Trek Top Fuel 8 review: a progressive rather than podiuming XC machine

Trek’s top fuel delivers superlative short-travel suspension performance but it’s definitely a trail bike not an xc bike.

Trek Top Fuel 8 review

BikePerfect Verdict

Awesome suspension, agile swagger, grippy kit and practical frame updates build a brilliant rally bike, but high weight buries any XC aspirations

Infectiously agile and playful vibe

Superlative suspension feel

Seriously tight tracking frame

Trail tough kit

Internal storage

Too heavy for XC racing

Simple fork damper

Tight internal storage access

Yawning gap between this and the Supercaliber

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Top Fuel used to be Trek’s out-and-out best full-suspension mountain bike for racing, but with the soft-tail Supercaliber under its sponsored riders now, the Top Fuel has developed a burly rather than race character. 

The latest frame, suspension and spec changes to the 8 make the most of its short-travel agility and gripped tenacity to create a proper rally racer. Excess weight shows on climbs and acceleration though.

Design and geometry

The alloy Top Fuel frame not only has the same geometry, shock and suspension layout as its carbon counterpart but Trek’s engineers have also worked super-hard to give it the same extensive, updated feature lineup. That includes the lever-locked trapdoor into the down tube for internal storage, threaded bottom bracket shell with chain guide tabs. The Knock Block 2.0 inset now allows 72-degrees of steering lock (not 58-degrees as before) or you can fit a blank insert for full rotation if the bars aren’t slammed. 

In fact, it’s one of those bikes where we continually found ourselves riding how we always want to ride, not how we actually ride. That inevitably builds into an addictive upward spiral of confidence and insolent speed that often ended with us snapping at the heels of more expensive longer travel bikes even on really rowdy trails. Picking a larger, longer frame will settle it even more at speed, but for flow trails, it was refreshing to really rip those big Bontrager side tire lugs round on a compact, close combat chassis. Just be careful you don’t get too carried away, as however good it feels, less travel inevitably means the tires are having to cope with more impact force and we soon put a couple of splits in the rear tire despite the ‘inner strength’ casing.

When that happens the narrow neck of the storage hatch can make getting your spare tube out awkward and the high cage position means you won’t get a large bottle in either. There’s space for a 2.5in tire in the rear swingarm which pivots co-axially around the rear axle according to Trek’s ‘Active Braking Pivot’ wisdom. While it limits choice, the switch to a 34.9mm seatpost size should mean stiffer, smoother dropper action, especially on larger frame sizes which get up to a 200mm shaft stock. The new trunnion style shock pivots more smoothly and is the right way up now compared to last year’s inverted shocks. That means the MinoLink geometry flip chip to change angles by 0.5-degrees is now at the base of the shock but it’s still easy to get too. Significantly all RockShox spec Trek bikes from the 8 upwards get the same ‘Ultimate RCT’ spec Deluxe rear shock.

The alloy frame is a kilo heavier (3.74kg vs 2.7kg) than the carbon option according to Trek’s weights. This saves you $1,400/£1,500 if you buy the frame separately, although it still retails for $2,319.99/£2,350. Those numbers prove it’s neither affordable or light for a bike that you’ll find listed in the XC section of Trek's website, not the trail pages. In fact, the 130mm Fuel EX Al frame is the same weight although that doesn't have internal storage.

A 66/66.4-degree head tube definitely suggests progressive riding rather than traditional podium hunting vibes too. The 465/469mm reach on our M/L size is more trad than rad though so riders after a stretch should make use of the short 450mm seat tube and opt for the L with a 480/484 reach. All bikes get the same 76/76.4-degree seat tube angle and 434/435mm chainstay length though so while having six (S-XXL) sizes is great, the balance is definitely centered around the M - M/L - L models.

Components and build 

The Top Fuel 8 is the most expensive alloy bike, above the 7 at $3,529.99/£3,200 and the 5 at $2,629.99/£2,700 (we don’t know what 6 did to offend them but its missing from the line-up), but below the carbon-framed 9.7 at $4,229.99/£4,700.

The highlights of the package are the lightweight SID fork (albeit with the simplest Rush Damper) and Shimano XT rear mech and shifters. The Bontrager XR4 tires are some of our favorite welterweight all-rounders too. The SLX crank is a great piece with a 30T ring for easy climbing, but muscle Mary’s will find a 36T fits the frame too. You get a 150mm Trans-X dropper with a Bontrager Arvada saddle on top and 35mm diameter Bontrager Elite 45mm stem and 780mm wide bar.

Deore four-pot brakes just about do the job adequately via 180/160mm rotors but together with the wide rim tubeless Bontrager Line Comp 30 wheels they’re an obvious area where extra weight creeps in and adds up to nearly 14.5kg without pedals. 

Trek Top Fuel 8's Shimano XT drivetrain

Performance

Add that weight to chunky treaded, relatively grippy tires and however Trek categorizes the Top Fuel, the 8 clearly isn’t the best choice for charging climbs and ripping round simple XC laps. Now we’ve got rid of the people who’ll likely love the 12.2kg Trek Supercaliber for the same money, we can start talking about what the Top Fuel does do really well – and that’s riding properly rowdy.

While bikes like the Evil Following , Santa Cruz Tallboy , and Norco Optic have already established that short-travel bikes can feel awesome, the Top Fuel definitely goes into the small travel, BIG capability hall of fame. Like most of its peers, it doesn’t squander initial shock movement and can feel slightly sharp in the car park unless you drop tire pressures low. 

Once moving though it’s both amazingly fluid and connected over ruts and roots whether climbing janky tech or sucking onto stutter bump/root ripple turns or off-camber high lines. The wheel path and rear pivot position mean there’s minimal pull back through the pedals as it hoovers up chunder so you can stay on the gas without getting jacked or stalled out. While we’re always suspicious of acronyms and a 160mm rotor doesn’t generate much torque anyway, the braking performance of the ABP rear end is impressively grippy compared to the same hardware on other bikes. 

Trek Top Fuel 8 with a RockShox SID fork

The RCT damper also has plus and minus low-speed compression settings to fine-tune support sensitivity depending on personal/terrain preferences. Even in the plus setting the mid-stroke mobility does mean you’ll want to flick into the much firmer ‘pedal’ mode if you’re stood up slow cadence churning on a climb or don’t want distracting bounce on long smooth climbs. The SID fork gets a similar firming option via the fork top lever though we rarely touched it unless we were really hanging on a road climb.

While the superlative suspension performance is definitely the heart of the Top Fuel’s ‘have a go hero’ character, the rest of the bike definitely exploits it rather than squandering it. The alloy frame might be heavy but it’s seriously stout when it comes to squaring up to the trail when things get punchy.

While the simpler Rush damper starts to get seasick and inconsistent well before the back end, the 35mm stanchions do a great job of staying on track. Shorter travel means less dive too and together with well-balanced cockpit dimensions and steering angle gives a really predictable and tenacious target lock.

Despite the hefty weight and relatively slow rear hub engagement the fact you can keep the power down or brake really late meant the Top Fuel always felt hyped to be hitting trails and tweaking lines as fast as possible. The shorter M/L size made it a proper joyride on tighter, twistier trails but you can still drive it really hard, heels down, feet level through turns and it loves to pump downslopes.

The Trek Top Fuel 8

Trek’s Top Fuel 8 is a brilliant example of just how good short-travel suspension can feel, and less stroke always means a more responsive, visceral ride than a leggier bike. The geometry and proper trail tires really let you exploit the hooligan that’s hiding in the frame along with your pump, tool and spare tube too. 

As much as we’ve loved ripping around the trails on it, there’s no doubt it’s heavier and harder to accelerate/elevate than we’d like for its supposed XC/downcountry range placement though. If you’re about the overall vibe, not outright velocity, that doesn’t matter though.

Test conditions

  • Temperature: -2 to 8 degrees
  • Surface: Mixed blue-black trail center, moorland tracks, off-piste wooded tech and DH

Tech Specs: Trek Top Fuel 8

  • Price: $3,829.99 / £3,850
  • Model: Trek Top Fuel 8
  • Discipline: XC/downcountry/trail
  • Head angle:  66/66.4-degrees
  • Frame material: Alpha Platinum Aluminium
  • Weight: 14.46kg
  • Wheel size: 29 x 2.4in 
  • Suspension: RockShox SID 120mm travel, 44mm offset/RockShox Deluxe Ultimate RCT 120mm travel
  • Drivetrain:  Shimano XT M8100 mech and shifter. Shimano SLX M7100, 10-51 cassette, chain
  • Cranks:  Shimano XT 30T chainset
  • Brakes:  Shimano Deore M6000 brakes with 180/160mm rotors
  • Cockpit:  Bontrager Line 780mm bar and 45mm stem
  • Wheelset:  Bontrager Line Comp 30 wheels
  • Tires:  Bontrager XR4 Team Issue 29 x 2.4in tires
  • Seatpost:  TranzX 150mm dropper post
  • Saddle: Bontrager Arvada, steel rail saddle

Guy Kesteven

Guy has been working on Bike Perfect since we launched in 2019. Hatched in Yorkshire he's been hardened by riding round it in all weathers since he was a kid. He spent a few years working in bike shops and warehouses before starting writing and testing for bike mags in 1996. Since then he’s written several million words about several thousand test bikes and a ridiculous amount of riding gear. To make sure he rarely sleeps and to fund his custom tandem habit, he’s also penned a handful of bike-related books and talks to a GoPro for YouTube, too.

Current rides: Cervelo ZFS-5, Forbidden Druid V2, Specialized Chisel, custom Nicolai enduro tandem, Landescape/Swallow custom gravel tandem

Height: 180cm

Weight: 69kg

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trek top fuel xc

2022 Trek Top Fuel Review | All-new frame & geometry, with a whole new attitude

The not-so-minor details, 2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt.

https://www.trekbikes.com/

- Brilliant trail-ripping geometry - Active and supportive suspension - Masses of cornering grip & stability - Refined and practical frame design - Downtube storage is a welcome addition

- Dropper post is sluggish - Wheels are solid but quite heavy - Carbon bars are harsh - Heavier than many of its competitors

Flow reviews the 2022 Trek Top Fuel

The Trek Top Fuel has long been known as the American brand’s flagship full suspension XC race bike, purpose-built to to compete at the very highest level of the sport. In more recent years however, the Top Fuel has steered in a different direction. With the short-travel Supercaliber taking over duties for World Cup XCO racing, Trek has softened the Top Fuel’s serious, race-focused persona, adding travel and bulking it up in the process.

For 2022, the Trek Top Fuel makes its biggest move away from its XC racing roots. Equipped with a brand new frame, an updated suspension design and some thoroughly modern geometry, the Top Fuel aims to retain the pert pedalling performance of its predecessor while significantly boosting its all-round capability. So, has Trek succeeded?

