to the full 300W, it is possible to increase both the Assist Factor and Pedal Response settings, which is exactly what we did.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

With both settings maxed out, the Fuel EXe accelerates faster and requires less pedal input to deliver maximum power. It still requires plenty of input, and it isn’t as gutsy as a full-powered motor like a Bosch Performance Line CX or Shimano EP8, but it is noticeably quicker compared to the stock settings.

Of course the downside is reduced range, and it’s possible to rinse that 360Wh battery pretty quickly, especially for heavier riders. It works well for an hour-of-power session after work, but for longer rides you’ll want to make use of the Eco and Mid settings, and consider dialling down the Assist Factor. This will encourage you to pedal harder to receive maximum motor support, while only relying on the High setting when you really need it.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

It still has some lag

In our initial review, we mentioned that the TQ-HPR50 motor didn’t always provide support when we wanted, exhibiting some lag in certain circumstances.

Now we aren’t referring to the mechanical pickup of the motor. That is near-instantaneous, with very little free-play in the cranks before they engage the drive system. Rather we mean the delay between when you input a pedalling force, to the point that the motor starts delivering power output.

Even with the Pedal Response set to the maximum level, this delay can still sometimes occur. If you’re climbing in a higher gear at a slower cadence, pausing to freewheel over an obstacle won’t be met with instant power delivery once you get back on the gas. Similarly, if you’re cruising along at speed and need to pause on the pedals, there is some lag in the motor’s pickup when you begin pedalling again.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

To avoid this, we’ve found the TQ-HPR50 motor to provide better support at higher cadences. Make use of the lower gears, spin at a higher RPM, and the motor will respond faster and more willingly.

Generally speaking though, this is a motor that is here to give you a subtle helping hand rather than feeling like you have a rocket booster strapped to the bike. The soft and smooth power delivery is what contributes to its discreet and energy-efficient performance, allowing the Fuel EXe to be built with such a small and lightweight battery in the first place.

The wide Q-factor may be a bother

Despite spending another couple of months on the Trek Fuel EXe, I’ve not gotten used to its wide stance at the pedals.

To clarify, the TQ-HPR50 is one of, if not the smallest mid-drive motors on the market, and its bottom bracket axle is narrow at 135mm. The issue is with the carbon e*13 crank arms that come on the Fuel EXe 9.8 and 9.9 models. These bulky cranks add significant width to the overall Q-factor, pushing the pedals further away from the bike.

According to my measurements the Q-factor is nearly 195mm. That is very wide, and it’s caused me some knee pain on longer rides.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

I visited a local Trek dealer and compared the Q-factor with the alloy e*13 cranks that come on the cheaper Fuel EXe 9.7 and 9.5 models. The difference is almost 20mm, with the alloy crank arms being considerably slimmer and coming much closer to a crankset on a regular mountain bike.

Many riders won’t be fussed by a wide Q-factor, and indeed the broader stance can improve overall stability on the bike. But for riders with sensitive knees, it is something to consider. Indeed if the Fuel EXe were my bike, I’d be looking at changing out the crank arms.

But it’s oh so quiet

Since reviewing the Trek Fuel EXe, I’ve been riding a whole bunch of other e-MTBs including the Canyon Spectral:ON , the Scott Patron and the Cube Stereo Hybrid 160 . Those all make use of full-powered motors that have their various strengths and weaknesses, but one of the most noticeable differences is the amount of noise out on the trail.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

The TQ-HPR50 motor is remarkably quiet, even in the highest assist mode with all of the settings maxed out. The pitch and overall volume are so discreet, that every time I jump onto a full-powered e-MTB, it feels like I’m riding a vacuum cleaner.

It’s also unnoticeable on the descents, with none of the freewheel clacking that has plagued the Shimano EP8 and Bosch Performance CX drive units. Along with its smooth and surge-free power delivery, I’ve been really impressed with the experience that the stealthy TQ motor brings to riding the Fuel EXe, which feels closer to a regular mountain bike than a full-powered e-MTB.

The RockShox suspension is performing beautifully

Both the Trek Fuel EXe 9.8 XT and the top-end 9.9 models come fitted with the new 2023 RockShox forks and shocks as standard. Featuring an all-new construction with updated internals, the Lyrik is equipped with the new Charger 3 damper, and the Super Deluxe shock features the RC2 damper.

In our initial review, we found the Fuel EXe’s suspension to be incredibly supportive, but not the most compliant over smaller bumps. That was particularly the case up front with the Lyrik, which even felt harsh in some situations.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

I’m happy to report that the suspension has bedded in a lot since new, though I’ve since been riding the Fuel EXe with a different Lyrik Ultimate. This Lyrik had been freshly serviced by SRAM, and it has bedded in beautifully over the last few weeks of riding. Compared to the original fork it is significantly smoother and plusher, especially across smaller rubble. The support is still there, it’s just vastly more comfortable and reactive.

This experience has turned around my earlier feelings on the Lyrik, which I wasn’t overly impressed with. Aside from the different colour, the only difference between these two forks is the fact that the green one had been serviced. It isn’t uncommon to encounter varying levels of assembly grease and oil with mass-produced suspension products, though perhaps the new RockShox forks are more sensitive to it.

My advice to anyone out there with a 2023 RockShox fork that is feeling harsh? Have your local bike shop check the lowers for the proper lubrication levels. It could make all the difference, as it has done on our Fuel EXe.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

It’s brilliant with a 160mm travel fork

While the Trek Fuel EXe comes standard with a 150mm travel fork, the frame is rated for use with up to a 160mm fork. And so alongside the green Lyrik Ultimate, I’ve also been testing a Fox 36 GRIP2, both set at 160mm of travel.

The extra 10mm of travel does lift up the BB slightly, and it also slackens the angles a touch. With the longer fork fitted, I needed to nose the saddle down slightly, and I dropped the stem down one spacer to bring the grips down to the same level as before.

On the trail the longer fork feels fantastic. There may be a touch more front wheel wander on the climbs, but having lowered the stem to get more weight over the front, it’s pretty minimal. And the added ground clearance has actually improved the Fuel EXe’s technical climbing abilities, allowing me to keep pedalling over chunky sections with less fear of pedal strikes.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

It’s on the descents where the extra 10mm of travel has been most welcome though, delivering increased grip and control when things get rough and rowdy. The whole bike feels more planted, and it’s plusher overall.

I was worried the bigger fork might feel mismatched with the 140mm of rear travel, but that hasn’t been the case. The Fuel EXe is a mighty capable bike, and its rear suspension is nice and progressive with plenty of end-stroke support thanks to the Hydraulic Bottom Out feature in the new Super Deluxe shock. Because it uses its travel in such a controlled manner, it actually feels more balanced with the bigger fork up front.

With that in mind, I can highly recommend experimenting with a longer fork on your Fuel EXe. The good news is that this a relatively cheap upgrade, as you only need to buy a 160mm air shaft to extend the RockShox Lyrik and Fox 36.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

Mullet compatibility

A lesser known fact about the Trek Fuel EXe is that it can be run as a mullet. While the bike comes standard with 29in wheels and the Mino Link set in the Low position, Trek says flipping the chip into the High position will help counter the drop in BB height if you decide to fit a 27.5in rear wheel.

That’s true to an extent, though the difference in BB height between the High and Low positions is only 7mm. In our experience with trying out mullet conversions on other bikes, that difference isn’t quite enough. If we were to mullet the Fuel EXe, we’d recommend pairing that setup with a 160mm travel fork to help lift the BB up again to roughly the same spot as the stock setup.

The downside of fitting a 27.5in rear wheel? The TQ’s speed sensor can’t be recalibrated for a different wheel circumference, so the system will still assume you have a 29in wheel fitted. This will affect the speed readout on the top tube display, changing the motor’s behaviour slightly and resulting in a lower actual cutoff speed.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

If you’re prepared to put in more effort at the pedals however, the mullet setup will be an effective way to add further agility into the Fuel EXe while increasing bum clearance for shorter riders. See our recent Specialized Stumpjumper mullet review  if you’re keen to know more about the advantages and disadvantages.

Burlier tyres are a great upgrade

While the stock Bontrager SE5 tyres on the Trek Fuel EXe are decent all-rounders, we did find ourselves wishing for more bite up front. As well as wanting a stickier and more aggressive set of tyres, we were also curious to try out a slightly narrower width to improve handling precision.

Since reviewing the bike in its stock form, I’ve been riding the Fuel EXe with a set of Continental Kryptotal tyres. This combination features a front and rear specific tread pattern, and I elected for the burlier Enduro casing option that features the Soft rubber compound.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

We’ll have a separate feature coming on the Continental tyre range, but so far I’ve been really impressed with this setup on the Fuel EXe. The 2.4in width suits the bike well, and the sturdy casings offer a really nice balance of stability and damping. Along with the soft rubber compound, the level of grip is outstanding, inspiring more confidence and control compared to the stock SE5s. Along with the 160mm fork up front, I’ve been able to push the Fuel EXe harder and faster on the descents, while enjoying a more responsive attitude through twisty singletrack.

Dialling in the contact points

As with the tyres, I’ve also been trying out some different contact points on our Trek Fuel EXe test bike. The stock Bontrager saddle and grips will be fine for most riders, but there’s always room for personalising these touch points to improve comfort and control.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

I swapped the Bontrager Arvada with an Ergon SM E-Mountain Pro saddle, which features a pronounced kick-tail profile. This elevated ramp at the end of the saddle is particularly beneficial on an e-MTB, as it helps to anchor your sit bones while you’re pedalling in the saddle on a steep climb. The ramp is subtle enough that it doesn’t feel weird on the flats though, and combined with the broad platform, relief channel and OthoCell inserts, this has quickly become my favourite e-MTB saddle.

Along with the saddle I’ve fitted a set of Ergon GD-1 grips. These utilise Ergon’s high-end Factory rubber compound, which is incredibly tacky while being quite durable. Along with the tapered profile and one-way traction grooves, the GD-1s provide a more tactile feel and much improved damping over the stock grips. A small but meaningful upgrade, which doesn’t cost a lot either.

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

Flow’s Verdict

We continue to be impressed by the Trek Fuel EXe, which stands as one of the most agile and enjoyable electric mountain bikes we’ve ever ridden. The discreet TQ motor allows for elegant packaging, while offering quiet and subtle power delivery on the trail. And the option to tune the motor via the Trek Central app means you can customise its performance to suit your range requirements.