Watch our video review of the new Trek Top Fuel here:

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Along with the active ABP suspension design and chunky tyres, there’s an exceptional amount of grip and support on offer for a 120mm travel bike.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Trek Top Fuel overview

Despite being all-new, the Trek Top Fuel retains its position in between the Supercaliber (the 60mm travel XC race bike) and the Fuel EX (the 130mm travel trail bike).

It’s equipped with a 120mm travel fork just like its predecessor, but rear travel has actually lifted by 5mm up to 120mm. This increase has been achieved with a longer stroke shock (50mm vs 45mm), and Trek has also flipped the orientation of the trunnion-mount. The rocker link now drives the shock via two sealed cartridge bearings to improve sensitivity.

You’ll no longer find a dual remote lockout on the Top Fuel, which leads to a vastly cleaner bike with fewer cables occupying your view from the cockpit. Along with the bigger shock, slacker geometry and 2.4in wide tyres, it is without doubt the most trail-oriented Top Fuel we’ve seen yet.

To put it into context, that sees it move away from the likes of the Orbea Oiz TR and the Canyon Lux Trail , and more towards the direction of the Santa Cruz Tallboy and Pivot Trail 429 .

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

A new, burlier chassis

Though it looks pretty similar, the Trek Top Fuel frame is all-new for 2022. It’s not so much a radical overhaul, but rather a collection of many small refinements that add up to a more practical package.

The chassis is notably beefier than its predecessor, with the seat tube diameter swelling to the new-school 34.9mm size. As well as increasing frame stiffness, the fatter seat tube is also shorter, allowing it to swallow a modern long-stroke dropper post.

The downtube is also larger, and it now features the integrated storage design we’ve seen employed on the latest Fuel EX and Slash. A latch underneath the bottle cage removes the trap door, providing you access within. A neat tool roll is included with the bike so you can carry a spare tube, levers and CO2. You could also fit a lightweight jacket in there along with some snacks.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Trek has updated the Knock Block headset, increasing the available turning radius from 58° to 72°. This provides you with greater freedom of movement on the trail, but still prevents the handlebar controls from smashing into the top tube. If you’re not into it though, the Knock Block is removable.

Also nice to see is a threaded bottom bracket shell for ease of maintenance, and the rear ABP pivot can now be tightened with a cassette tool. Also new for the Top Fuel is guided internal cable routing – poke the cable in at one end, and it’ll pop out the other, no fishing required.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt rockshox sid select+

Trail-leaning geometry

The 2022 Trek Top Fuel has received a series of geometry updates over the outgoing model, bringing it up to speed with other boundary-pushers in this travel bracket. Here are the key numbers;

  • Head tube angle: 66°
  • Seat tube angle: 76°
  • Reach: 420mm (S), 450mm (M), 465mm (M/L), 480mm (L), 500mm (XL)
  • Rear centre length: 435mm
  • BB drop: 36mm

Compared to the old Top Fuel, the head angle has kicked back by 1.5-degrees and the reach measurements have gone up by 10mm. The seat tube angle has also steepened by 1-degree to improve the climbing position, while the chainstay length and BB drop remain the same.

The Top Fuel still features a Mino Link, but it’s now located at the lower shock eyelet. Bikes will come setup from the factory in the Low position. Flipping that into High will lift the BB height by 7mm and steepen the angles by 0.4°.

You can get even rowdier by fitting a 130mm travel fork, which will kick the head angle back to a very-slack 65.6° in the Low position. And for those wanting to push the needle further, there’s clearance to run 2.5in tyres.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Trek Top Fuel price & specs

We’ll see four Trek Top Fuel models coming into Australia this year – two with alloy frames and two with carbon. All Top Fuel models feature the same geometry, suspension design and travel. They’re all equipped with 29in wheels, and there are five frame sizes available from Small through to X-Large (the XS size with 27.5in wheels won’t be available in Australia).

Pricing kicks off at $3,499 AUD for the Top Fuel 5 and goes up to $8,299 AUD for the Top Fuel 9.8 XT that we have on test here. Additionally, Trek will offer a 9.9 spec via the Project One bike builder program.

You can check out the specs and prices for all those models down at the bottom of the page. Right now we’ll be diving straight into our experience of testing this bike here; the Top Fuel 9.8 XT.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

  • Frame | OCLV Mountain Carbon Fibre, ABP Suspension Design, 120mm Travel
  • Fork | RockShox SID Select+, Charger 2 RL Damper, 44mm Offset, 120mm Travel
  • Shock | RockShox Deluxe Ultimate RCT, 185x50mm
  • Wheels | Bontrager Line Elite 30, OCLV Carbon Rims, 29mm Inner Width
  • Tyres | Bontrager XR4 Team Issue 2.4in Front & Rear
  • Drivetrain | Shimano XT 1×12 w/XT 30T Crankset & 10-51T Cassette
  • Brakes | Shimano XT 4-Piston w/Ice Tech Rotors
  • Bar | Bontrager Line Pro, OCLV Carbon, 27.5mm Rise, Width: 750mm (S), 780mm (M-XL)
  • Stem | Bontrager Line Pro, 45mm Length
  • Seatpost | Bontrager Line Elite Dropper, 34.9mm Diameter, Travel: 100mm (S), 150mm (M-M/L), 170mm (L), 200mm (XL)
  • Saddle | Bontrager Arvada, Austentite Rails
  • Confirmed Weight | 12.88kg (Large, Tubeless)
  • RRP | $8,299 AUD

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

This differs from some other brands that utilise a single frame, and simply up-fork and up-shock it to create a slightly longer travel bike (like the Specialized Epic EVO and Orbea Oiz TR). The Top Fuel is not one of those bikes.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt ben

Trek Top Fuel sizing & fit

We put the new Trek Top Fuel into the hands of our tester Ben, who owns the current Top Fuel and has also spent considerable time on the Fuel EX. At 181cm tall, Ben’s been riding a size Large across all three bikes.

The Top Fuel is well-proportioned out of the box. The 480mm reach is very long, but it’s balanced nicely with a 50mm stem and the 76° seat tube angle. The Bontrager saddle is totally inoffensive, and we haven’t needed to shunt it into an extreme position just to get it comfortable.

The 760mm wide riser bars are a great match for this bike, and while it may not be totally necessary for all riders, the 170mm stroke dropper post is fashionably long for such a short travel bike.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Suspension & tyre setup

With the anodised sag gradients on the fork and shock, suspension setup is made easy. Weighing 80kg loaded up, Ben’s been running 180psi in the rear shock (26% sag) 80psi in the fork (20% sag).

The factory rebound tune for both the RockShox SID fork and Deluxe shock is quite light, so each rebound dial was set a couple of clicks slower than halfway.

Tubeless rim strips and valves come pre-fitted to the Bontrager wheels, and Trek kindly includes two bottles of sealant with the bike, making tubeless setup the breeze it should be. Pressures were set at 20psi on the front and 22psi on the rear.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Trek Top Fuel weight

Given its swollen proportions, the new Trek Top Fuel has gotten heavier. With the tyres setup tubeless, our test bike came in at 12.88kg without pedals. To put that number into perspective, here’s how it compares to some similarly-priced XC and Trail bikes we’ve recently tested;

  • Canyon Lux Trail CF 9 – 11.22kg
  • Merida Ninety-Six 8000 – 11.63kg
  • Scott Spark 910 – 12.43kg
  • Specialized Stumpjumper Pro – 12.84kg
  • Trek Top Fuel 9.8 XT – 12.88kg
  • Giant Trance Advamced Pro 29 1 – 13.38kg

trek top fuel 2022 9.8 xt

Trek claims a carbon Top Fuel frame weighs 2.7kg including the rear shock, which puts it on the heavier side of things for a 120mm travel bike. The alloy frame is purportedly a whole kilo heavier again, with a claimed weight of 3.74kg.

The Top Fuel’s rolling stock is also a significant contributor to its overall mass. The Bontrager Line Elite wheels are heavy at 2,071g for the pair (with tubeless strips and valves). Incidentally, these are exactly the same wheels that came on the Slash 9.9 X01 , which is a full-bore enduro race bike.

Trek has also plumped up the rubber. The previous Top Fuel featured semi-slick XR3 tyres, but the new bike is now spec’d with 2.4in wide XR4 Team Issue tyres. They’re not overly heavy at around 800g each, though they do offer significantly better grip across a broader range of conditions.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

What does the Trek Top Fuel do well?

From the very first ride the new Trek Top Fuel proved to be easy to get used to, with no quirks to the fit, handling or suspension.

The proportions are significantly broader compared to the outgoing Top Fuel, with the front wheel sticking out much further ahead of the rider. Despite the long reach however, the effective top tube length is basically identical to its predecessor, so the overall cockpit length remains the same.

The steeper seat angle is noticeable though, providing an improved climbing position with your hips placed further over the bottom bracket. As a result, less bum-shuffling is required on stem-chewing ascents.

Pedalling performance is also superb. Despite its burlier exterior, Trek is still prioritising pedal efficiency with the Top Fuel, with the main pivot positioned high and quite far forward of the bottom bracket. Anti-squat is claimed to hover around the 100% mark, and indeed the rear suspension clenches tightly under chain torque, propelling the whole bike forward with minimal energy loss.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Active suspension performance

Despite the trunnion bearing mount and the longer shock stroke, the rear suspension doesn’t feel radically plusher than its predecessor, which already offered great performance. It is noticeably more supportive though, particularly when absorbing square-edge hits at speed, and when returning to earth after boosting off a lip on the trail.

It’s worth noting here that many bikes in the 100-130mm travel bracket make use of a carbon flex-stay design, including the Canyon Lux Trail, Merida Ninety-Six, and Specialized Stumpjumper. As well as being simpler, flex-stay designs are typically lighter too.

canyon lux trail cf 9

In comparison, the Top Fuel sticks with a genuine four-bar platform based around the ABP suspension design. Trek claims the ABP pivot helps to isolate braking forces from the suspension, and indeed it does result in less skipping and skidding when you’re on the brakes on loose, rocky descents.

With all the pivot points rolling on steel ball bearings, the suspension is more active and possesses a more consistent feel to both compression and rebound damping when compared to a flex-stay design. Yes it’s heavier, but the Top Fuel offers notably more active suspension performance, with excellent traction on loose climbs and better reactivity across chattery rock gardens. It’s very impressive for a 120mm travel bike.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Look out Fuel EX!

The geometry is also brilliant, and the handling really sets it apart from the outgoing Top Fuel.

Cornering performance has improved, with more grip courtesy of the longer front end and those XR4 tyres. These are great all-rounders, with a supple casing and surprisingly decent rolling speed given their size and tread pattern.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

The new Top Fuel is also much more composed on rough and fast descents. Thanks to the longer reach and slacker head angle, the overall wheelbase length has grown by almost 40mm. That’s huge, and it offers a vastly more planted feel at speed. Along with the big tyres and active suspension, this really is a solid little trail bike.

In fact, the geometry updates kind of make the Fuel EX look a little outdated. The two bikes now share the same head angle, and the Top Fuel has a 10mm longer reach and a steeper seat angle. The front end is quite a bit higher on the Fuel EX though, and that does inspire more confidence on really steep descents.