It’s also been great fun trying out different upgrades on our long-term test bike. The 160mm travel fork is a winner, offering a plusher and more controlled ride quality that allows you to capitalise on the Fuel EXe’s descending capabilities. Similarly, switching the stock tyres out for burlier casings and stickier rubber has levelled up traction and control. If you’re a Fuel EXe owner and you’re looking to broaden its performance window, we can highly recommend those upgrades.

Keen to know more about the tech and development behind the new bike, as well as prices and specs for the full range? Read on for our Trek Fuel EXe review .

2023 trek fuel exe electric tq hpr50

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Review: Trek Fuel EXe eMTB smashes rough trails & climbs like (you’re) a beast

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

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The Trek Fuel EXe is a bit of an outlier in the current e-MTB market. Most e-mountain bikes fall into one of two categories: High-powered, long-travel beasts, or lightweight, short-travel models with lower-power systems.

The Fuel EXe sits in the middle, with 150/140mm travel and generous, adjustable trail geometry, and the new TQ HPR50 motor that’s ultra-quiet with moderate output. And it works, delivering a balanced, capable bike and an extremely fun ride experience.

If you’re looking for an eMTB that rides like a trail bike and helps you conquer bigger trails and longer days, here’s everything you need to know about the Trek Fuel EXe…

The Quick Overview

test trek fuel exe 9.5

The Trek Fuel EXe translates their popular Fuel EX trail bike line into an electric-assist model that “empowers you to do more, without interrupting the way you experience nature.” That was the goal, and they nailed it.

It starts with a full OCLV carbon frame with fully internal routing and integrated TQ HPR50 drive system. The tiny motor sits where the BB is and still allows short 440mm chainstays. The 360Wh battery sits in the downtube and the power button/system monitor is flush in the top tube.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

A simple two-button remote is barely visible on the bars. It cycles through the modes, initiates Walk Mode, and a long press of the lower button will turn off all assist. Meaning, default is Eco mode, you have to hold the lower button for about 3 seconds to turn assist off…I wish it was just a quick press as for the other modes.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

The bike has 29er wheels front and rear, 140mm rear travel paired to 150mm forks, a 65º head angle, and 77º effective seat angle (in Low position; their Mino link flip-chip lets you tweak the geo by 0.5º steeper in High).

Size-specific dropper posts range from 120mm to 170mm in travel depending on frame size. All sizes get 165mm cranks.

Check our launch coverage for the full tech story on this bike.

How’s the TQ motor?

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

It’s brilliant. Until I thought to pay attention to it, I heard nothing.

And when I was paying attention, it sounds like a light, barely perceptible whistling of the wind.

The sound of my friend’s regular eMTB riding 20 feet behind me drowned out any noise from this bike.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Basically, noise is no issue here, not even at maximum power. You truly do hear nature, not the bike.

This is because the motor has no belts or gears. Trek has a great breakaway view of it , and we covered the tech in depth if you’d like to dig deeper.

The TL;DR is this: It’s ultra quiet, pumps out smooth power delivery, and 50Nm of torque is plenty to help you along the trail and up the hills. It’s also ultra-light, weighing 2.5+ pounds less than competitors’ larger 85-90Nm motors. As such, it uses a smaller, lighter battery without giving up range or ride time.

What about battery life?

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Trek claims 2-5 hours of ride time per charge. With judicious use of Eco mode, I routinely got more than 3 hours of riding on a single charge. That means mixed use of mostly in Eco but using Trail mode on most climbs and Turbo on the steepest climbs.

Fortunately, Eco felt just right when pedaling along. Trail was fun, and a bit faster, but mostly not necessary for keeping up with others.

That said, when riding with others on eMTBs with more powerful systems, it was clear that they were faster. But on the trail, in the woods, things evened out enough that we all just rode together perfectly fine. I never felt under-gunned unless we were nailing it up a smooth fire road.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

A 160Wh Range Extender is available for $599 and adds 44% more capacity. It’ll take up the single bottle cage on the bike, but it’s worth it for big days when range anxiety is a real thing. Personally, I’d add it to the cart.

One note: Fresh out of the box, TQ says the system needs a few full charge and discharge cycles to accurately estimate range and battery life.

My first ride’s assistance abruptly ended with 7% battery showing on the display. My second ride ended at 3%.

Subsequent rides are getting closer to 0%, but even at 0% showing, there’s a small reserve left to power the electronics. Which is crucial because the SRAM AXS rear derailleur is plugged into and powered by the bike…not its own battery.

TQ e-bike display

Starting with 1%, I still managed to get 2.5+ hours of riding out of it before it finally, fully shut down and left me with a single speed.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Yes, you can borrow the battery from the Reverb AXS and use that, but then the wire and plug leading to the derailleur are left dangling about… and likely to get ripped off or sucked up into the chain.

Fortunately, the system also charges quickly, getting to about 80% in about 90 minutes, and fully charged in about 2.5 hours.

It’s worth noting that when TQ’s system drops below 10% charge, it limits output to Eco mode regardless of the setting you choose. This helps ensure you maximize your range.

Why not just get a high-powered eMTB?

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

I’ve been asked, “yeah, but if you’re paying for an eMTB, why not just get a high-powered e-MTB?”

That’s a good question. I have a couple of good answers.

First, this bike is a lot lighter, at least 10lbs lighter. It’s entirely pedal-able even without assist, something I unwittingly proved when I showed up at the trailhead and realized I hadn’t charged it.

Three hours later, I was spent, but had a great time riding. Granted, this was on flowing trails without any massive, long climbs, but I still had hundreds of little punchy climbs and sprints to get up and down the trail.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Second, full power feels about like half power compared to a top-level Bosch- or Shimano-equipped bike. But that’s OK. The Fuel EXe’s output feels more natural, so if you’re looking for an e-bike that rides like a regular bike, this is it. It just lets you get a little further a little faster. Big days can be bigger. Little days can be a little faster.

On loose, technical, or entirely too steep climbs, I actually preferred the lower output of the Fuel EX-e. It was more than enough to help me up (I still had to work), but it wasn’t spinning out or lurching out of control where more powerful bikes were. It makes really steep, sketchy climbs more manageable.

But if you want more power, check out the Trek Rail . If you want no power, we reviewed the non-electric version of this 2023 Trek Fuel EX with this same spec, too.

How much does the Trek Fuel EXe weigh?

trek fuel EXe eMTB actual weights on a hanging scale

I tested the top of the line Trek Fuel EXe 9.9 XX1 AXS in size XL. It weighed in at 41lb 11oz (18.76kg) without pedals…and that’s with an impressive (and expensive) mix of both lightweight and tech-laden parts.

Trek says the entire TQ HPR50 system adds just 3.9kg (8lb 10oz). The EXe is only about 10lbs more than the nearly identical-looking standard Fuel EX, so they didn’t add much beyond the TQ system to make it an e-bike.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

The frame feels stiff and robust. The tires are big and meaty.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

The bike looks tough, with square-ish tube profiles and wide cross sections. All of that adds up to an extremely laterally stiff frame.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

The one-piece RSL handlebar stem and Line Pro 30 carbon wheels save weight, but as a percentage of total bike weight, they’re not making the same impact they would on an analog bike. And, at 820mm wide (on all frame sizes!) it’s really wide…if it were mine, I’d cut it down (they include marks measured to 740mm).

I’d also probably switch the grips to something with a bit more vibration damping. If you choose a model with a standard handlebar and stem, I’d recommend something like the OneUp or Race Face trail handlebars with added compliance.

Too much tech?

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Other spec highlights on this particular trim level include a complete SRAM AirWiz and TireWiz system, offering remote tire pressure and fork & shock pressure monitoring.

The Trek App shows recommended tire, fork, and shock pressures based on your riding weight, along with starter rebound settings. With AirWiz/TireWiz installed, their app will also show current actual pressures, too.

Check it there, or just look for the blinking lights on the bike to be green, and you’re good to go. Red lights mean something’s out of the recommended range.

trek ebike app setup screens for fuel exe eMTB

I found that the recommended tire pressure settings were a tad high. I ended up at 22psi front and rear with no issues (I’m about 192-195lbs fully kitted out, ready to ride).

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

The Bontrager SE5 Team Issue 29×2.5 tires are excellent, I run them on some of my other bikes, too. Like most aggressive trail tires, and particularly those spec’d on e-bikes, the casings are stiffer and can take a lot of abuse, so lower pressures help improve ride feel. I may still go a bit lower.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

At 22psi, they’ll mold to the ground and take a hit, but I still haven’t felt a rim strike despite some obvious deformation over roots and rocks.

trek ebike app setup screens for fuel exe eMTB

The rear shock’s air pressure recommendation was spot on, giving me full travel on the big days.

The fork, however, was too high. Trek recommended 102psi, but even at 87psi I was only getting ~85% travel. I’m still tinkering here, down to 84psi, but the takeaway is that you don’t have to stick to the recommended settings.

And, once you find what you like, you can use the Trek (or SRAM’s AXS) app to manually set your preferences. If the bike has the Air/TireWiz devices, those will be updated to blink red/green accordingly, too.

closeup frame and component details on trek fuel EXe e-mountain bike

Personally, I think the Wiz devices are clever, but overkill, and they definitely add cost. I like that I can set my preferences and use the Trek app to save them (because I will definitely forget), but I could take or leave the extra electronics on the bike…and, if I were shopping, would probably opt not to pay for that tech here.

How does the Trek Fuel EX-e ride?

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

In short? It rides like an aggressive trail bike. A really good aggressive trail bike.

Trek’s ABP suspension is efficient and effective. There’s a lockout switch on the rear shock, but in most instances it’s not needed. I only used it on long fire road stretches or when riding the road to the trails. Once on the dirt, it stays open with no issues on sprints, standing climbing, or just powering along.

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

On the descents, I could smash through extended rock and root sections, prevalent on the trails at Carven’s Cove near Roanoke.

While I’m still fiddling with the fork’s air pressure to improve small bump and low speed comfort, the Lyrik Ultimate on this bike absolutely demolished high speed hits.

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

Combined with the stiff frame and capable tires, the Fuel EXe inspires a lot of confidence at speed over gnarly terrain.

test trek fuel exe 9.5

The suspension stays active under power, which is good because I (like most eMTB riders, according to research) tend to stay seated more often on e-mountain bikes. The motorized assist helps a rider power through rough stuff in theory, and a good suspension platform like this makes it happen in reality.

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

The Fuel EXe hammers through the rough stuff when standing, too, maintaining traction.

Situations like these, where a little bounce and skip is inevitable is another argument in favor of moderate power output from the motor. Never once did I spin out, and never did I really wish for more power. It’s a good balance.

The bike’s geometry is perfectly balanced, too. I could easily maintain rear traction while keeping the front wheel firmly on the ground, even on some monstrous 18%+ loose, rutted fire road climbs.