As mentioned earlier though, it’s possible to fit a 130mm fork to the Top Fuel, which would lift the front end and actually make it slacker than the Fuel EX. Indeed there’s now quite a bit of overlap between the two platforms, leaving us to ponder what could be in store for the next generation Fuel EX.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

What does it struggle with?

You’ve likely gathered that the new Trek Top Fuel is more of a muscly trail ripper than a spindly XC featherweight. While it may carry over the name, it’s evolved into quite a different bike compared to its racier ancestors.

The lack of a remote lockout results in a much cleaner cockpit, and we like how it signals the Top Fuel’s commitment to its trail riding intentions. However, it may disappoint those riders and racers who prefer having an instantaneous sprint button at their fingertips.

Indeed with all the updates, and the fact that the new Top Fuel has double the travel of the Supercaliber, there is now an even bigger gap between these two bikes. Riders who are still interested in some part-time XC racing, but aren’t sold on the Supercaliber’s sharp geometry and proprietary IsoStrut suspension design, may be turned off by the Top Fuel’s new attitude.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt bontrager line elite carbon wheel xr4 team issue tyre

Of course you could easily inject some speed with some lighter and faster-rolling tyres, like Bontrager’s XR2. There’s also around half a kilo to be saved in the wheelset, which would make a significant difference to the Top Fuel’s acceleration and climbing enthusiasm.

You could also flip the Mino Link into the High position to steepen the angles. In that guise, with lighter wheels and faster tyres, the Top Fuel would make for a comfortable and confidence-inspiring option for those wanting to sign up for the odd endurance race or multi-day event. If you’re serious about your XC racing though, this is not the bike for you – you’ll be wanting to look at the stupendously efficient Supercaliber for such endeavours.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Component highs & lows

The 2022 Trek Fuel 9.8 XT is a solid package out of the box, especially when you consider it comes in $1,600 cheaper than the 2021 model. And that’s with a pretty much identical build kit. How has a new bike gotten cheaper in the midst of a global pandemic and industry-wide component shortages? Heck knows!

There’s not a lot to be said about the Shimano XT groupset – it works, it’s solid, and it’s easy to tune. The I-Spec mounts offer plenty of adjustability for getting the brake and shift levers into the right spot, and the integrated dropper lever is a nice touch too.

The RockShox suspension isn’t quite as sensitive as the Fox equivalent, particularly the SID Select+ fork, which felt a little stickier than we expected. Otherwise the fork and shock perform well, and the ease of setup is great.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

The Bontrager dropper post works fine, but the action is sluggish compared to some of its competitors. And while the carbon handlebars offer a nice profile, having spent a lot of time on OneUp handlebars lately, the Bontrager Line Pro feels considerably harsher in comparison.

We’ve had excellent long-term experience with Bontrager’s latest Line Pro & Line Elite carbon wheels , which feature thick carbon beads that are designed to increase impact strength while also reducing the chance of pinch-flats. They’re totally solid and come with an excellent crash-replacement guarantee, while the buzzy 108pt engagement freehub delivers rapid pickup at the pedals. As mentioned earlier though, they are heavy, providing an opportunity to drop significant weight with a wheel upgrade.

Otherwise we’ve been impressed with the frame finish so far. The Mino Link is simple and effective, the Knock Block is totally unnoticeable on the trail, and we’re big fans of the built-in storage from the Burrito Box. Or is it the Kebab Cave? Maybe a Sausage Roll Hole? Sushi Shaft? Cannoli Cavity? Hot Dog Hollow? Spring Roll Room?

Alright, alright! We’ll show ourselves the door…the door that leads into the Spring Roll Room – ha!

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

Flow’s Verdict

Tying together a whole suite of updates to the frame and suspension design, there are no doubts that the new Trek Top Fuel is a more capable bike than its predecessor. It’s still very efficient, but having adopted a more progressive approach to its geometry, it delivers a significant improvement in stability. Along with the active ABP suspension design and chunky tyres, there’s an exceptional amount of grip and support on offer for a 120mm travel bike.

With all those changes, the Top Fuel moves even further away from the Supercaliber. And for some riders, that gap will be a little too wide.

Trek seems happy to have a clear delineation between the two platforms though. This differs from some other brands that utilise a single frame, and simply up-fork and up-shock it to create a slightly longer travel bike (like the Specialized Epic EVO and Orbea Oiz TR). The Top Fuel is not one of those bikes.

Instead of being a long-legged Supercaliber, it’s really a shrunken-down Fuel EX, albeit one with more contemporary geometry. And having ridden both bikes, unless you really need the extra travel of the Fuel EX, this is arguably the better option.

Sure it may have put off the weight-weenies and lockout-lovers, but there’s no denying that the Top Fuel has broadened its appeal to an even wider range of riders, and we reckon it’s more fun as a result.

2022 trek top fuel 9.8 xt

2022 Trek Top Fuel 9.9 XTR

  • Fork | Fox 34 Step-Cast, Factory Series, FIT4 Damper, 44mm Offset, 120mm Travel
  • Shock | Fox Float DPS, Factory Series, 185x50mm
  • Wheels | Bontrager Line Pro 30, OCLV Carbon Rims, 29mm Inner Width
  • Drivetrain | Shimano XTR 1×12 w/e*thirteen TRS Race Carbon 30T Crankset & 10-51T Cassette
  • Brakes | Shimano XTR Race 2-Piston w/Ice Tech Rotors
  • Bar | Bontrager RSL Integrated, OCLV Carbon, 27.5mm Rise, 820mm Width
  • Stem | Bontrager RSL Integrated, OCLV Carbon, Length: 35mm (S), 45mm (M-XL)
  • Saddle | Bontrager Arvada Pro, Carbon Rails
  • RRP | $14,199 AUD

2022 trek top fuel 9.7

2022 Trek Top Fuel 9.7

  • Fork | Fox Rhythm 34, GRIP Damper, 44mm Offset, 120mm Travel
  • Shock | Fox Float DPS, Performance Series, 185x50mm
  • Wheels | Bontrager Line Comp 30, Alloy Rims, 29mm Inner Width
  • Drivetrain | Shimano SLX/XT 1×12 w/Deore 30T Crankset & 10-51T Cassette
  • Brakes | Shimano SLX 4-Piston
  • Bar | Bontrager Line, 27.5mm Rise, Width: 750mm (S), 780mm (M-XL)
  • Stem | Bontrager Elite, 45mm Length
  • Seatpost | TranzX Dropper, 34.9mm Diameter, Travel: 100mm (S), 150mm (M-M/L), 170mm (L), 200mm (XL)
  • Saddle | Bontrager Arvada, Steel Rails
  • RRP | $6,299 AUD

2022 trek top fuel 8

2022 Trek Top Fuel 8

  • Frame | Alpha Platinum Alloy, ABP Suspension Design, 120mm Travel
  • Fork | RockShox SID, Rush RL Damper, 44mm Offset, 120mm Travel
  • Brakes | Shimano Deore 4-Piston
  • RRP | $5,299 AUD

2022 trek top fuel 5

2022 Trek Top Fuel 5

  • Fork | RockShox 35 Silver RL, Motion Control Damper, 44mm Offset, 120mm Travel
  • Shock | X-Fusion Pro 2, 185x50mm
  • Wheels | Bontrager Alloy Hubs & Alex MD35 Rims
  • Drivetrain | Shimano Deore 1×12 w/Deore 30T Crankset & 10-51T Cassette
  • Brakes | Shimano MT200 2-Piston
  • Bar | Bontrager Comp, 15mm Rise, 750mm Width
  • Stem | Bontrager Rhythm Comp, 50mm Length
  • Seatpost | TranzX Dropper, 34.9mm Diameter, Travel: 100mm (S), 150mm (M-M/L), 170mm (L-XL)
  • RRP | $3,499 AUD
  • Submit for Review
  • Terms & Conditions

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Field Test Review: 2022 Trek Top Fuel - Same Name, Different Bike

photo

Cool Features

Trek Top Fuel 8 review

Alan Muldoon

  • Alan Muldoon
  • July 27, 2023

Once a lean XC race-focused machine, now a bulked up down-country rig. We test Trek's latest take on its short travel full suspension design.

Trek Top Fuel 8

Trek Top Fuel 8 Credit: Roo Fowler

Product Overview

Overall rating:, trek top fuel 8.

  • • Poppy, playful and efficient
  • • Available in six frame sizes
  • • Internal down tube storage
  • • Mino Link flip chip allows geometry tweaks
  • • Needs a 180mm rear rotor
  • • Accurate rear shock set up is crucial
  • • A solid build, so not the lightest in its class

Manufacturer:

Price as reviewed:.

Think Top Fuel, and the image of a XC race bike instantly springs to mind. But like a faded polaroid tucked into the corner for a dusty picture frame, it’s not an accurate representation of the current design. With the Fuel EX increasing in travel, the Top Fuel has been swept along in its backdraft and seen in high definition, it’s now a capable 29er trail bike with modern sizing and 120mm travel and one of the best down-country bikes on sale. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

A dropper post and sorted cockpit complement the Top Fuel’s playful and poppy nature

Trek offers the new Top Fuel in carbon and alloy options, where the Top Fuel 8 tested here is the high-end alloy build. Regardless of frame material all Top Fuels come with integrated downtube storage. And while the quick release hatch under the bottle cage isn’t big enough to cram a three course lunch into the frame, there’s enough space for a tube, multi-tool, a few snacks and a lightweight jacket. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

Down tube storage is handy for those riders who are travelling light

Trek always offers a comprehensive size range; and with frame options from S to XXL, with a tweener M/L option too, the Top Fuel 8 is no exception. It also has geometry adjustment, but rather than having Trek’s signature Mino Link on the seat stay pivot, the Top Fuel has a flip chip at the lower shock mount. In the low setting this gives a relatively tall 340mm BB height for a 120mm bike, which is probably the only carryover from its race-bike roots – designed to let you keep the cranks spinning, and the speed high at all times.

  • Best down-country mountain-bike: short travel full-suspension

The rest of the Top Fuel’s vital stats are on the money though, where a slack 65.6º head angle and steep 77.2º effective seat tube angle make it easy to hammer up the climbs and shred the descents. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

Flip chip in the lower shock mount offers 0.5deg head angle and 8mm BB height adjustment

It’s built solid too, the complete bike tipping the scales at 14.89kg. It also comes with a combined rider and bike weight limit of 136kg (300lb) so it’s clearly no wet noodle. Yes, it’s not the lightest for a 120mm bike, and not far off what you’d expect for a 150mm bike, but that’s the price you pay for integrated storage, as the alloy down tube needs reinforcing when you cut a hole in it.