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

Even the bike’s weight feels well-balanced, in terms of handling. Jumps feel natural…

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

…as do drop-ins…

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

…and drop offs.

2023 trek fuel EXe eMTB review riding action

But there’s a definite heft to getting the front wheel up and over logs or rocks.

The result was that I’d just smash into stuff that I would usually pop up and over on a regular bike. Up to a point, of course … there are some things you simply have to lift the wheel up and over, so just know that it takes more effort.

Which means riding this bike, despite its relative light weight, is more of a full-body workout, as is any eMTB. And I feel like I pedaled more consistently and turned more total revolutions, many times also riding a bit longer than I otherwise would have.

The point is, at the end of each ride, I was all grins and knew quite well that I’d earned them. Well done, Trek.

TrekBikes.com

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Tyler Benedict is the Founder of Bikerumor.com . He has been writing about the latest bikes, components, and cycling technology for almost two decades. Prior to that, Tyler launched and built multiple sports nutrition brands and consumer goods companies, mostly as an excuse to travel to killer riding locations throughout North America.

Based in North Carolina, Tyler loves family adventure travel and is always on the lookout for the next shiny new part to make his bikes faster and lighter.

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Bobiov

Great review!!

Jim Bertolina

Thank you for the thorough review! Did you happen to test it out on jumps? I’m hoping that the reduced weight makes it feel more natural off of jumps compared to the heavier e-bikes but haven’t seen that discussed yet.

Gary Miller

Caution: If you are like me, and ride small frame bikes, right now they are very difficult to come by. I recently ordered the Trek Fuel EXe 9.8 and it has an early arrival date of January. Other companies are into spring.

Doc Sarvis

Hoping to pick up my 9.7 in early November. Excellent review.

Jeff

Great review. You rode an XL but never mentioned your height. Did it feel long? I’m 6’1 190 and debating L vs XL

JBikes

What the long-term plan from TQ on motor footprint/mounting. If the motor goes in 5-10 years, is the bike basically trash?

Yer dad

It’s still just a Trek. I guess we thank Giant for the fine work?

Also, TQ was having a heckuva time keeping up with demand in Europe, so time will tell how successful this bike will be service-wise.

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trek fuel exe

Trek’s Fuel EXe Is the Best e-Mountain Bike You Can Buy Right Now

Light, discrete, and quiet with a great chassis, the new EXe proves that more doesn’t make e-bikes better.

TQ HPR50 Motor

Motor noise, battery and range, display, remote, and apps, frame details, models and prices.

The Takeaway: Motor or no motor, the Fuel EXe is one of the best mountain bikes on the market right now.

  • All new EX carbon frame with 140mm rear travel and 150mm fork
  • Small and light (1850 grams) TQ HPR50 with maximum 50Nm torque
  • 360Wh in-frame battery. Optional piggyback 160Wh range extender
  • 2-5 hour claimed ride range from in-frame battery
  • Six models priced $6,500 to $14,000

Weight: 40.9 lbs. (medium, 9.9 XX1 AXS)

Price: $14,000 (9.9 XX1 AXS)

trek fuel exe

Trek kicks off a big week of mountain bike launches here at Bicycling with the introduction of their latest e-mountain bike: The Fuel EXe. While the usual e-bike story is about more power, battery, and range, the EXe falls into the intriguing e-light category where the story is less.

The EXe is lighter, a lot lighter—10 or so pounds lighter—than a full-power e-bike because it uses a less powerful motor requiring a smaller battery. That makes it appealing to riders who want an e-bike but also want the feel and handling of an unpowered e-bike. It should also interest lighter and less powerful riders put off by riding a 50-pound eMTB. As I found out, being less powerful doesn’t mean less fun. The EXe proves that the old Less Is More axiom works for e-bikes too.

The Fuel EXe arrives in shops worldwide, in limited numbers, today.

Ride Impressions

Most of the e-bikes I ride are motorized versions of a brand’s existing unpowered frame platform, which there’s a better-than-good chance I’ve already ridden. However, with this new Fuel EXe, Trek flipped the script on me because the powered version came first.

trek fuel ex e

My test bike was the most expensive model: The $14,000 9.9 XX1 AXS in Baja Yellow. The parts were, as you would hope for a bike this expensive, flawless. I did notice the RockShox Reverb AXS dropper on this post seemed smoother and less sticky than other examples of this post I’ve tried, perhaps due to some running changes on the assembly line. The Bontrager SE5 Team Issue tires are the best Bontrager trail tires I’ve ever ridden, and I feel like the company has a rubber compound that lets them compete with the best on the market. Also impressive were the 2023 RockShox parts which are a step forward in smoothness for the brand, and operate silently.

One thing not present on my bike was Trek’s AirWiz suspension pressure sensors on the fork and shock, or the Quarq TyreWiz tire pressure sensors on the wheels. These are a stock feature on the model I tested, but Trek’s PR team decided to remove them from my review bike after the issues I had with the sensors on the Rail test bike in October . Riders who order the new EXe through Trek’s Project One customization program have the option to remove the sensors.

trek fuel ex e

While much of this bike is new to me, the Fuel EXe is such a harmonious package that I got comfortable with it very quickly, and it wasn’t much longer before I was in love with this bike. In fact, I’m going to declare that this is one of the best mountain bikes—powered or unpowered—I’ve recently ridden. I can’t wait until the unpowered version of this frame lands because I think it will kick ass.

Everything makes this bike good, but I’ll start with the frame. The chassis has a modern fit and balanced handling that lets the rider climb comfortably and let it run on the descents, yet it’s still agreeable on mid-speed and flatter trails. There’s nothing particularly unique or different about the EXe’s geometry numbers, which I think is the point: It finds an equilibrium that works well on many kinds of climbs and flavors of descent without neglecting that some trails are flatter. If anything, it’s snappier and livelier—things I don’t think I’ve ever said about an e-mountain bike—than the average 140/150mm bike, and enough that I legitimately forgot that I was on an e-bike at times.

trek fuel ex e

I sometimes forget I was on an e-bike because the motor is so quiet and well-mannered. I couldn’t hear it over my breathing on climbs, and it’s so smooth that there are almost no vibrations or buzzing to feel in the frame. Plus, it is entirely free of clunking and lash.

It’s the most natural feeling motor I’ve yet ridden, by which I mean it doles out the power in an approximately human way. It is also so quick that there’s almost no lag between when you start and stop pedaling; the motor power flows in and out. It legitimately feels like you’re just having a really great day when you pedal this bike. I felt less surging and pushing from this motor, even in the highest assist mode, than I’ve experienced from any other e-bike motor system.

The EXe’s motor feels exceptionally well-tuned, and the experience is refined, eclipsing even Specialized’s excellent motors. Some of this smoothness likely results from the TQ’s lower torque. By keeping the system quiet, the bike tricks the brain a bit—quieter is perceived as smoother. But riding the EX- was such a pleasant experience that I never missed the extra boost of a “full power” e-bike.

trek fuel ex e

I feel like this e-lite mountain bike might provide a superior experience for many riders, even committed e-bike riders. Yeah, it’s not going to hurl you up the climbs the way a full-power e-bike will. Yes, I did wish for more range—if only because riding the EXe is so damn fun—but there’s enough power and range here to offer some substantial assist, yet the bike remains agile and doesn’t punish the upper body on the descents. It is an e-bike experience that doesn’t overwhelm the mountain bike experience. The experience of transitioning from a mountain bike to a full-power e-bike is pretty extreme and can be jarring.

Full-power e-bikes are a lot: A lot of power and a lot of weight. Many riders adapt and are completely happy with their full-power e-bikes. But if you’ve tried a full-power e-bike and thought it was a bit much, the EXe will be a revelation.

Based on Strava, even with the EXe’s assist, I was still slower on the climbs and descents than my town’s fastest pro riders. I wasn’t even as fast as my best unassisted times from when I was in my best riding shape. But I could ride quicker and with less effort than I can (at my current weight and fitness) compared to an unassisted bike. It lessened—but did not eliminate—the pain and significantly increased the fun in a quiet, sleek, and easy-to-ride package. Which, to me, are the hallmark of an extraordinary bike.

trek fuel ex e

For the new EXe motor, Trek turned to a new supplier: TQ Group. Like Bosch, Brose, and Mahale, TQ’s e-bike division is a small part of a large and diverse company with extensive knowledge in electronics. Though they may not have the recognition of its competitors, this isn’t TQ’s first foray into e-bike motors: The Flyon motor used for some Haibike models was a TQ product. But while the Flyon was noteworthy for its massive 120Nm of torque, the HPR50 maxes out at 50Nm (300 watts maximum assist), putting the Fuel EXe into the growing e-light category of mountain bikes. Other e-light trail bikes include Specialized’s Levo SL and Orbea’s Rise.

With nearly half the maximum torque, these e-light bikes don’t have the sheer thrust of a full-power e-MTB. But less powerful motors are smaller and lighter, and they draw less juice so that the bikes can use smaller and lighter batteries. And that’s why this EXe is easily 10 pounds lighter than a comparable full-power e-bike. For example, the full-power Trek Rail I reviewed last October weighed 51.3lb. This EXe with a similar build weighs 40.9 pounds.

The HPR50 is a light (1830 grams) and small e-bike motor because of its architecture. The “harmonic pin ring” system allows a concentric profile without belts and with fewer gears, packaging the entire unit into a shell that looks more like an oversized standard bottom bracket than the typical e-bike motor. Rather than explaining the design, the hypnotic animation provided by TQ below illustrates it nicely.

preview for Trek Fuel EXe TQ Motor Exploded View

One more stat I want to highlight is TQ’s claimed “135mm Q-Factor.” While this is true, it’s the Q-factor of the motor without cranks which, last I checked, is hard to pedal. With my test bike’s e*thirteen e*spec Race Carbon cranks installed, I measured an approximate 195mm Q-Factor, which is quite a bit wider than a Shimano EP8 motor’s 177mm.

According to Trek’s launch materials, they spent a lot of time analyzing and quantifying e-bike motor noise. And while I don’t consider any of the current mid-drive e-bike motors loud, they all make noticeable—and not particularly pleasant—noise. Trek claims that when measured in an anechoic chamber, their motor’s tonality across a range of cadence speeds is four to five times lower than other e-bikes, registering as “barely perceivable.”

After many hours of riding the EXe, I agree that barely perceivable is an apt way to describe the motor’s noise. It’s so quiet that it barely registers above (and most of the time is masked by) tire noise and breathing. And not only is it hushed, but the noise you can hear is a much lower pitch—almost like a cat’s happy purr—than the high-pitched whine of most e-bike motors.