Thankfully, the Top Fuel 8 rides light, as there’s less travel to pull through to get the bike off the ground, so it offers a different ride experience to modern long-travel trail bikes which tend to have one eye on enduro racing. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

The stock RockShox Pike Rush RC fork dishes out 130mm of travel

There are no sag gradients on the 130mm travel RockShox Pike fork, which we assume is down to cost saving, but set-up is still really straightforward with a tape measure to hand. And while the Pike has a reputation for having a sporty, firmer tune, the basic RC version on the Trek felt smooth and composed in all situations. Yes, the RC damper has a very wide range of rebound adjustment, but there’s only a small range that’s actually usable, but it is enough to get the rebound just so; and that’s all that really matters, right?

  • Best mountain bike suspension forks: XC, trail and enduro forks

You need to be equally attentive when setting up the rear suspension. Set to 30% sag, the top-end RockShox Deluxe Ultimate RCT shock bottoms relatively easily. So if you want to run the shock softer to achieve a lower dynamic BB height, you’re going to need to add volume spacers. As such, we increased the shock pressure and reduced the sag to 27.5%.

This small change alone was enough to prevent premature bottom out, but we could still use all of the available shock stroke when we really needed it. We also ran the low-speed compression setting in the minus position for maximum plushness. In the low geometry setting we measured rear wheel travel at 115mm, which is 5mm less than claimed. 

One of the biggest differences in terms of ride feel between the Lapierre and the Trek, other than sizing, are the wheels. The Bontrager Line 30 rims have a 30mm internal rim width, 5mm more than the Mavic rims on the Lapierre XRM 6.9 we tested the Trek against. This adds to the overall volume of the tyres and the stiffness of the bike. It is also why we dropped the tyre pressures slightly on the Trek, even though we were running the exact same tyres on both bikes. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

Bolted on chainstay protection is a neat and considered touch

With 108 points of engagement the freehub on the Bontrager rear wheel offers rapid, secure engagement, with less chain slack and chain slap as a result. The bike is not totally silent though as there is a little bit of cable rattle, but it will probably disappear when you stuff the BITS storage box to the gills.

The contact points on the Top Fuel 8 are all sorted and while there’s a stack of stem height adjustment, the three 20mm spacers don’t offer any fine tuning of the handlebar height. So swapping one of the 20mm spacers of a 10mm, a 5mm and two 2.5mm spacers, would be our first move before leaving the store.

  • How to: ultimate guide to handlebar cockpit set up

Nothing else needs changing though. The mix of Shimano XT and SLX for the 12-speed drivetrain worked flawlessly in the dry, dusty test conditions, where the smaller 30t chainring is a real saviour on long draggy climbs or on days when your legs feel like lead. 

Trek Top Fuel 8

ABP suspension design transforms the seat stay assembly into a floating brake mount

Performance

The steep seat tube angle on the Trek Top Fuel 8 really helps with the pedalling dynamics on steeper climbs and the cockpit is long enough that even with the shorter 45mm stem, you never feel cramped or uncomfortable when climbing. It’s not so steep though, that it feels like the pedals are behind you when sitting down spinning across flatter, rolling singletrack.

Stand up to sprint and the rear suspension on the Trek clearly gets animated, the rocker link flapping around like the tail on an overly excited puppy. So the best approach is to sit and spin up the climbs, as the shock remains remarkably still and lifeless until you encounter a bump. Also if you really want to go for it on smoother climbs, the rear shock has a firmer pedal threshold setting. In short then, gaining elevation on the Top Fuel 8 is relatively straightforward and painless.

Trek Top Fuel 8

Knock Block 2.0 steering lock with 72º steering angle, protects the frame without limiting steering

So, it’s somewhat surprising just how rapidly you can throw those gains away. This bike simply rips the descents. Given the limited travel it still seems to carry speed everywhere, and while bumps that would normally chip away at your momentum are still felt though the chassis, they do not perturb the Trek one bit. It rails corners too. Simply load up the suspension mid-turn, and the Top Fuel has just the right amount of support and extension to keep the front end loaded, before slingshotting you out of the turn faster than you entered it. Combine the raw speed with the balanced weight distribution, and the Top Fuel 8 is a really fun, exciting ride and blisteringly fast too.

Would the Trek Top Fuel 8 be even faster with a genuinely low geometry setting? You bet it would. But we’d settle for a bigger rotor on the SRAM DB8 rear brake, as this bike is so fast in fact, that the 160mm rotor feels wholly inadequate and it looked like it had been tempered after just a couple of rides. 

  • Best cross-country XC mountain bikes: hardtail and full suspension

Trek Top Fuel 8

The Top Fuel 8 is at home on fast sweeping singletrack

At 14.89kg (32.83lb), the Trek Top Fuel 8 isn’t that much lighter than a 150mm bike. So if you want one bike to conquer all trails, it wouldn’t be our first choice. It’s still a great 29er trail bike though, and if bike park laps and enduro racing don’t fall under your trail bike remit, the Trek Top Fuel 8 offers a fast, fun and engaging ride. Its poppy playful nature, combined with generous sizing means you never feel limited by the travel for regular trail riding. Yet, it still feels more energetic and efficient under pedalling than than most 150mm bikes. It’s a heady combination that manages to keep both the tempo and fun factor high, without any apparent lows.

ENDURO Mountainbike Magazine

Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 2021 in review – From XC-racer to our trail bike group test

trek top fuel xc

“The Top Fuel 9.9 flies through singletrack and rips descents, but it really shines when pushed to its full potential during gruelling endurance races.” That’s what Trek say about the Top Fuel 9.9 X01, but how did it fare against its bigger brother, the Fuel EX?

For an overview of the test fleet head to the group test: The best mountainbike of 2021 – 22 models in review

trek top fuel xc

115 mm rear travel, 11.5 kg and a lightweight spec. At first glance, the specs of the Top Fuel 9.9 look impressive, but how much fun will you have onboard the carbon rocket from Wisconsin? Just like its bigger EX sibling, the Top Fuel features Trek’s ABP rear linkage, albeit with 15 mm less travel and a standard FOX DPS Factory shock without Trek’s proprietary Thru Shaft technology. On the handlebars, a dual remote lockout controls a 120 mm FOX 34 fork and, together with the brake levers, shifters and dropper remote, makes for a rather crowded and untidy cockpit. Trek include their proprietary Knock Block in the headset, which limits the steering angle and prevents the fork from damaging the frame and cables from ripping in the event of a crash. On the trail, the system doesn’t affect the handling in any way. A large TPU plate on the downtube protects the frame against stray rocks, while a reasonably sized and well-positioned chainstay protector prevents chain slap and paint chips. Unlike other Trek models, the Top Fuel doesn’t feature a storage compartment integrated into the down tube, forcing riders to carry their trail essentials in a backpack or hip pack instead.

trek top fuel xc

The spec of the Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 – Lightweight components for a true high flyer

The € 8,999 Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 is specced to ensure a lightweight construction and top efficiency. At 11.5 kg, it’s the lightest bike in our big MTB group test. However, Trek couldn’t achieve this without compromising on trail performance. While the FOX 34 Factory Step-Cast fork, which with its lighter chassis is significantly lighter than a conventional 34, unfortunately, it’s only suitable for particularly light riders. Fast and heavy riders will notice considerable flex in hard corners and compressions, which affects the handling of the bike and dents your confidence. Moreover, hard consecutive hits push the FIT4 damper to its limit. For the tires, Trek spec their own super light Bontrager XR3 Team Issue tires with a puncture-prone casing and shallow tread. While this setup reduces weight and rolling resistance, it generates poor traction in corners and under braking and could potentially result in irreversible damage to the Bontrager Line Elite 30 carbon rims. We recommend upgrading the tires the moment you pick up your bike from the store.

The Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 is great fun on fast, sporty laps and very comfortable on long tours, where it convinces with a comfortable pedalling position.

For better downhill performance, you should run a robust but fast-rolling semi-slick tire at the rear, paired with a grippy front tire with a more aggressive profile. Braking is taken care of by SRAM G2 RSC brakes with tool-free lever reach and bite point adjustments. The brakes run on small 180/160 mm rotors and tend to overheat easily, requiring strong fingers on long descents. The drivetrain consists of a high-quality SRAM X01 12-speed rear derailleur with a matching shifter but a cheaper (and heavier) SRAM GX 10–52 t cassette. The rest of the spec is made up of Trek’s in-house components, including the 750 mm Bontrager Line Pro carbon handlebars and 170 mm Line dropper post. The remote is combined with the lockout for the fork and shock – if you’re not careful you’ll activate the wrong lever!

trek top fuel xc

Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01

Specifications.

Fork FOX 34 FIT 4 120 mm Rear Shock FOX DPS Factory 115 mm Seatpost Bontrager Line Elite 170 mm Brakes SRAM G2 RSC 180/160 mm Drivetrain SRAM XO1 Eagle 1x12 Stem Bontrager Kovee Pro (35) 70 mm Handlebar Bontrager Line Pro OCVL 750 mm Wheelset Bontrager Line Elite 30 29" Tires Bontrager XR3 Team Issue 2.4

Technical Data

Size S M M/L L XL XXL Weight 11.54 kg

trek top fuel xc

The geometry of the Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01

The Trek Top Fuel is available in six sizes, from S to XXL, which caters to riders between 153 cm to 203 cm tall. Typical for Trek, there’s also an intermediate ML size, which allows many riders to choose between at least two suitable frame sizes. The smallest S size has a modified frame shape with a slight kink in the top tube. A flip-chip in the seat stay allows you to switch between the high and low settings and adapt the geometry of the bike to your needs and preferences. Needless to say, we rode the bike mostly in the low setting, which drops the bottom bracket by 7 mm, slackens the head angle by 0.5 ° and shortens the reach by 5 mm. The size L in the low setting has a reach and seat tube of 470 mm. The reach is in the midfield of our test fleet while the seat tube is on the long side. Despite the low top tube, this restricts the insertion depth of the dropper and thus your freedom of movement, as well as making it hard to upsize if you’re between sizes – what a shame! At 603 mm, the stack height is the lowest in the entire test field. Trek compensate for this by stacking an odd-looking spacer tower under the stem and increasing the handlebar height.

trek top fuel xc

Can the Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 with its XC-racing DNA convince on the trail?

Uphill, the Top Fuel lives up to its name. The bike is damn fast and the neutral suspension makes it a great option for long rides too. On flat terrain, it convinces with a comfortable pedalling position, which is suitable for both fast, sporty laps and long rides. The Top Fuel accelerates fiercely and is extremely efficient even with the shock fully open. While you’d expect the active rear end to provide plenty of traction on technical uphills, the low-profile tread of the tire causes the rear wheel to spin out of control. On very steep climbs, the bike forces you to actively lean forward, while the slack seat tube angle positions you far back over the rear wheel, causing the front to lift off the ground. Nevertheless, the Top Fuel overtakes its direct competitor, the Merida NINETY-SIX 8000, without breaking a sweat – in all situations. On fire roads, the climb switch ensures extremely stiff suspension, ensuring excellent acceleration together with the lightweight wheelset. Even strong climbers like the YT Izzo and Yeti SB115 struggle to keep up with the American carbon rocket.