So quiet is the HPR50 motor that I could ride the EXe in a group without others knowing I was on an e-bike. Unless they got a good look at the bike from the non-drive side or happened to see the discrete handlebar remote (which I tried to cover with my hand as much as possible), they assumed it to be a non-assist bike. To make it even stealthier, I covered the top tube display with electrical tape to hide it, covered the top tube logo with stickers, and rode trails that are closed to e-bikes. Of course, I can’t suggest you do the same, but no one I rode by gave me or the bike a second look.

The EXe has a 360 Wh internal battery, which is enough for “two to five hours” of riding, according to Trek. While frustratingly vague, it’s accurate as many factors influence battery range. Riding in the “mid” assist mode, I did a 25-mile ride with almost 2500 feet of climbing. The ride took two hours and 40 minutes and finished with under 30 percent battery remaining, so I think the two-to-five hour estimate is accurate.

If you want more range (or less range anxiety), the EXe offers a couple of options. One is a 160Wh piggyback battery ($660, 900 gram claimed weight) that fits into the bottle cage. You’ll lose the ability to put a water bottle on the bike, but it provides 40 percent more range. One clever thing about this range extender is you can charge both it and the bike’s in-frame battery through a charge port in the extender. The other option is to buy a second in-frame battery ($750). You can easily remove the in-frame battery from the frame, so hot swaps on the trail are possible if you’re willing to carry a spare 1835g battery in your pack.

Claimed charge time for the 360Wh battery is a relatively short two hours, while the 160Wh piggyback charges in an hour.

trek fuel ex e

The EXe has a two-inch OLED flush-mounted in the top tube with four data lines and the system’s on/off switch. A remaining charge graphic and assist mode indicator always show, and you can scroll through four data screens. The most helpful are the ones that display the remaining battery charge as a percentage and estimated ride time remaining, and remaining range in miles and estimated ride time remaining. The other data screens show rider and bike power and speed. In addition, the TQ system broadcasts information on an ANT+ channel, so you can also see information on compatible GPS cycling computers.

The TQ handlebar remote is very discrete. Use it to select one of three assist modes (Eco, Mid, High), to shut off all assistance, or activate walk mode.

Riders may access further information and settings through the new Trek Central app for iOS and Android. The app can customize all three assist modes. However, assist-system firmware updates must be done by a Trek dealer.

trek fuel exe

The Central app also offers ride tracking/recording (with automatic export to Strava and Komoot) and navigation with battery charge remaining at the end of the trip. It also has a range cloud that shows how far you can ride if you want to make a round trip and how far you can ride one way with a full charge.

The Central app also provides suspension and tire pressure setup information based on rider weight and recommended suspension damping settings. If your bike has Trek’s TireWiz or AirWiz electronic pressure sensors, the app also connects to those devices.

trek fuel ex e

The EXe is the debut of Trek’s all-new carbon frame platform. Though the e-bike version is the first to launch, I’d bet there’s an unassisted version of this same frame coming soon. It is a mid-travel trail frame with 140mm of rear travel and complete models equipped with 150mm forks (it can take up to a 160mm fork). In addition, Trek seems to be heading in a new styling direction with the EXe, as the frame shapes and graphics seem crisper yet more subtle than previous mountain bikes.

The rear suspension is Trek’s familiar ABP (Active Braking Pivot) design. ABP is a single pivot system with a floating brake arm, allowing the nerds to fine-tune the bike’s anti-squat (pedaling) and anti-rise (braking) characteristics more than they could by using a more traditional single-pivot design. Trek says the kinematics work with either air or coil shocks and states that all coil shocks from Fox and RockShox are compatible with the EXe.

All frame sizes fit a 20-ounce water bottle inside the front triangle, and there’s a cargo mount under the top tube, too. Hoses and housing run internally (of course), but this frame does not use Trek’s Knock Block system to limit bar rotation. It got sacrificed to make room for the in-frame display.

trek fuel exe

The EXe’s geometry is pretty average for a modern 140/150mm travel trail bike. The highlights are two geometry positions (via a chip in the rocker link yielding a 64.7- or 65.2-degree head angle/76.7- or 77.2-degree effective seat tube angle) and chainstays that measure about 440mm.

While complete bikes come with 29-inch wheels, Trek says the bike is compatible with a 27.5” rear wheel.

Trek recommends using the high geometry position with the smaller-sized wheel fitted. However, it cautions that “the smaller wheel circumference will affect the accuracy of the speed reading and cannot be adjusted.”

Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

Fuel EXe 9.5

There are six EXe models—starting with the $6,500 Fuel EXe 9.5 and topping out with the $14,000 EXe 9.9 XX1 AXS. All use the same carbon frame, TQ motor, and 360Wh battery, but the rest of the build changes accordingly to price. Trek provided complete bike weights for the line, which I’ve pasted below, and you’ll also find build highlights. Full component package details are available on Trek’s website.

trek fuel exe

Notably, the most expensive EXe is not the lightest bike in the lineup. The $13,000 Shimano XTR build and the $8,700 and $9,200 Shimano XT bikes are lighter weight than the range-topping $14,000 SRAM XX1 AXS-equipped model. Also, the least expensive 9.5 model (remember: same frame, motor, and battery for all models) costs $7,500 less than the 9.9 XX1 AXS build but only weighs 3.3(ish) pounds heavier. To put it another way, the 9.5 is 53.6 percent cheaper than the 9.9 XX1, yet only eight percent heavier.

trek fuel exe

Personally, the best build in the line is the XT model. It’s under 40 pounds (claimed), has the carbon rims, comes with tough and sticky SE tires, and has the fancy one-piece carbon bar/stem of the most expensive builds. It has all of this while carrying a sub-five figure price tag.

Lastly, on the SRAM AXS -equipped bikes (like my review sample), the rear derailleur gets power from the bike’s battery via an “extension cord” pack. This pack clips on in place of the standard AXS battery and connects to the bike’s wiring harness. If you completely drain the e-bike battery, there is still enough juice left for about 200 shifts. Riders can bring along a spare AXS battery as an extra precaution.

trek fuel ex e

Model | Weight in Pounds | Price

Fuel EXe 9.5 | 43.94 | $6,500

Fuel EXe 9.7 | 41.99 | $7,600

Fuel EXe 9.7 P1 Now* | 41.99 | $8,100

Fuel EXe 9.8 XT | 39.9 | $8,700

Fuel EXe 9.8 XT P1 Now* | 39.9 | $9,200

Fuel EXe 9.8 GX AXS | 40.06 | $11,000

Fuel EXe 9.9 XTR | 38.51 | $13,000

Fuel EXe 9.9 XX1 AXS | 40.67 | $14,000

* “P1 Now” models have a “premium” finish and are painted and assembled at Trek’s headquarters in Waterloo, Wisconsin. The weight and build kit are the same as standard models.

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A gear editor for his entire career, Matt’s journey to becoming a leading cycling tech journalist started in 1995, and he’s been at it ever since; likely riding more cycling equipment than anyone on the planet along the way. Previous to his time with Bicycling , Matt worked in bike shops as a service manager, mechanic, and sales person. Based in Durango, Colorado, he enjoys riding and testing any and all kinds of bikes, so you’re just as likely to see him on a road bike dressed in Lycra at a Tuesday night worlds ride as you are to find him dressed in a full face helmet and pads riding a bike park on an enduro bike. He doesn’t race often, but he’s game for anything; having entered road races, criteriums, trials competitions, dual slalom, downhill races, enduros, stage races, short track, time trials, and gran fondos. Next up on his to-do list: a multi day bikepacking trip, and an e-bike race. 

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test trek fuel exe 9.5

  • Rider Notes

2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

test trek fuel exe 9.5

A 29″ carbon frame full suspension trail e-bike with upper mid-range components. Compare the full range

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test trek fuel exe 9.5

Fuel EXe 9.5

In Stock: MD, LG, & XL

Fuel EXe Project One - 2023, Medium

In Stock: MD

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ebiketips

Trek’s Fuel EXe 9.5 is a game-changing electric mountain bike with a natural-feeling motor system and inspired geometry. Considering it’s an entry-level model to the range, it’s rather a lot of money at £6,400, but if a mid-drive motor that doesn't sap all feeling from the trail is high on your list of wants, then this is the bike to try. American company Trek has really embraced the electric bike game in recent years. Unlike some other brands, they don’t appear tied to one motor brand and thus have a variety on offer including Bosch and now TQ.

Bikerumor

Trek's Fuel EXe trail eMTBs get new alloy models to bring the price down without changing the motor or suspension tech that make it great.

EMTB Forums

Jul 2023 · Knut Nes

About one year ago, Trek launched a new lightweight emtb with a carbon frame. It was equipped with the mild and silent TQ HPR50 motor and a 360 Wh battery. The 2023 Trek Fuel EXe felt so natural on the trails. Natural because the motor was barely...

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Trek releases a more affordable line of Fuel EXe Models utilizing an Alloy Frame. Same great performance, at a cheaper pricepoint.

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Light, discrete, and quiet with a great chassis, the new EX-e proves that more doesn’t make e-bikes better.

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Trek fuel exe 9.5.

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  • Near silent motor
  • Playful and agile frame
  • Great connectivity with app and cycling computers
  • Mid-level components for the price

Trek’s Fuel EXe 9.5 is a game-changing electric mountain bike with a natural-feeling motor system and inspired geometry. Considering it’s an entry-level model to the range, it’s rather a lot of money at £6,400, but if a mid-drive motor that doesn't sap all feeling from the trail is high on your list of wants, then this is the bike to try.

American company Trek has really embraced the electric bike game in recent years. Unlike some other brands, they don’t appear tied to one motor brand and thus have a variety on offer including Bosch and now TQ .

I was lucky enough that my local bike shop York Cycleworks had a Trek Fuel EXe ready for demo rides, so they kindly let me borrow it for a few weeks to get to grips with this new TQ motor I’d heard so much about, and to get some proper Yorkshire trail riding in.

Trek Fuel EXe 9 BB and motor.jpg

The Fuel EXe is aimed at people who want a natural feel when they ride. For those who don’t want an e-bike to take over the trail, but want to go further and easily add more laps in at the bike park. This is why the TQ-HPR50 is the heart and soul of this bike.

Trek (and TQ) like to push the aerospace heritage angle of the TQ drive system. It’s extremely quiet, which is a big plus for many e-bikers who typically have to endure the whirr of a mid-drive working hard as they try and get their heads into nature. It’s also small and lightweight at a claimed 1,800g (for obvious reasons I couldn’t measure this myself). TQ uses a harmonic pin ring transmission which means it can be smaller than traditional toothed gear motors and belt drives. I won’t re-hash how it works here, but if you’re desperate to understand more, Trek has a nice little page on their website .

The point is, it’s small, light and powerful. It produces a maximum 50Nm of torque and 300W peak power, which doesn’t sound like a lot for an eMTB, but it works. When everything else on the bike is lighter and more compact, you don’t need to overcompensate. Additionally, it’s at this sort of range where you avoid the occasional jerkiness of more powerful motors.

I only felt like it was lacking once or twice, and that was when I was riding up something about 20% and slippery. It helped me get through some pretty deep snow drifts while staying upright, and tackled a lot of natural trails easily. I was really impressed with how responsive and quiet the drive system was, and only really heard it kick into gear when I was in the highest assist setting and making it work overdrive.

The battery

Trek Fuel EXe 9 top tube.jpg

Encased in the downtube is a 360Wh battery. It doesn’t sound like much if you want to head out on an all-day epic, so if you find you want more, you can purchase a 160Wh range extender which sits in the front bottle cage for just under £500.

The range of the 360Wh battery, however, is where things get a bit tricky to measure. TQ measures it in hours rather than miles, and estimate roughly two hours on full assist for an average rider. I think that could be about right, maybe a bit under what I experienced, but as a lighter than average rider (and female), I usually do see better range numbers than estimated by brands.

I rode 18 miles around the North Yorkshire Moors as my longest ride on this bike, switching between the assist levels when needed, and still had 32% battery when I got back to the car.

Display and app

Trek Fuel EXe 9 display.jpg

The control display is located within the top tube. Some riders will like this position, but I still prefer something on the handlebars so I don’t get distracted looking down for too long. It can display several different metrics, including battery level, range remaining, mileage, time on bike etc. The remote is on the handlebars, and is where you choose your assist setting (including walk assist).

You can pair the bike with the Trek Central app , which provides lots of information and tracking for the bike. I particularly liked the suspension PSI suggestions for weight – not a foolproof measurement but a good place to start if you’re not sure how to set up your suspension. You can even download over the air updates which is something I would consider an essential for a modern e-bike.

Trek Fuel EXe 9 controls.jpg

The app also allows you to tune your motor, so picking how much assistance and at what point it ‘kicks in’ within each level. It’s a truly customisable experience. The bike is also ANT+ compatible, so you can see a lot of metrics on Garmin, Wahoo and now Hammerhead devices if you’re into that sort of thing.

How it rides and components

Trek Fuel EXE 9.5 riding

So what’s it like to ride? In a word, excellent. The TQ drive system is not overbearing and doesn’t make you feel indestructable like some mid-drive motors can. But that’s not a bad thing. Instead, it feels like you are Jolanda Neff, only without the lack of fear and years of technical training. It won’t make up for the fact you’re in over your head if you accidentally take the black line instead of the red, but it will help you to ride for longer, at a higher speed, and potentially give you more time to learn the skills.

The frame is agile and lively – and I think it’s important to mention here that I was riding a size L when really I should have been on an S – and yet I was still able to whip it about and ride with a degree of confidence. And perhaps more importantly, I could fit it in my car by myself (which is not something I can often do with electric mountain bikes - I usually pull a muscle).

Trek Fuel EXe 9 forks.jpg

It just doesn’t look, ride, or weigh like a beastie boy e-bike. It’s like the lighter weight cousin, the one who runs marathons and eats a decent ratio of greens to meat at Christmas rather than being first in line to the Quality Street tin.

I took some time to tune in the suspension for my weight and it was excellent. For reference, the Fuel EXe 9.5 is equipped with a 150mm RockShox Gold RL fork and 140mm RockShox Deluxe Select+ rear shock. It’s compliant and easy to adjust – and I didn’t feel out of my depth at any point, riding it around the North Yorkshire Moors, Dalby Forest and beyond.

The Shimano Deore 12-speed drivetrain was also pretty faultless, but I did feel that at this price point perhaps it could have done with an SLX upgrade just to warrant the cost a little better.

Trek Fuel EXe 9 side on (1).jpg

The Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 is the entry-level model for this range, which sounds a bit daft when it costs over £6k. It is, however, on a par with other brands using this particular drive system. It’s brands making lightweight eMTBs that choose it, including bikes like the Scott Lumen eRIDE which begins at £6,499 - although you do get a better groupset and ‘e-bike specific’ suspension even on the ‘entry-level’ model, the 910.

Without the extreme price, there’s no denying the Trek Fuel EXe is an incredibly enjoyable e-bike to ride. It’s agile, it’s playful, but with the right amount of grip and stability to make all kinds of terrain your playground. If you want something that rides like an unassisted bike but with a little bit of extra boost, it’s definitely worth a test ride.

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Rebecca Bland

Rebecca has been writing about e-bikes for four years, after a typically ill-timed career change pre-pandemic. She's been riding bikes since she can remember, and fell back in love with them after realising it was faster, cheaper, and more fun than getting the bus to work. Nowadays she enjoys all kinds of bikes, from road to eMTB and is training her border collie pup to become a trail dog. 

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Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 im Test

Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 im Test

  • Preis: 5999 €
  • Rahmenmaterial: Carbon
  • Motor: TQ HPR 50
  • Federweg vorne: 150 mm
  • Akku: 360 WH
  • Federweg hinten: 140 mm
  • Modelljahr: 2024
  • Laufradgröße: 29"
  • Gewicht: 19,93 kg

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Die wichtigsten Wertungen des Fuel EXe 9.5 ⬤ im Vergleich zum relevanten Marktumfeld um 6000€ ⬤ .

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Diese Grafik zeigt dir auf einen Blick die Preis/Leistung des 5999 € teuren Fuel EXe 9.5.

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Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 im Test

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Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

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  • Motor TQ HPR 50
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  • Dämpfer RockShox Deluxe Select+ RT, 205 x 60 mm
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Want to pull the trigger this week!- Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 or Levo SL Comp Carbon?

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It was a exciting experience to test ride Fuel EXe 9.5 for 20 minutes from my LBS, it performed exactly like most of the online reviewer stated: quiet, light, and agile. Just when I got ready to order it, I found another shop has Levo SL Comp Carbon (MSRP $8,500) on sale for the same price as Fuel ($6,400). The main reason I am still considering Levo SL is the component of 9.5 did feel a little under-spec, specially rear derailer and fork during my test ride. If Levo can provide enough motor power that I need, I don't mind to live with a little louder noise with better component spec on Levo Comp model.. What's your vote? I won't have chance to test ride Levo SL so I need to decide on one of them soon. For those of you Levo SL owner, can you share your opinion on its output power and battery life? I rode MTB for 20 years but the last 8 years has been lazy. The EMTB option inspire me to get back to riding, specially want to go back to Tahoe for 2 hours semi-technical trip. I don't go super fast for my age (56) but adequate power assist on uphill is important for me to invest in eBike. thanks for your input in advance! Chris  

test trek fuel exe 9.5

I detune my kenevo sl motor in all modes..... the sl motor and battery arr heavy compared to the newest batteries and tq and fazua. At this moment imo the treck is the better package, geo included, maunly seat angle. Both are insanely good bikes. I am not a fan of rocker link suspension but there is no denying both are good.  

Btw check out this to compare motor/battery combos: https://m.pinkbike.com/forum/listcomments/?threadid=236745  

Found this newly posted, very detailed Fuel Exe video review compared to Orbea. Trek Fuel EX-e 9.7 video review - $7600 best ebike value? | Mountain Bike Reviews Forum (mtbr.com) All sound good except one post comment about a downhill drag made me think...I do agree that TQ motor is the biggest selling point, it's the only thing I remembered from the test ride and can't wait to get more ride on it! At this point I think Levo SL will give way to Fuel's revolutionary tiny motor, since I can easily upgrade other components.  

Keep us posted. I'm in the same boat as you... Going to test ride a Heckler and maybe others in a few weeks in Santa Cruz.  

Let me know what you think after your Heckler test ride.  

test trek fuel exe 9.5

I got the Spec Levo SL CC and have been super happy with it. Managed to get it to 34.5lbs with a few changes, met my goal of an under 35lb pedal assist.  

test trek fuel exe 9.5

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Fuel EXe   Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 Build

  • Thread starter Keith3007
  • Start date Jan 8, 2023
  • Jan 8, 2023

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Cheers Wheels are Mavic Deemax Sam Hill  

  • Feb 21, 2023

I did more less the same: I ordered a 9.5 because I was just interested in the frame and my updates are as follows: - Rock Shox Lyrik Ultimate Charger 3 RC2 in 150 mm - Rock Shox super deluxe Ultimate RC2 - Syntace Vector Carbon Bar and headset - Full Sram X01 Eagle drivetrain with maybe a small 30T chainring from Raceface or Garbaruk (this will be decided after the first rides if 30T really needed or if I stay with 32T) - Acros Enduro Carbon rims mullet with Maxxis DHR 2.4 and DHF 2.5 - Kind Shock Lev Integra 200mm dropper post with Selle Italia Flite saddle - Trickstuff direttissima brakes (I will move them from my actual Liteville 301 MK12) - Syntace pedals number 9 Titan (also from my existing bike) So I end up with the same price as a 9.8XT but with the components as I want them and an expected weight of below 18 kg. Bike is expected to come in the next 2 weeks so by end of march I will show you the final result and givve you my feedback on the riding impressions. Cheers Thomas  

  • Fox 36 Factory Grip 2 160mm
  • Fox Float X2 factory shock
  • XT 4-pot brakes and rotors
  • XT drive train
  • One-up Carbon 35mm bar
  • Race Face 60mm stem for a little extra reach
  • Atlas pedals and some fat grips
  • i9 355 carbon wheels, hydra hubs, and maxxis dissector rubber

1677005880783.png

  • Feb 22, 2023

Your bike looks nice...how does it ride? Thank you for the alert, but as far as I am staying with Rock Shox hopefully this is not going to happen.  

volts

  • Feb 24, 2023

I ordered a 9.5 in the blue. I hope it looks good. I'll be putting on a Mezzer Pro set to 160mm and a 65mm stroke float X performance I got for almost free and will make the hack to turn it into a float x performance elite. 203mm rotors, xt cassette, xt derailleur, slx shifter, 35mm stem with oneup bar, SLX brakes and a 210mm oneup dropper, DT Swiss XMC 1200 carbon mullet wheels and flip the chip to high and I should be set. Can't wait for the bike to arrive, parts are ready. Most of the parts I already have, so all in all not an expensive build.  