If you’re not too fussed about downhill performance, the Top Fuel is a great option for long rides and lots of fun on easy, flowing singletracks – provided you’re running the right set of tires. Nevertheless, its bigger brother, the Fuel EX, is the better all-rounder.

trek top fuel xc

Tuning-tips: more robust tires with more aggressive tread | 180 mm brake rotor at the rear

Downhill, the Top Fuel loses its advantage over the competition, suffering from a significant lack of braking traction and cornering grip – not least because of its tires. As a result, it’s hard to unlock the full potential of the bike without pushing your own limits. While the tall and stiff cockpit conveys huge amounts of confidence, the stiff suspension passes on vibrations and hits to the rider almost unfiltered, making for vague and undefined handling and causing fatigue and arm pump. The Top Fuel shows its strengths on flowing singletracks with flat sections, where it’s intuitive and easy to ride. On faster and rougher trails with big steps, it quickly reaches its limits, falling behind bikes like the Yeti SB115. On very technical descents it also has to admit defeat to its bigger sibling, the Trek Fuel EX. On top of that, the Fuel EX is only slightly slower uphill but offers more reserves downhill and suits a wider range of applications.

trek top fuel xc

Riding Characteristics

Value for money, intended use.

In a direct comparison, the Top Fuel 9.9 X01 has to admit defeat to the Fuel EX. While it has a small advantage uphill, downhill it can’t keep up with the smooth handling and superb suspension performance of its bigger sibling. All in all, the Fuel EX suits a much wider range of application and delivers far more riding fun – even in the significantly cheaper 9.8 GX version we tested. If you’re not too fussed about downhill performance, the Top Fuel is a great option for long rides and still great fun on easy, flowing singletracks – provided you’re running the right set of tires.

trek top fuel xc

  • accelerates willingly
  • easy, intuitive handling

trek top fuel xc

  • Bontrager XR3 tires generate poor traction
  • remote cluster in the cockpit area is confusing
  • odd-looking spacer tower
  • no Trek storage compartment
  • very few advantages over the Fuel EX, which suits a much wider range of applications

Find more information here: trekbikes.com

trek top fuel xc

The testfield

Get an overview of the grouptest here: The best mountainbike of 2021 – 22 models in review

All Bikes in this group test: Canyon Neuron CF SLX 9 (Click for review) | Canyon Spectral 29 LTD (Click for review) | Canyon Stoic 4 (Click for review) | FOCUS THRON 6.9 (Click for review) | Ibis Ripmo V2 (Click for review) | MERIDA eONE-SIXTY 10K (Click for review) | MERIDA NINETY-SIX 8000 (Click for review) | Nukeproof Reactor 290C (Click for review) | Orbea Rise M-Team (Click for review) | Propain Hugene (Click for review) | RAAW Jibb XTR Build (Click for review) | Rocky Mountain Instinct C70 (Click for review) | Santa Cruz 5010 X01 (Click for review) | Santa Cruz Tallboy CC X01 (Click for review) | SCOTT Ransom 900 Tuned AXS (Click for review) | Specialized S-Works Stumpjumper (Click for review) | Specialized S-Works Stumpjumper EVO (Click for review) | Specialized S-Works Turbo Levo SL (Click for review) | Trek Fuel EX 9.8 GX (Click for review) | Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 | Yeti SB115 TURQ3 (Click for review) | YT IZZO BLAZE 29 (Click for review)

trek top fuel xc

This scale indicates how efficiently the bike climbs. It refers to both simple and technical climbs. Along with the suspension, the riding position and the weight of the bike all play a crucial role. ↩

How does the bike ride and descend? How spritely is the bike, how agile is it through corners, how much fun is it in tight sections and how quickly can it change direction? ↩

Is the bike stable at high speeds? Is it easy to stay in control in demanding terrain? How composed is it on rough trails? Stability is a combination of balanced geometry, good suspension and the right spec. ↩

This is all about how balanced the bike is and particularly about how well it corners. Balanced bikes require little physical effort from the rider and are very predictable. If a bike is unbalanced, the rider has to work hard to weight the front wheel to generate enough grip. However, experienced riders can have a lot of fun even with unbalanced bikes. ↩

How sensitive is the suspension over small bumps? Can it absorb hard impacts and does it soak up repeated hits? Plush suspension not only provides comfort and makes a bike more capable, but it also generates traction. The rating includes the fork and the rear suspension. ↩

This aspect mainly comes down to the suspension. How much pop does it have, does it suck up the rider’s input or is it supportive, and how agile and direct is the bike? ↩

We don’t calculate value for money in an excel spreadsheet or based on how high-end a bike is specced. We are more concerned with how a bike performs on the trail and how the bike benefits the rider. What good are the best components if the bike doesn’t perform well on the trail? Expensive bikes with a lower-end spec can offer very good value for money – provided they excel where it matters. Just as supposedly cheap bikes with good components can get a bad rating if they don’t deliver on the trail. ↩

No, it’s not about racing, it’s about efficiency. Fast, fleet-footed and efficient – those who want to speed along flowy singletrack and gravel roads need a defined and spritely bike that accelerates with ease and efficiency. Nevertheless, reliable components are important too. We interpret XC more like the Americans do: big back-country rides instead of a marathon or XC World Cup with the ultimate in lightweight construction! Uphill-downhill ratio: 80:30 (not everything has to be 100%!) ↩

...also known as mountain biking. Classic singletrack with roots, rocks and ledges – sometimes flowy, sometimes rough. For this, you need a bike with good all-round qualities, whether climbing or descending. Uphill-downhill ratio: 50:50 ↩

Even more extreme and challenging compared to Trail riding, riddled with every kind of obstacle: jumps, gaps, nasty rock gardens, ruts and roots. For this, you need (race)proven equipment that forgives mistakes and wouldn’t look out of place on a stage of the Enduro World Series. Climbing is just a means to an end. Uphill-downhill ratio: 30:70 ↩

Strictly speaking, a 200 mm travel downhill bike is the best choice for merciless tracks with big jumps, drops and the roughest terrain. Those would be the black or double-black-diamond tracks in a bike park. But as some of the EWS pros (including Sam Hill) have proven, it’s the riding skills and not the bike that define what you can ride with it. Climbing? On foot or with a shuttle, please! Uphill-downhill ratio: 10:90 ↩

You can find more info about our rating system in this article: Click here! ↩

Did you enjoy this article? If so, we would be stoked if you decide to support us with a monthly contribution. By becoming a supporter of ENDURO, you will help secure a sustainable future for high-quality mountain bike journalism. Click here to learn more .

Words: Peter Walker Photos: various

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About the author.

trek top fuel xc

Peter Walker

As editor-in-chief, Peter is as much a man of action as he is of words. This expert, screw-driver-flexing two wheeled-whizz has many envy-inducing characteristics, including a background in motocross, several EWS race plates to his name, and more than 150 recorded days at Whistler Bike Park. However complex the bike and however steep the trail, he’s probably already nailed it, twice. Oh, and he can do it all on skinny tyres too. When it comes to guiding consumers, Peter cut his teeth at Vancouver’s oldest bike shop and now puts pen to paper on the daily translating this know-how into our editorial plan. When not tearing up Stuttgart’s local trails while testing bikes, he loves nothing more than loading up his self-renovated VW T5 and hitting the road. The fact that he’s a trained paramedic gives his colleagues reassurance out on the trails. So far we haven’t had to call him by his alias ‘Sani Peter’, so here’s hoping he keeps it right side up for the rest of his time here!

Gear-obsessed editors choose every product we review. We may earn commission if you buy from a link. How we test gear.

Trek Top Fuel

Trek's Top Fuel is Reborn a Fast and Fun Trail Bike

The new Trek Top Fuel Pulls the XC-race stick out of its butt and joins the trail bike party.

The takeaway: You can ride all day without sweating the climbs.

  • Reborn as a trail bike, the new Top Fuel has more travel and is more stable.
  • Complete builds come with dropper posts and other trail-oriented parts.
  • Aluminum frame Top Fuels start at $3,300. The most expensive carbon model is $10,000.

Weight: 24 lb. (9.9, size small)

.css-1hhr1pq{text-align:center;font-size:1.1875rem;line-height:1.6;font-family:Charter,Charter-roboto,Charter-local,Georgia,Times,Serif;}.css-1hhr1pq em{font-style:italic;font-family:Charter,Charter-styleitalic-roboto,Charter-styleitalic-local,Georgia,Times,Serif;}.css-1hhr1pq strong{font-family:Charter,Charter-weightbold-roboto,Charter-weightbold-local,Georgia,Times,Serif;font-weight:bold;} —Five Great Details—

Trek Top Fuel

Hidden Adjustment

Trek's MinoLink flip chip is hidden in the upper shock mount.

Trek Top Fuel

Slippery Gold

This top-end model gets the extra-slippery Kashima Coat legs on its Fox fork.

Trek Top Fuel

State Pride

Take a bit of Wisconsin with you wherever you ride.

Trek Top Fuel

The Knock Block headset prevents damage to the top and down tubes.

Trek Top Fuel

The housing and hoses are clamped to prevent rattle.

From Cross Country to Trail Bike

While the 2019 Top Fuel featured 100mm of travel in the front and back, the new Top Fuel now has 120mm of front suspension and 115mm of rear suspension. They’ve also done away with the floating mount that compressed the shock from both ends. Instead, the lower eyelet is fixed to the downtube, a change that reduces weight and improves stiffness.

Tires are also trending wider across the industry, and the same proves true here. Instead of light and skinny race tires, the new model comes with 29x2.40-inch Bontrager XR3 Team Issue tires designed for a variety of riding conditions. The new Top Fuel 9.9 also has armor to protect the downtube against rock strikes and Trek's Knock Block headset which prevents the bars and fork from twisting backward and damaging the frame.

Trek Top Fuel

As for geometry, the new model is slacker and longer than the last, and it has a shorter stem and wider bars than the previous generation. One of the most notable changes, however, is the updated front suspension offset. Trek was arguably the first to get behind an increased offset—specifically 51mm—for their 29ers.

Other brands eventually followed and soon most 29ers were using 51mm offset forks. But the current trend of longer front centers and slacker head angles has reversed this tide, and the offsets are shrinking. Even Trek couldn't fight the reduced-offset trend: the new Top Fuel uses a 44mm offset fork.

Text, Font, Line, Pattern,

All the Bells and Whistles

As a top-of-the-line 9.9 model, our review bike comes with everything you’d ever want on an endurance bike and then some. Last year’s Top Fuel family didn’t feature a single dropper post, but now, every model comes with one. The small starts with a 100mm dropper and from there dropper sizes run all the way up to 170mm on the largest sizes.

The left handlebar grip features a TwistLoc remote that lets you lock out both front and rear suspension with one simple twist. Unlocking it is even easier, you just push a small button with your thumb. I was warned about it prior to riding, to prevent me from accidentally triggering it, but I didn’t find that to be a problem at all. Maybe it’s my small hands, but I think you really have to activate it intentionally. However, near the end of the review period the fork's lockout mechanism began to stick and sometimes wouldn't open.