volts said: I ordered a 9.5 in the blue. I hope it looks good. I'll be putting on a Mezzer Pro set to 160mm and a 65mm stroke float X performance I got for almost free and will make the hack to turn it into a float x performance elite. 203mm rotors, xt cassette, xt derailleur, slx shifter, 35mm stem with oneup bar, SLX brakes and a 210mm oneup dropper, DT Swiss XMC 1200 carbon mullet wheels and flip the chip to high and I should be set. Can't wait for the bike to arrive, parts are ready. Most of the parts I already have, so all in all not an expensive build. Click to expand...

irie

E*POWAH Elite World Champion

  • Feb 25, 2023
Julie_X1 said: My husband recently got the blue 9.5. It looks great in person and the folks at our LBS thought the color was beautiful too. The 9.5 model has 2 nice colors. Love this 9.5 thread by the way… giving me many ideas. Maybe too many, lol. Click to expand...
  • Feb 26, 2023
irie said: So you fancy the Fuel EX-e 9.5 in "Matte Dnister Black" I guess? ​ Click to expand...
Julie_X1 said: I do like black as much as I like blue. But I picked the Deep Smoke color for mine. (I likely will be keeping mine stock, but have already started suggesting upgrades to my husband for his. ) Click to expand...
  • Mar 1, 2023
Keith3007 said: Hello Purchased 9.5 in October for frame, battery and motor. Had all custom parts ready so converted bike straight away and been using since. Two small changes to do this week in Title seat-post clamp and Intend headset. Thoughts on bike - Great handling and fun, can't fault once all bolts tightened properly. TQ motor - Enough power but would like a bit more 10% of the time, you deff need to work harder, knew this would be the case when buying but willing to trade for the silence. Previous bikes had Shimano EP8/EP8 RS and Bosch Gen 4 but would not go back, motor whine not end of world but going downhill... Range - Could be better will probably get extender for big days out in Alps etc...summertime. Cheers View attachment 104234 View attachment 104326 Click to expand...
  • Mar 2, 2023
tolmie35 said: Hi there, just seen you are glasgow like myself, is that photo from the Braes? Thanks Click to expand...
  • Mar 3, 2023
Keith3007 said: Well spotted! Click to expand...
  • Mar 4, 2023

IMG_3778.jpg

  • Mar 11, 2023
volts said: I'm far from done but I have a broken thumb so working on the bike is hard. Took the bike for a short ride today though. View attachment 108314 The cables are a birds nest, the dropper is very short, the brake handles will be swapped to shimano, the shock will be swapped, new saddle, new grips, new shifter and different bottle cage coming up. But so far so good. Click to expand...
  • Mar 12, 2023
visionone said: can you tell me what fender that is? Click to expand...

Samo

  • Mar 17, 2023

Love this thread.. Picked up a 9.5 myself. Was on sale and much cheaper than the other models. I intend to upgrade parts. Trying to source some ideas on what too first, what would make the most impact to the riding. Does anyone have any advice on where they would suggest the first upgrades should occur?  

IMG_3836.jpg

Great advice thanks Was definitely thinking suspension and wheels first. Perhaps a fox 36 160mm up front. Potentially leaving the stock rear. And then some lighter wheels. Will check out brake levers. Good tips. I definitely thought the drive train felt clunky on my first ride... Comparing to my sram eagle on my old 2017 analogue bike (canyon spectral).  

IMG_3776.jpg

E*POWAH Elite

I started with a 9.5 and then changed the following, i had a lot of this stuff either spare or on other bikes, so didnt cost much to do. - dt swiss hx1501 wheelset - taken off another bike. the stock wheels are very heavy and very weak, these dtswiss wheels are not light, but are very strong, and are still a lot lighter than stock. - XT cassette - the stock sunrace cassette is seriously heavy - AXS gears - the stock derailluer is shimano xt which is great, but I had AXS that I could take off another bike so why not - Magura Mt7 brakes - stock 9.5 brakes are awful - if on a budget just upgrading the levers to deore levers would be a significant upgrade. Had to buy these. - Fox 36 factory 160mm fork - taken off another bike. The stock RS gold 35 is awful. - Super deluxe ultimate shock - had to buy this. The stock deluxe select+ is actually ok though IMO, it feels a bit spiky over successive rapid bumps, but not bad at all really, but may as well do things properly. - One up carbon bars and renthal stem - stock bars are too narrow for me - Fabric saddle - Maxxis Assegai Exo+ tyre on the front, DHR II double down on the rear. The main things to fix on the standard 9.5 is the front suspension, the brakes and the wheels, in that order (IMO)  

Mteam said: - Magura Mt7 brakes - stock 9.5 brakes are awful - if on a budget just upgrading the levers to deore levers would be a significant upgrade. Had to buy these. Click to expand...

Some good ideas here. I got my 9.5 a couple of weeks ago. I picked up a Lyrik on eBay for a good price and got the bike shop to fit that before I picked it up. I've no idea how good/bad the 35 Gold fork is, but I am able to sell it on eBay as new and unused. @Samo you might want to swap yours out and sell it while it's still unmarked. Mine came with TRP brakes which are plenty powerful but I don't like the feel. F*ckin noisy too. Hadn't thought about only upgrading the levers - good suggestion. Wheels I guess I'll do when I decide whether to run it mullet (feels good as a full 29er I think) and find a bargain. The Select+ shock is ok, but think I may go for a coil eventually.  

MikeP said: Mine came with TRP brakes which are plenty powerful but I don't like the feel. F*ckin noisy too. Hadn't thought about only upgrading the levers - good suggestion. Click to expand...
Mteam said: ... maybe you dont need to swap the brakes out at all? Click to expand...

InRustWeTrust

InRustWeTrust

E*powah master.

Samo said: Love this thread.. Picked up a 9.5 myself. Was on sale and much cheaper than the other models. I intend to upgrade parts. Trying to source some ideas on what too first, what would make the most impact to the riding. Does anyone have any advice on where they would suggest the first upgrades should occur? Click to expand...
  • Mar 18, 2023

test trek fuel exe 9.5

Samo said: All great tips.. Thanks! I think Australian 9.5 (where I am) might have different components to elsewhere... This is what I have. Frame OCLV Mountain Carbon, removable battery, internal routing, alloy rocker link, 34.9 mm seat tube, upper chain guide mount, 55 mm chainline, Mino Link, ABP, Boost148, UDH, 140 mm travel Fork RockShox 35 Gold RL, DebonAir spring, Motion Control damper, lockout, tapered steerer, 44 mm offset, Boost110, 15 mm Maxle Stealth, 150 mm travel Shock RockShox Deluxe Select+ RT, 205 mm x 60 mm Wheels expand_less Hub front Bontrager sealed bearing, alloy axle, 6-bolt, Boost110, 15 mm thru axle Hub rear Bontrager alloy, sealed bearing, alloy axle, 6-bolt, Shimano MicroSpline freehub, Boost148, 12 mm thru axle Skewer rear Bontrager Switch thru-axle, removable lever Rim Alex MD35, tubeless compatible, 32-hole, 35 mm width, Presta valve Tyre Bontrager XR5 Team Issue, Tubeless Ready, aramid bead, 120 tpi, 29x2.50" Tyre part Bontrager TLR sealant, 180 ml/6 oz Rim strip Bontrager TLR Drivetrain expand_less Shifter Shimano Deore M6100, 12-speed Rear derailleur Shimano Deore M6100, long cage Crank E*thirteen E*spec Plus, 165 mm length Crank arm E*thirteen E*spec Plus, 170 mm length Chainring E*thirteen E*spec, 32T alloy ring, 55 mm chainline Cassette Shimano Deore M6100, 10-51, 12-speed Chain Shimano Deore M6100, 12-speed Max. chainring size Max: 34T Min: 30T Components expand_less Saddle Bontrager Arvada, steel rails, 138 mm width *Seatpost Size: S TranzX JD-YSI-22PLQ, 100 mm travel, internal routing, 34.9 mm, 346 mm length Size: M TranzX JD-YSI-22PLQ, 150 mm travel, internal routing, 34.9 mm, 454 mm length Size: L, XL TranzX JD-YSI-22PLQ, 170 mm travel, internal routing, 34.9 mm, 497 mm length Handlebar Bontrager Rhythm Comp, alloy, 31.8 mm, 15 mm rise, 750 mm width Grips Bontrager XR Trail Comp, nylon lock-on Stem Bontrager alloy, 31.8 mm, Blendr-compatible, 7-degree, 50 mm length Brake Shimano 4-piston hydraulic disc, MT4100 lever, MT420 calliper Brake rotor Shimano RT66, 6-bolt, 203 mm Click to expand...
  • Mar 19, 2023

20230318_162925.jpg

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Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

  • AUS $ NZD $ USD $ CAD $ GBP £ EUR €

Weight / M - 19.93 kg / 43.94 lbs (with TLR sealant, no tubes)

At a glance

Where to buy.

Trek Logo

Specifications

  • Frame OCLV Mountain Carbon, removable battery, internal routing, alloy rocker link, 34.9mm seat tube, upper chain guide mount, 55mm chainline, Mino Link, ABP, Boost148, UDH, 140mm travel
  • Fork RockShox 35 Gold RL, DebonAir spring, Motion Control damper, lockout, tapered steerer, 44mm offset, Boost110, 15mm Maxle Stealth, 150mm travel
  • Shock RockShox Deluxe Select+ RT, 205mm x 60mm
  • Motor TQ-HPR50, 300 watt, 50 Nm
  • Battery TQ 360Wh
  • Wheels Alex MD35, tubeless compatible, 32-hole, 35mm width, presta valve
  • Wheel Size 29"
  • Tires Bontrager TLR sealant, 6oz
  • Chain E*thirteen E*spec, 32T alloy ring, 55mm chainline
  • Rear Derailleur Shimano Deore M6100, long cage
  • Shifters Shimano Deore M6100, 12 speed
  • Brakeset Shimano 4-piston hydraulic disc, MT4100 lever, MT420 caliper
  • Handlebar Bontrager Rhythm Comp, alloy, 31.8mm, 15mm rise, 750mm width
  • Saddle Bontrager Arvada, steel rails, 138mm width
  • Stem Bontrager alloy, 31.8mm, Blendr compatible, 7 degree, 50mm length

Q: Where to buy a 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5?

The 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 may be purchased directly from Trek .

Q: How much does a 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 weigh?

A 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 weights M - 19.93 kg / 43.94 lbs (with TLR sealant, no tubes).

Q: What size wheels does the 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 have?

The 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 has 29" wheels.

Q: What size 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 should I get?