Trek Top Fuel

The bike also comes with Trek’s Mino Link, which is located on the front of the rocker, making it easier to access and change than on previous versions. In the high position, the 9.9 has a quicker-steering vibe. If you want a more stable feel, flipping it to the low position will drop the bottom bracket 8mm, and relax the head angle from 68 to 67.5 degrees.

Right now the Top Fuel 9.9 comes in two color options: All black matte (for those minimalists) or an eye-catching black and teal hybrid with neon green lettering seen here. If you’re thinking of getting the Top Fuel and really want to go all out then you might want to wait until July 25, when the new Top Fuel joins Trek's ProjectOne customizable paint and build program.

You get all of these features, and the bike still only weighs 24 pounds (size small). The only thing the Top Fuel 9.9 doesn’t come with is electronic shifting. For that you’ll want the $10,000 Top Fuel 9.9 AXS with SRAM's Eagle AXS wireless group .

Frame: Carbon Wheel Size: 29-inch Travel: 115mm Shock: Fox Factory Float Fork: Fox Factory 34 Step-Cast, 120mm Drivetrain: 1x12 Crankset: SRAM XX1 Eagle Carbon, 32t Rear Derailleur: SRAM XX1 Eagle Cassette: SRAM XG-1295 Eagle, 10-50 Brakes: SRAM Level Ultimate hydraulic disc, 180mm front/160mm rear rotors Seatpost: Bontrager Line Elite dropper, 100-170mm travel Rims: Bontrager Kovee Pro 30 carbon, tubeless ready Tires: Bontrager XR3 Team Issue 2.4 in., tubeless ready Sizes: S, M, M/L, L, XL

The Top Fuel Family

If this $9,000 9.9 falls outside of your budget, there are three other bikes in the Top Fuel family that you can get for less.

The family starts with the Top Fuel 8 at $3,300. It’s the only aluminum bike in the line-up, and it weighs almost 30.5 pounds (size medium, claimed). It comes with the same amount of travel, a SRAM NX Eagle drivetrain, and you’ll even get the TwistLoc remote. For $4,000, you can get the Top Fuel 9.7. You’ll get roughly the same set up as the 8 but with a full carbon frame.

Trek Top Fuel

The Top Fuel 9.8 comes in at just over 26 pounds (claimed) for $5,500. You’ll get better components like SRAM GX Eagle, the Bontrager Line Elite Dropper (like the 9.9), and a Fox Performance 34 fork and Bontrager Kovee Elite 30 wheels with carbon rims.

The the 9.9 and the 9.9 AXS get Bontrager Kovee Pro 30 wheels with 108-tooth Rapid Drive hubs, for near-instant engagement. At $10,000, the biggest differences between the 9.9 and the 9.9 AXS are the wireless SRAM Eagle AXS shifters and the wireless RockShox Reverb AXS dropper.

Reshuffling the Trek Full-Suspension Family

Trek has a number of world-class cross country racers on its mountain bike teams. With the Top Fuel no longer a race bike, those riders will need a new XC bike. And it appears one is coming soon. Trek's racers are aboard a new bike with a sock on the top tube covering up a new full suspension design.

Trek Top Fuel

With its new trail orientation, the Top Fuel has serious overlap with Trek's current Fuel EX, a 130/130mm trail bike. We expect that will be rectified with a new version of the Fuel EX that will launch later this year. It will likely have more travel than the current Fuel EX, as well as longer geometry, slacker headtube angle, steeper seat angle, a shorter offset fork, a stiffer frame, and will be built with heartier parts.

How It Rides

I took the new Top Fuel to the trails I'd been riding on my personal Trek Fuel EX 5 — a heavier and longer travel bike than this Top Fuel 9.9. The trails I rode during the initial test ride were flowy, with a few technical spots and long climbs.

The biggest thing I noticed? Climbing wasn't nearly as difficult as it was on my personal bike. I wouldn't call it effortless, but the difference was significant. Riding in the "cross country" setup, with the Mino Link set high and the stem flipped in the downward position, the Top Fuel is a quicker steering and faster feeling trail bike. In this form, the bike truly would be great for endurance races like the Breck Epic and BC Bike race.

In the low mode, the bike feels mellower, but still a fast and agile bike. On paper, it has a lot in common with the Yeti SB100 and Santa Cruz Tallboy, which puts the new Top Fuel in very good company.

Trek Top Fuel

Taking it on some rocky trails, the Top Fuel tackled them just as well. While it might not have as much suspension as other trail bikes, it can just as easily rip down most technical trails. The 29er wheels and wider tires help the bike roll over obstacles with ease, without taking away from the bike's superb climbing ability.

The new Top Fuel might not be a pure XC-race bike anymore, but it's still precise and very fast. Its new trail orientation makes it a great choice for a rider who wants a fast and light bike with most of the the efficiency of a cross-country race bike, but with bit more versatility and playfulness.

equipment Top Fuel 9.9

Top Fuel 9.9

When she’s not out riding her mountain bike, Jessica is an editor for Popular Mechanics . She was previously an editor for Bicycling magazine. 

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Trek’s Top Fuel Is More Than Just an XC Race Bike

trek top fuel xc

Trek bills the Top Fuel as “fast, versatile ...for the cross country racer, marathon rider, and the Trek Factory Racing World Cup team.” All these things are true. It’s wicked fast and way more versatile than you might think. Like most race-focused bikes (or race-focused anything), the Top Fuel takes a little while to get to know. That’s not a knock, it’s a compliment. Once you earn its respect it'll carry you far and fast.

trek top fuel xc

It’s got normal, 11-42-tooth 11-speed gearing and a 32-tooth front chainring. Fast and light, nothing crazy. XC bikes are designed to disappear between your legs. You don’t want too much thinking going on while trying to beat 50 other caffeine-jacked lunatics off the starting line.

trek top fuel xc

The wheels are boost-ed Bontrager Kovee Pro, OCLV Carbon. They are super light and fabulous for racing. They held up fine on trail rides too, straight and true as the day they came out of the box.

The tires… well… Bontrager XR1 Team Issue are beautiful things but, unless you live in the desert, they’re a bit precious. On smooth, fast courses, they'll probably work great. I threw on Vittoria 2.35 Morsas for muddier rides and 2.25 Mezcals for faster tracks. The Mezcals were better overall than the beefy tire, but still had better tread and a stronger sidewall than the XR1.

trek top fuel xc

The OE carbon stem is 70mm long. I’m mostly legs, short torso and long-ish arms—so I put a 35mm stem on the cockpit. Changing a stem is a cheap, easy way to fit a bike to you. Seems like a small thing, but in XC racing you tend to obsess more about small details like stem length, tires, air pressure, bottle cages, saddle angle, cockpit setup, computer mount and on and on.

trek top fuel xc

The Top Fuel does not come with a dropper at any spec level. It has a super-light carbon seatpost, which helps keep the bike around 24lbs. I did throw on a dropper for one of the more technical races, and was glad I did. Though with the lockout and a dropper, the handlebar felt a bit crowded, but not unmanageable. Truthfully, I did ride a good bit without the dropper and got used to it.

trek top fuel xc

The frame is slick and elegant, as are pretty much all Trek frames. If you buy this bike, you better like black. The carbon front, seatstays and aluminum chainstays are seamlessly integrated. Setting up the fox fork and shock is very quick. Fox’s float components are designed to be plug-and-play.

trek top fuel xc

Now we come to the big leap forward for this 2017 bike. Trek’s Top Fuel experience is about the custom Re:Aktiv shock’s updated regressive valving and its simple, two-position switch. 1) Firm and 2) Locked. Boom, that’s it. When Trek first told me about this I was like “Aw, man. I’m sure it’s a fast, light bike and all...but am I in for two months of taint-punching race riding?”

trek top fuel xc

However, Trek was confident that, aside from smooth courses or situations where you should lock the frame out, the open position was not only supportive, but plush enough for all purpose riding and tough modern XC courses. Of course the bike still has Trek’s proven ABP (active braking pivot) technology and Full Floater shock mount.

trek top fuel xc

I raced the Top Fuel in 4 races, one early season tune-up, one super smooth roadie-fest, one super-technical mudfest called the Chain Stretcher (where they purposefully and willfully set the course to knock roadies out of balance), and one other fast and very flowy one. In the super fast, no-tech tracks, hardtails seemed to have the edge, but for tough tracks, this bike shines. Bright. The Top Fuel keeps peppy and quick all the way through your ride, allowing you to finish strong and have some fun.

Early in its travel, the Re:Aktiv regressive valving maintains a linear and firm shock rate. It then ramps up in mid-stroke to be a bit more progressive. However, at any point in its travel, for medium and big hits, or over rough terrain, the shock opens up and becomes instantly supple. I have absolutely no idea how it knows how to do this, but it knows.

Here’s a quick video on the tech.

Again, the two settings on the handlebar-mounted lockout are either fully locked for both fork and shock or open, which puts the shock in its firm, ‘wonderboy’ mode and opens the fork.

After a few rides, merging the usual firm and open capabilities of a 3-position shock actually makes perfect sense, not to mention massively simplifies everything. I either want to push the gas hard in locked out mode, or I want the shock be firm/open for supple travel when the going gets gnarly.

When you’re pushing hard and concentrating on racing--eyes bleeding, legs burning, your whole body in the pain box--you don’t want to think about three positions.

trek top fuel xc

With a 70-degree head angle, the Top Fuel’s steering is super fast and responsive. This is where the ‘getting to know it’ phase is. The better you can handle a bike the more you’ll enjoy it. Ride it like a champion fencer, cutting and thrusting precisely through a course. While the Top Fuel doesn't have 65-degree head-angle impunity, I never went over the bars or felt sketchy. You just have to slice and punch with some accuracy.

trek top fuel xc

It climbs great (a 74-degree effective seat tube angle helps). Just like an XC bike should. Really, that’s job one for any XC bike, because it’s where races are lost and won. So check that box for this bike and move on.

While the suspension can handle punchy climbs so well, it's still ready for an unexpected log-over, root section or big hit. That's where I found the Top Fuel to have a remarkable advantage over other XC bikes: it’s ability to flow right from fast to tough. Guys on hardtails look like baby giraffes on long root sections but the Top Fuel mashes through with no problems.

trek top fuel xc

The SRAM X01, 11-speed drivetrain was always smooth under the toughest, most demanding (and occasionally ill-advised uphill) shifts. If you’re so inclined, The Top Fuel 9.9 gets you SRAM Eagle, which has 12 speeds and a 50 rather than 42-tooth top cassette ring. Might be nice if you need it, though not having it forces you to push without bailing to a too-easy gear.