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Down to earth, out of this world First there was the forest. Next came the trail. And then there were mountain bikes. Hardtails for hammering. Full suspensions for crushing. Short travel whips. Long travel steeds. High powered e-bikes. Now — there’s Fuel EXe. Evolved to break the mold, bridge the gap, and elevate your ride with quiet assist that all but disappears in the woods. Fuel EXe is everything you’ve been craving on the singletrack. It’s a full suspension e-mountain bike that flattens climbs and pushes you farther on every ride, without interrupting the way you experience the trail. It’s your best trail ride ever, with extra Fuel in the tank.

  • watch the walkthrough

Natural look. Natural ride. Surprisingly electric.

Noise 0.12tu.

Tonality units - barely perceivable

Assist Up to 20 mph

Range 2-5 hrs / 360wh.

3-7.5 hrs with 160Wh extender

Torque 50nm

The 100 greatest innovations of 2022.

“Trek Fuel EXe is the best new “SL,” or superlight ebike, blurring the line between purely human-powered and pedal-assist bikes.”

Innovation of the year: TQ-HPR50 Motor

“That tiny harmonic pin ring drive unit is the golden goose of e-bike motors.”

  • See the TQ-HPR50 motor

Design & Innovation Award 2023

“Trek Fuel EXe ushers in a new generation of Light-eMTBs, combining the nimble handling of an analogue mountain bike with the motor support of an ebike.”

TIME Best Inventions of 2023

Fuel EXe's natural-feeling assist and stealthy good looks earned it a coveted spot on TIME's Best Inventions of 2023 list. From TIME. © 2023 TIME USA LLC All rights reserved. Used under license.

Nothing else like it Most e-bike motors use gears and belts to move you forward — but belts and gears lash, slip, rattle, and wear out over time. That disconnects you from the ride. Fuel EXe uses an award-winning motor unlike anything else — the TQ’s HPR50 harmonic pin ring transmission. HPR50 is not only smaller and lighter than traditional e-bike motors, but it also uses fewer moving parts, so it’s smoother, quieter, and more durable, too. You get more of the ride experience without any downside.

  • learn more about the TQ HPR50

Less is more

When we’re on the trail and connecting with nature, we don’t want to hear more than the sound of our tires on the dirt, the wind through the trees, and the hoots and hollers of our riding crew. Up until now, e-bikes have pulled us away from that experience with high-pitched motors that take us out of the element. Fuel EXe is different. It’s not only quieter—it’s less annoying.

Tonality (sound perception)

When it comes to sound, decibels don’t tell the whole story. Sounds like a ripping current of a river or wind rustling through trees might measure in as quite loud, but they don’t distract us from the ride. That has everything to do with something called tonality. Simply put, tonality is the measurement of how annoying and perceivable a sound is. It’s the difference between the crunch of leaves under your tire, and a squeaking brake rotor.

Cadence and tonality

Tonality is measured in tonality units, or tu for short. Sounds that measure under 0.1tu aren’t perceivable to the human ear, while sounds over 0.4tu are grating and annoying. Fuel EXe’s motor is tuned for tone, measuring in under 0.2tu—five times less perceivable than other light-assist bikes—so you can forgo the annoying whine of most e-bike motors to stay in the moment and connected with nature while you ride.

Data recorded in an anechoic chamber using a calibrated B&K 4966-h-041 microphone and Siemens SCADAS data acquisition unit with an acoustically-isolated Wahoo Kickr trainer set to 300W total resistance and bikes in maximum assist mode. Microphone was located 1 m laterally from the bottom bracket and 1.7 m off the floor (head height) and sampled at 51,200 Hz. Tonality calculated in Siemens Testlab Neo according to the ECMA-74:2019 standard.

While some e-bikes feel cumbersome and bulky, Fuel EXe is light, nimble, and playful, just as a trail bike should be. Its capable geometry is fine-tuned for barreling into berms and making light work of tech trails, lacing turns through tight aspens, and gnawing through rowdy rock gardens. Instead of being flung uphill like a rocket launcher, Fuel EXe’s assist feels natural, barely there — like an extension of your own power, so you can ride just like you would on a traditional mountain bike.

Built like a trail bike. Rips like a trail bike.

Fuel EXe is built with trail bike geometry that’s slack and capable out front with a 65-degree head tube angle.

A 77-degree seat tube angle keeps you perched for punchy climbs and long pedal fests up fire roads.

With a compact motor, Fuel EXe’s chainstays are able to stay tight at just 440mm, keeping the ride nimble and playful.

Carbon or alloy – the choice is yours

Now with both carbon and aluminum offerings, Fuel EXe offers incredible electric performance to meet your needs and budget. Test your mettle with Fuel EXe Alloy or go ultra light and lively with Fuel EXe Carbon.

Dialed for how you ride

Mino Link lets you quickly adjust your geometry, so your bike is always tuned for the terrain and your riding style. Plus, you can take geometry tweaks even further with adjustable angle headset cups on Fuel EXe Alloy (sold separately).

Simple battery solution

In-tube battery storage keeps your battery securely stashed while you ride, but simple to remove with just an hex wrench.

Non-stop suspension

Trek’s exclusive Active Braking Pivot keeps your suspension active while you’re braking (which is often when you need it most).

Hammer out big mile days with Range Extender. This compact bottle-shaped back up battery offers 160Wh of power that extends the distance you can ride by 44%. It tucks neatly in your existing bottle cage for simple connection to the charge port, which is located high on the down tube to stay clear from mud and make charging up simple. No additional hardware swapping needed. Just toss it in the existing cage, plug in, and go.

Tuned to you

You’re in control with three completely adjustable motor tune settings that can be easily tweaked on the fly. Quickly adapt your Fuel EXe to your terrain or riding style from the Trek Central app.

Plan your ride

Map out the perfect ride with easy-to-use maps and let the app show you how far you’ll make it with your current battery level.

See your stats

Keep track of the hours you spend in the saddle, the distance you ride, battery usage, and calories burned with activity tracking.

Make history

Scroll through a complete history of your rides and work towards new goals with ride history that logs every ride automatically when your Fuel EXe is paired to the Trek Central app.

Plays well with others

Pair your Trek Central app with Strava and Komoot to seamlessly communicate ride details and automatically log your rides across different apps.

Which is right for you?

Want an e-MTB that doesn’t hold back on power? Rail is the choice for riders who want to blast up climbs effortlessly with a full powered steed. It’s built for those who consider the trail their second home and want a ride that rips as hard as its non-electric siblings.

  • Shop Rail with smart system

Looking for a balance of power and natural ride feel? Fuel EXe offers smooth assist that doesn’t overdo it. With just enough power to make climbing a breeze, and a lightweight, nimble ride that feels like a traditional trail bike, Fuel EXe is the go-to for those who want an e-bike that doesn’t look like an e-bike.

  • Fuel EXe 9.5

No image available

TIME Best Inventions of 2023

"Fuel EXe's natural-feeling assist and stealthy good looks earned it a coveted spot on TIME's Best Inventions of 2023 list." From TIME. © 2023 TIME USA LLC All rights reserved. Used under license.

No image available

TQ HPR-50 is Pinkbike's Innovation of the Year

"That tiny harmonic pin ring drive unit is the golden goose of e-bike motors." Find out what Pinkbike had to say about the revolutionary motor at the heart of Fuel EXe.

No image available

Best All-Around

"Overall, the Trek Fuel EXe is a bike that ranked consistently well across the board when it came to performance on the trail. It does everything pretty darn well and would be a great jack of all trades lightweight eBike for those looking to have a mid-power eMTB for trail shredding fun."

No image available

2022 Gear of the Year

"This is the first time an e-bike has made my Gear of the Year list [...] in addition to being silent, the HPR50 motor feels frictionless while pedaling. The assistance comes on with a subtlety that makes it feel like you are a younger, fitter version of yourself with a tailwind at your back."

No image available

Editor's Choice

"The low-key, silent assist is just enough, keeping it riding like a real mountain bike but making the climbs less sucky. Don’t get me wrong, I love a good high-power eMTB, but I loved this bike, too. Trek’s Fuel EX’s handling is dialed, and this is merely an enhanced version of that. I tested the top model, but, fortunately, there are also mid-priced models that eschew some of the AirWiz(ardy) without giving up any of what makes this bike rad."

No image available

"Nothing comes close"

"Simply put, nothing comes close to the Fuel EXe when you paint the picture of the mountain bike experience as a whole."

No image available

"Probably going to be the most significant bike launched this decade"

"The Trek Fuel EXe is the bike (e or otherwise) that plenty of people have been waiting to see… Removes the final few issues that the e-curious crowd had."

No image available

"One of the best mountain bikes - powered or unpowered - I’ve recently ridden."

"The Fuel EXe is such a harmonious package that I got comfortable with it very quickly, and it wasn’t much longer before I was in love with this bike...I legitimately forgot that I was on an e-bike at times…it’s the most natural feeling motor I’ve yet ridden."

No image available

"We have to call it as we see it and the Trek Fuel EXe just elevated the eMTB game."

No image available

"The first impression was a unanimous 'Wow.' This is one of the few times that a bike exceeded expectations."

No image available

"Nothing less than a great leap forward for eMTBs"

"There are times when I am left amazed by something new and shiny, and that is the case with the Trek Fuel Exe...I might even go as far as to call it an engineering marvel."

Still have questions?

Get rewarded for going electric

Electric bike rebate programs are popping up all over the country, meaning you could save big when you buy a Trek e-bike! See if you're eligible for a rebate near you.

How to responsibly recycle your e-bike battery

Unboxing fuel exe with mahalo my dude.

Follow along as Jason from Mahalo My Dude unboxes and builds a brand new Fuel EXe.

Good sounds. Bad sounds.

Psychoacoustics? Tonality? Articulation index? We put a lot of thought into making Fuel EXe as quiet as possible. Like, a lot.

Run Horse Run

R-Dog shows off just how capable the Fuel EXe really is in this edit set to a Charley Crockett classic.

How to pack for any trail ride

Everything you need (and nothing you don’t).

Get faster on the trail in a week

When it comes to being a better trail rider, practice makes perfect. Get seven tips from Pinkbike’s Christina Chappetta that will have you setting PR's and riding with more confidence in no time.

Product features

Tq-hpr50 - small, quiet, mighty.

TQ-HPR50 motor is super-efficient with an amazing power-to-weight ratio. Most motors use gears and belts that take up space and can make noise or break. The TQ-HPR50 uses a harmonic pin-ring drive transmission that’s small, ultra-quiet, and unbelievably natural feeling.

Range Extender

Give yourself 40% more range with an optional 160wh external battery. It fits in a standard bottle cage and doesn’t require any complicated wiring or special mounts.

Connect, customize, calculate

The Trek Central app seamlessly connects with your bike for custom motor tuning, activity tracking and more ways to analyze and personalize your ride. You even get navigation features and real-time range calculations.

Removable battery

The 360 Wh battery gives you power for 2-5 hours. It’s concealed in the downtube, but it’s still easy to remove for more convenient charging.

Shimano Deore

Shimano Deore brings even more adventure with a wider range of gear choices for the steep stuff, the fast stuff, and the fun. With smooth riding, improved chain stability, and sharp shifting, Deore heightens your mountain biking confidence and control so you can focus on the trail and enjoy the ride.

Compliant with leading safety regulations

Learn how we ensure our e-bikes meet or exceed the latest safety regulations

You almost forgot your pedals

This bike doesn’t come with pedals because you'll have a better ride if you choose your own. Explore the pedal guide to find the best pedals for your riding style. Reach for flat pedals for simple versatility or go for clipless MTB pedals if you want control & efficiency.

Suspension Calculator

This suspension calculator will help you optimize your suspension settings for your riding weight. Simply follow the steps to find your best set up.

Complete Tubeless System

Tubeless Ready rims and tires make it easy to ditch the tubes so you get better traction, fewer flats, and less weight. You're ready to roll right out of the box with the included TLR rim strips, valves, and sealant.

Integrated display

Fuel EXe's display is simple to use and protected in the top tube. Check your assist level, range, speed, and more at a glance.

Sleek and simple remote

Toggle between assist modes or engage the walk-assist function with the ergonomic low-profile remote.

Easier internal routing

Integrated channels in the frame make it easy to route the brake hose, dropper and derailleur housing so you get a clean set-up with no hassle.

Oversized 34.9mm dropper post

Bigger is better. The oversized seat tube diameter gives more support and strength for longer travel droppers, and allows for more robust, durable internals that work faster.

Mino Link adjustable geometry

Fine tune head tube angle by 1/2° and BB height by up to 10mm with the simple turn of a nut. Just flip the link to choose between slack or slacker geometry, without negatively affecting suspension performance. A Trek exclusive.

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IMAGES

  1. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 2023... Trek's latest endeavour into the lightweight

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

  2. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 2023... Trek's latest endeavour into the lightweight

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

  3. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

  4. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 (Matte Dnister Black) 2023

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

  5. Trek Fuel EXe first ride review

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

  6. Neues Trek Fuel EXe im Test: Light E-MTB

    test trek fuel exe 9.5

VIDEO

  1. Trek Fuel EXe SL Emtb with some upgrades #bikeadviser

  2. Trek Fuel EXe 9.9 XO

  3. Putting the Trek Fuel EXe to the test. Woodhill Bike Park #mtb #emtb

  4. Trek Fuel Exe Test Ride

  5. Range extender test! Trek fuel EXE. Test in progress. Subscribe to see the results on April 12th

  6. Trek Fuel EXe mit TQ Antriebstechnologie▶️ https://youtu.be/4AZUQk5RNzo

COMMENTS

  1. 2023 Trek Fuel EXe Review

    Globally, there will be six Trek Fuel EXe models offered for 2023. Only three of those models will be available in Australia, with prices starting at $9,499 AUD for the Fuel EXe 9.5, and maxing out at $12,999 AUD for the Fuel EXe 9.8 XT. All Fuel EXe models make use of the same TQ-HPR50 motor, 360Wh battery and OCLV carbon frame.

  2. Fuel EXe 9.5 Review (2023)

    The Fuel EXe 9.5 comes with a Sun Race CSMZ800 11-51, 12-speed cassette and Shimano Deore M6100, 12-speed rear derailleur. This is an adequate pairing, but they're far from being all-singing all-dancing. The shifting is fairly swift, but by no means as responsive as some on the higher-spec bikes in the Fuel EXe range.

  3. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 2022 Review

    The developers of Trek have created a solid all-rounder with the Fuel EXe 9.5. Even though the E-Mountainbike reveals a weak flank with an average chassis and a middle ground brake system, it remains thanks to an outstanding motor and a very good handling:Genetiv a widely applicable vehicle. The guarantee promise of 25 years provides trust ...

  4. Trek Fuel EXe reviewed (finally)

    Trek Fuel EXe reviewed (finally) by Ben Haworth November 6, 2022 56. The new Trek Fuel EXe is an important bike. It's attracting a lot of attention from the e-curious who don't think much of ...

  5. Long-term review: Trek Fuel EXe shifts the standard for eMTB

    Trek EXe 9.9 AXS retails for $18,300 at Trek stores and online through Trekbikes.com. Categories: MTB | Tags: eMTB , Fuel EX-e , mtb-features , mtb-gear , review , TQ , TQ HPR50 , Trek , Trek Fuel EXe

  6. 4 upgrades & 7 updates on our Trek Fuel EXe review bike

    Price. $9,499 AUD - $12,999 AUD. Weight. 18.6kg. The Trek Fuel EXe was launched just a few months ago, arriving to much fanfare thanks to its unique TQ-HPR50 motor and clean aesthetics. We were totally captivated by the smooth and quiet motor performance, while the low weight, balanced geometry and supportive suspension gave it an impressively ...

  7. Review: Trek Fuel EXe eMTB smashes rough trails & climbs ...

    The Trek Fuel EXe is a bit of an outlier in the current e-MTB market. Most e-mountain bikes fall into one of two categories: High-powered, long-travel beasts, or lightweight, short-travel models with lower-power systems. The Fuel EXe sits in the middle, with 150/140mm travel and generous, adjustable trail geometry, and the new TQ HPR50 motor ...

  8. Trek Fuel EXE 9 5 Review

    Alex Llande reviews the new Trek Fuel EXE full suspension electric mountain bike.The Fuel EXe 9.5 is a new kind of electric mountain bike that bridges the d...

  9. Trek Fuel EXe Mountain Bike Review

    The Takeaway: Motor or no motor, the Fuel EXe is one of the best mountain bikes on the market right now. All new EX carbon frame with 140mm rear travel and 150mm fork. Small and light (1850 grams ...

  10. 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

    Trek's Fuel EXe 9.5 is a game-changing electric mountain bike with a natural-feeling motor system and inspired geometry. Considering it's an entry-level model to the range, it's rather a lot of money at £6,400, but if a mid-drive motor that doesn't sap all feeling from the trail is high on your list of wants, then this is the bike to try

  11. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

    The Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 is the entry-level model for this range, which sounds a bit daft when it costs over £6k. It is, however, on a par with other brands using this particular drive system. It's brands making lightweight eMTBs that choose it, including bikes like the Scott Lumen eRIDE which begins at £6,499 - although you do get a better ...

  12. Fuel EXe 9.5

    10 Reviews / Write a Review. $5,499.99 $6,499.99. Model 5272530. Retailer prices may vary. Fuel EXe 9.5 Deore is a new kind of e-mountain bike that bridges the divide between pedal assist and traditional bikes. It features a carbon frame and a compact motor that keeps the ride light, lively and quiet. Get the benefit of pedal assist on long ...

  13. Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 2024 im Test

    Modelljahr: 2024. Laufradgröße: 29". Gewicht: 19,93 kg. Das Fuel EXe 9.5 ist nicht das erste Fully, mit dem Trek sich im Light-Segment profilieren will. Anders als das Superkaliber ist es aber deutlich abfahrtsorientierter unterwegs. Trek setzt beim Fuel EXe 9.5 auf den HPR 50 Motor von TQ, der von einem 360-Wh-Akku mit Energie versorgt wird.

  14. Trek Fuel EXe E-Mountain Bike review

    A TransX dropper seatpost with 170mm of travel on our Size Medium test bike finishes the build. ... The Trek Fuel EXe is available in three different levels locally. The 9.5 (tested) will set riders back $9,499 and is available in either matte grey or blue. The 9.7 is priced at $11,499, while the range-topping 9.8 will be available for $13,499 ...

  15. 2023 TREK FUEL EXE 9.5 Bike Review

    The Trek Fuel EXE 9.5 is perfect for your needs! In this 2023 Trek Fuel EXE 9.5 Bike Review, we'll cov... Are you looking for a bike that can take you anywhere?

  16. Want to pull the trigger this week!- Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

    It was a exciting experience to test ride Fuel EXe 9.5 for 20 minutes from my LBS, it performed exactly like most of the online reviewer stated: quiet, light, and agile. Just when I got ready to order it, I found another shop has Levo SL Comp Carbon (MSRP $8,500) on sale for the same price as Fuel ($6,400). ... Trek Fuel still looks like a ...

  17. Fuel EXe

    Mar 1, 2023. #12. Keith3007 said: Hello Purchased 9.5 in October for frame, battery and motor. Had all custom parts ready so converted bike straight away and been using since. Two small changes to do this week in Title seat-post clamp and Intend headset. Thoughts on bike - Great handling and fun, can't fault once all bolts tightened properly.

  18. Is the Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 Better Than the Pivot Shuttle SL?

    This week we take a look at the Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 and rate it against the Pivot shuttle SL ride and see if the Trek Fuel EXe has enough to beat the Pivot Shu...

  19. 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5

    The 2023 Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 is an E-Mountain Carbon mountain bike. It sports 29" wheels, has RockShox suspension and a Shimano drivetrain. The bike is part of Trek 's Fuel-Exe range of mountain bikes. As a pedal-assisted e-mountain bike, the Trek Fuel EXe 9.5 is powered by a TQ-HPR50, 300 watt, 50 Nm motor and a TQ 360Wh battery.

  20. Fuel EXe 9.5

    Fuel EXe 9.5. £3,994.89 £5,550.00. Model 5272405. Retailer prices may vary. The Fuel EXe 9.5 Deore is a new kind of e-mountain bike that bridges the divide between pedal-assist and traditional bikes. It features a carbon frame and a compact motor that keeps the ride light, lively and quiet. Get the benefit of pedal assist on long climbs, and ...

  21. Fuel EXe redefines e-MTB

    Fuel EXe is everything you've been craving on the singletrack. It's a full suspension e-mountain bike that flattens climbs and pushes you farther on every ride, without interrupting the way you experience the trail. It's your best trail ride ever, with extra Fuel in the tank. watch the walkthrough. Natural look.

  22. Fuel EXe 9.5

    9 Reviews / Write a Review. $5,499.99 $6,499.99. Model 5272530. Retailer prices may vary. Fuel EXe 9.5 Deore is a new kind of e-mountain bike that bridges the divide between pedal assist and traditional bikes. It features a carbon frame and a compact motor that keeps the ride light, lively and quiet. Get the benefit of pedal assist on long ...