The SRAM Level brakes (the lighter, XC race version of their capable Guide brakes) also had no issues. Through the mud and muck they stayed true without rubbing, squealing or fading. They still work like new.

trek top fuel xc

The bike has a Mino-link flip chip, but leave it in the low position. It comes that way, no reason to change it. It’s there if you want to experiment. I didn't touch it.

trek top fuel xc

Because Trek’s jam is making bikes more versatile than their intended design, I took it on a few trail rides. Powering up and keeping speed are, of course, easy on this bike. This is also where the Re:Aktiv tuning gives you the plushness and ability to ride the bike with comfort and a bit more playfulness. The geometry is still racy, so you have to handle it. Descend with precision and you're able to hit any trail you'd normally ride on a longer-travel bike.

The Bottom Line

Once again, Trek has put out a bike that's great at what it's made for, but is also really good at something else. The Top Fuel is, first and foremost, a race bike. It's light, fast and stiff—so go out and race it. Your secret weapon will be how well it handles rougher courses and sections that toss hardtail roadies. It's also really tough, with low-stress brakes and shifting which hold up great on trail rides. Add a dropper and some beefy tires and you've got yourself a short-travel trail bike rocket. It's enjoyable as a precise, not slacked-out, ride.

trek top fuel xc

Frame: OCLV Carbon main frame & seatstay, alloy chainstay, ABP,Mino Link, Carbon Armor Boost 148 & G2 Geometry on 29ers, 100mm travel Fork: Fox Performance 32 Float 100mm travel w/ Grip 2-position remote damper. Shock: Fox Performance Float 100mm travel, RE:aktiv XC 2-position remote damper Wheels: Bontrager Kovee Pro Carbon W/Boost Hubs Tires: Bontrager XR1 Team Issue 2.2 Drivetrain: SRAM X01 w/11-speed 10-42 cassette Crank: SRAM X1 Carbon w/32T Direct Mount X-Sync chainring Brakes: SRAM Level TLM Seatpost: Bontrager Pro, OCLV Carbon It’s Black. All Black. Everywhere. 24lbs $5,199

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About The Author

trek top fuel xc

stash member Gunnar Waldman

Editor-at-Large, IMBA instructor and east-coaster. Raced Trans-Savoie in France, SoCal Enduro and Endurance in Temecula and is psyched for all the great new races in the east. Article Ideas: [email protected]

trek top fuel xc

September 6 th , 2017

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Trek Top Fuel 9.8 review

Super-capable ripper on the racetrack or singletrack

Laurence Crossman-Emms

Ed Thomsett

Makes the climbs fun and rips on the way down; an elegant package with a choice of colours; the six frame sizes span a massive range

A higher front end would give more descending confidence; thin tyres don’t offer much grip or protection; carbon wheels and bar bump up the price without a big impact on performance

Trek’s ambition with the Top Fuel is to combine the best qualities of both cross-country and trail bikes. This genre-bending, 115mm-travel 29er is burlier than its XC thoroughbred, the Supercaliber , but lighter and more agile than the Fuel EX . It promises lightning-fast speeds, whether gravity is on your side or not.

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Trek Top Fuel 9.8 frame

The Top Fuel’s full-carbon frame is obviously a Trek design, with that familiar twin-triangle shape and ABP (Active Braking Pivot) suspension design, where the rearmost pivot is concentric with the rear axle.

As on the rest of Trek’s full-sussers, the ‘Full Floater’ shock mounting of the old Top Fuel is gone. Instead, the Fox DPS air-can mounts directly to the frame at one end and to a magnesium rocker link at the other. Travel has been extended by 15mm for 2020.

In terms of geometry, the Top Fuel is now longer and slacker. Depending on which way you position the Mino Link flip-chip, the head angle can be set at either 67.5 or 68 degrees and the reach varied by 5mm, from 470 to 475mm on the large.

The effective seat-tube angle has been steepened to 75/75.5 degrees. With six sizes, it should be easy to achieve a perfect fit. The details of the frame have been well considered too, from its sleek, flowing lines to the fully-internal cable routing and integrated rubber protection finish.

Plus, Trek’s Knock Block steering-lock stops the fork crown fouling on the down tube.

Trek Top Fuel 9.8

Trek Top Fuel 9.8 kit

That 115mm-travel, air-sprung rear end is matched to a 120mm Fox 34 Performance fork. A bar-mounted RockShox TwistLoc remote lets you lock out both ends simultaneously, providing a firm pedal platform that’s easy to toggle on or off.

Combine that with a Bontrager Line Elite dropper post, and the Top Fuel switches easily into downhill mode, although a 10mm-shorter stem and slightly wider bar would help the handling.

Shimano’s SLX brakes are good, but it doesn’t take much to find the limits of the 160mm rear rotor and the lever return was a little sluggish.

I found the Bontrager XR3 tyres slightly flimsy too. They’re efficient uphill but the low-profile tread isn’t great on unsurfaced trails and I sliced a hole in the thin casing on a fairly mellow descent.

The bike’s price tag isn’t insignificant either and, while the spec is solid, I’d happily lose the carbon wheelset and bar to save some money.

Trek Top Fuel 9.8 ride impressions

You have to bite your tongue before criticising a bike like this because by its versatile nature it’s never going to be the best of the best in any scenario. With this in mind, there’s very little to fault in the way the Top Fuel rides.

With a poised feeling on the pedals even in the lower/slacker setting, the bike blasts up hills with minimal effort and I rarely found I needed to use the lockout apart from on long fireroads.

As a trail bike, the Top Fuel puts on an impressive show and never faltered, even when hammered into turns or launched off drops. The suspension gives you a solid base to push into and I was surprised after the first ride to discover that it only has 115mm of travel.

The main limiting factor to this downhill prowess is the low front end. When things get steeper, you do notice you’re on a bike that’s also built for going fast up hills. The short head tube and low stack height are clear indicators of this, and while for general trail riding I found them a little low, this does allow the bar to be fully slammed for all-out XC attacks.

Even with the 13-degree-rise stem positioned as high as possible on the steerer, I wouldn’t have minded a little more height. But then, upping the fork travel would blur the lines between the Top Fuel and the longer-travel Fuel EX.

On a bike like this, there are always going to be trade-offs, and opinion is always going to be biased by riding style, but for rapid mile-munching that doesn’t get in the way of enjoyment on the descents, the Top Fuel is hard to beat.

Trek Top Fuel 9.8

Trek Top Fuel 9.8 geometry (based on high setting for size L)

  • Seat angle: 68.5 degrees
  • Head angle: 68 degrees
  • Chainstay: 43.3cm / 17.05in
  • Seat tube: 47cm / 18.5in
  • Top tube: 63cm / 24.8in
  • Head tube: 10cm / 3.94in
  • Fork offset: 4.4cm / 1.73in
  • Trail: 10.3cm / 4.06in
  • Bottom bracket drop: 2.9cm / 1.14in
  • Wheelbase: 1,185mm / 46.65in
  • Stack: 59.9cm / 23.58in
  • Reach: 47.5cm / 18.7in

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trek top fuel xc

First refuelling for Russia’s Akademik Lomonosov floating NPP

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trek top fuel xc

The FNPP includes two KLT-40S reactor units. In such reactors, nuclear fuel is not replaced in the same way as in standard NPPs – partial replacement of fuel once every 12-18 months. Instead, once every few years the entire reactor core is replaced with and a full load of fresh fuel.

The KLT-40S reactor cores have a number of advantages compared with standard NPPs. For the first time, a cassette core was used, which made it possible to increase the fuel cycle to 3-3.5 years before refuelling, and also reduce by one and a half times the fuel component in the cost of the electricity produced. The operating experience of the FNPP provided the basis for the design of the new series of nuclear icebreaker reactors (series 22220). Currently, three such icebreakers have been launched.

The Akademik Lomonosov was connected to the power grid in December 2019, and put into commercial operation in May 2020.

Electricity generation from the FNPP at the end of 2023 amounted to 194 GWh. The population of Pevek is just over 4,000 people. However, the plant can potentially provide electricity to a city with a population of up to 100,000. The FNPP solved two problems. Firstly, it replaced the retiring capacities of the Bilibino Nuclear Power Plant, which has been operating since 1974, as well as the Chaunskaya Thermal Power Plant, which is more than 70 years old. It also supplies power to the main mining enterprises located in western Chukotka. In September, a 490 km 110 kilovolt power transmission line was put into operation connecting Pevek and Bilibino.

Image courtesy of TVEL

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trek top fuel xc

trek top fuel xc

For the first time Rosatom Fuel Division supplied fresh nuclear fuel to the world’s only floating nuclear cogeneration plant in the Arctic

The fuel was supplied to the northernmost town of Russia along the Northern Sea Route.

trek top fuel xc

The first in the history of the power plant refueling, that is, the replacement of spent nuclear fuel with fresh one, is planned to begin before 2024. The manufacturer of nuclear fuel for all Russian nuclear icebreakers, as well as the Akademik Lomonosov FNPP, is Machinery Manufacturing Plant, Joint-Stock Company (MSZ JSC), a company of Rosatom Fuel Company TVEL that is based in Elektrostal, Moscow Region.

The FNPP includes two KLT-40S reactors of the icebreaking type. Unlike convenient ground-based large reactors (that require partial replacement of fuel rods once every 12-18 months), in the case of these reactors, the refueling takes place once every few years and includes unloading of the entire reactor core and loading of fresh fuel into the reactor.

The cores of KLT-40 reactors of the Akademik Lomonosov floating power unit have a number of advantages compared to the reference ones: a cassette core was used for the first time in the history of the unit, which made it possible to increase the fuel energy resource to 3-3.5 years between refuelings, and also reduce the fuel component of the electricity cost by one and a half times. The FNPP operating experience formed the basis for the designs of reactors for nuclear icebreakers of the newest series 22220. Three such icebreakers have been launched by now.

For the first time the power units of the Akademik Lomonosov floating nuclear power plant were connected to the grid in December 2019, and put into commercial operation in May 2020. The supply of nuclear fuel from Elektrostal to Pevek and its loading into the second reactor is planned for 2024. The total power of the Akademik Lomonosov FNPP, supplied to the coastal grid of Pevek without thermal energy consumption on shore, is about 76 MW, being about 44 MW in the maximum thermal power supply mode. The FNPP generated 194 million kWh according to the results of 2023. The population of Pevek is just a little more than 4 thousand, while the FNPP has a potential for supplying electricity to a city with a population of up to 100 thousand people. After the FNPP commissioning two goals were achieved. These include first of all the replacement of the retiring capacities of the Bilibino NPP, which has been operating since 1974, as well as the Chaunskaya TPP, which has already been operating for more than 70 years. Secondly, energy is supplied to the main mining companies in western Chukotka in the Chaun-Bilibino energy hub a large ore and metal cluster, including gold mining companies and projects related to the development of the Baimsk ore zone. In September 2023, a 110 kilovolt power transmission line with a length of 490 kilometers was put into operation, connecting the towns of Pevek and Bilibino. The line increased the reliability of energy supply from the FNPP to both Bilibino consumers and mining companies, the largest of which is the Baimsky GOK. The comprehensive development of the Russian Arctic is a national strategic priority. To increase the NSR traffic is of paramount importance for accomplishment of the tasks set in the field of cargo shipping. This logistics corridor is being developed due regular freight voyages, construction of new nuclear-powered icebreakers and modernization of the relevant infrastructure. Rosatom companies are actively involved in this work. Rosatom Fuel Company TVEL (Rosatom Fuel Division) includes companies fabricating nuclear fuel, converting and enriching uranium, manufacturing gas centrifuges, conducting researches and producing designs. As the only nuclear fuel supplier to Russian NPPs, TVEL supplies fuel for a total of 75 power reactors in 15 countries, for research reactors in nine countries, as well as for propulsion reactors of the Russian nuclear fleet. Every sixth power reactor in the world runs on TVEL fuel. Rosatom Fuel Division is the world’s largest producer of enriched uranium and the leader on the global stable isotope market. The Fuel Division is actively developing new businesses in chemistry, metallurgy, energy storage technologies, 3D printing, digital products, and decommissioning of nuclear facilities. TVEL also includes Rosatom integrators for additive technologies and electricity storage systems. Rosenergoatom, Joint-Stock Company is part of Rosatom Electric Power Division and one of the largest companies in the industry acting as an operator of nuclear power plants. It includes, as its branches, 11 operating NPPs, including the FNPP, the Scientific and Technical Center for Emergency Operations at NPPs, Design and Engineering as well as Technological companies. In total, 37 power units with a total installed capacity of over 29.5 GW are in operation at 11 nuclear power plants in Russia. Machinery Manufacturing Plant, Joint-Stock Company (MSZ JSC, Elektrostal) is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of fuel for nuclear power plants. The company produces fuel assemblies for VVER-440, VVER-1000, RBMK-1000, BN-600,800, VK-50, EGP-6; powders and fuel pellets intended for supply to foreign customers. It also produces nuclear fuel for research reactors. The plant belongs to the TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom.

trek top fuel xc

Rosatom obtained a license for the first land-based SMR in Russia

On April 21, Rosenergoatom obtained a license issued by Rostekhnadzor to construct the Yakutsk land-based SMR in the Ust-Yansky District of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia).

trek top fuel xc

ROSATOM and FEDC agree to cooperate in the construction of Russia's first onshore SNPP

ROSATOM and FEDC have signed a cooperation agreement to build Russia's first onshore SNPP in Yakutia.

trek top fuel xc

Rosatom develops nuclear fuel for modernized floating power units

Rosatom has completed the development of nuclear fuel for the RITM-200S small modular reactor designed for the upgraded floating power units.

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Rosatom Starts Life Tests of Third-Generation VVER-440 Nuclear Fuel

  • 16 June, 2020 / 13:00

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  • Top Fuel 9.9 XTR

IMAGES

  1. Trek releases Top Fuel XC racer

    trek top fuel xc

  2. Trek Top Fuel 2020, ¿XC agresivo o trail ligero?

    trek top fuel xc

  3. Trek releases Top Fuel XC racer

    trek top fuel xc

  4. Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 (2021)

    trek top fuel xc

  5. Trek Top Fuel 8 (2020)

    trek top fuel xc

  6. Trek Top Fuel Top Fuel 9 (2016)

    trek top fuel xc

VIDEO

  1. Ekx X20 Мощные электровелы в горах. Syccyba Impulse

  2. Dream Build MTB

  3. Trek Top Fuel 9.9 AXS T-Type 2024 #shorts

  4. Вездеходы SEVER-TRUCKS могут преодолевать угол подъема и спуска до 28, а крен

  5. 2024 Trek Top Fuel 9.8 Color: Matte Emerald Iris. PRIMERAS IMPRESIONES @ibonzugasti @DanielRace8

  6. Whole bunch of new on my trek fuel ex 5 featuring I9 and shimano

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    NEED HELP CHOOSING? Use the Bike Finder to narrow your choices, compare models, and find the Trek that's right for you. Get started {{ $t('productCompare.rack ...

  2. Top Fuel

    Top Fuel. Top Fuel is a quick short-travel 29er trail bike that's perfect for riders who like to stay pinned both up and down the trail. It's lighter and snappier than a trail bike, but it's a lot more forgiving on rowdy descents than a true cross-country bike. It's the best of both worlds, and a hell of a lot of fun in the dirt.

  3. Trek Top Fuel 8 review: a progressive rather than podiuming XC machine

    The Top Fuel 8 is the most expensive alloy bike, above the 7 at $3,529.99/£3,200 and the 5 at $2,629.99/£2,700 (we don't know what 6 did to offend them but its missing from the line-up), but below the carbon-framed 9.7 at $4,229.99/£4,700. The highlights of the package are the lightweight SID fork (albeit with the simplest Rush Damper) and ...

  4. 2022 Trek Top Fuel Review

    Trek Top Fuel 9.8 XT - 12.88kg. Giant Trance Advamced Pro 29 1 - 13.38kg. Trek claims a carbon Top Fuel frame weighs 2.7kg including the rear shock, which puts it on the heavier side of things for a 120mm travel bike. The alloy frame is purportedly a whole kilo heavier again, with a claimed weight of 3.74kg.

  5. Field Test Review: 2022 Trek Top Fuel

    Maybe Trek will roll out yet another bike that sits between the Supercaliber and the Top Fuel--but the jump between the two is pretty massive. A 60mm XC race bike up to a 28lbs (stock with pedals ...

  6. Top Fuel 8

    Top Fuel 8. 11 Reviews / Write a Review. $3,499.99 $3,999.99. Model 5259793. Retailer prices may vary. Top Fuel 8 fuses the speed of a cross country bike with the capability and forgiveness of a full suspension trail bike. It's quick, nimble, and dishes out serious fun on flow trails and techy descents alike. Compare.

  7. Bible Review: Trek Top Fuel 9.9

    When the new beefed-up Top Fuel came out in mid-2019, prior to Trek launching its mysteriously cloaked World Cup XC bike, the Supercaliber, people went ape shit. The Top Fuel had long been Trek's fastest, leanest, most torturous cross-country racer, and all of a sudden it had more travel, came with a full-length dropper, and to the chagrin of ...

  8. Trek Top Fuel 9.8 SL XC Race Bike Review

    The Top Fuel 9.9 SL ($9,300) is Trek's top-of-the-line XC bike, with a full carbon OCLV main frame and stays, RockShox SID SE carbon fork with 100mm of travel, Fox Factor Float DPS shock giving ...

  9. Trek Top Fuel 8 review

    Think Top Fuel, and the image of a XC race bike instantly springs to mind. But like a faded polaroid tucked into the corner for a dusty picture frame, it's not an accurate representation of the current design. With the Fuel EX increasing in travel, the Top Fuel has been swept along in its backdraft and seen in high definition, it's now a capable 29er trail bike with modern sizing and 120mm ...

  10. Tested: Trek Top Fuel

    Takeaway: Trek's latest edition of the Top Fuel moves from being a big cross country racer and becomes a short travel trail bike. With new longer and slacker geometry, plus 5mm of extra travel ...

  11. Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 2021 in review

    The spec of the Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 - Lightweight components for a true high flyer. The € 8,999 Trek Top Fuel 9.9 X01 is specced to ensure a lightweight construction and top efficiency. At 11.5 kg, it's the lightest bike in our big MTB group test. However, Trek couldn't achieve this without compromising on trail performance.

  12. Trek Top Fuel 9.9 Trail Bike Review

    Aluminum frame Top Fuels start at $3,300. The most expensive carbon model is $10,000. Weight: 24 lb. (9.9, size small) Throughout its life, Trek's Top Fuel was the brand's cross-country racing ...

  13. Trek's Top Fuel Is More Than Just an XC Race Bike

    Trek bills the Top Fuel as "fast, versatile...for the cross country racer, marathon rider, and the Trek Factory Racing World Cup team." All these things are true. It's wicked fast and way more versatile than you might think. Like most race-focused bikes (or race-focused anything), the Top Fuel takes a little while to get to know.

  14. Trek Top Fuel 8 review

    A versatile and fast full-suspension mountain bike that can handle any terrain. Read our review to find out why we love the Trek Top Fuel 8.

  15. Trek Top Fuel

    Shop Top Fuel: https://trek.bike/YTTop_FuelTop Fuel is a full suspension XC mountain bike that's equally suited to racing and having an all-around great time...

  16. Trek Top Fuel 9.8 review

    Super-capable ripper on the racetrack or singletrack

  17. Top Fuel 5

    Top Fuel 5. 13 Reviews / Write a Review. $2,699.99. Model 5259752. Retailer prices may vary. Top Fuel 5 is a full suspension mountain bike that's equal parts efficient and capable. It soaks up rough, rugged descents but still flies like a rocket up hills and on flat stretches. The light and sturdy alloy frame is built with parts picked for ...

  18. First refuelling for Russia's Akademik Lomonosov floating NPP

    Rosatom's fuel company TVEL has supplied nuclear fuel for reactor 1 of the world's only floating NPP (FNPP), the Akademik Lomonosov, moored at the city of Pevek, in Russia's Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. The supply of fuel was transported along the Northern Sea Route. The first ever refuelling of the FNPP is planned to begin before the end of ...

  19. For the first time Rosatom Fuel Division supplied fresh nuclear fuel to

    The company produces fuel assemblies for VVER-440, VVER-1000, RBMK-1000, BN-600,800, VK-50, EGP-6; powders and fuel pellets intended for supply to foreign customers. It also produces nuclear fuel for research reactors. The plant belongs to the TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom.

  20. Top Fuel 9.9 XX AXS T-Type

    3 Reviews / Write a Review. $10,999.99. Model 5314701. Retailer prices may vary. Top Fuel 9.9 is a full suspension carbon mountain bike for riders who don't settle. Not for parts nor for one style of riding. It combines a high-end component package with a low-weight carbon frame for one unbelievably fun rig that's fast on flow and fun to ride ...

  21. Fuel Company of Rosatom (TVEL)

    The two TVEL fuel fabrication plants, TVEL-MSZ and TVEL-NCCP, located in Elektrostal and Novosibirsk respectively, provide fuel for 74 Russian and international nuclear power plants, in addition to numerous research reactors. 4 In 2010, TVEL won a contract to build a fuel fabrication plant in Ukraine, which is expected to come online in 2013. 5.

  22. Rosatom Starts Life Tests of Third-Generation VVER-440 Nuclear Fuel

    16 June, 2020 / 13:00. 10 704. OKB Gidropress research and experiment facility, an enterprise of Rosatom machinery division Atomenergomash, has started life tests of a mock-up of the third-generation nuclear fuel RK3+ for VVER-440 reactors. The work is carried out within the contract between TVEL Fuel Company of Rosatom and Czech power company ...

  23. Top Fuel 9.9 XTR

    Model 5279415. Retailer prices may vary. Top Fuel 9.9 XTR is a top-shelf full suspension mountain bike for riders who are serious about their fun. Its lightweight carbon frame is spec'd to the hilt with high-end suspension and high-performance parts. And all those fancy bits and bobs are really, really good at hitting the party line.