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Road cycling, review: trek lexa s, at £650 the trek lexa s really impressed us.

trek lexa s blue book

If you are in search of a ‘good all rounder’ bike that will not make your eyes water when you see the price tag, then the Trek Lexa S might be just what you are looking for.

I have been riding the Trek Lexa S for about a month now. I have taken it for leisurely weekend spins, long training rides and even on a little off-road adventure from Esher to Shoreham by Sea. And I have to say I have been hugely impressed by this bike.

First up, it will not break the bank. At £650 (recently reduced from £700), it is worth every single penny and a few more in my opinion.

One of the most notable things about the bike, is how comfortable it is to ride. Its streamlined shaping and women’s specific geometry help to take the pressure away from the three contact points on the bike (handlebars, saddle and pedals). Riding a bike that does not fit you correctly can result in a whole host of problems such as neck and back pain and fatigue in your arms. While women’s specific geometry will alleviate these issues, it is still advised to opt for a professional bike fit so you can ensure that your bike is the correct fit for you.

Riding position on the bike is quite relaxed making it an especially good choice if you are planning on taking part in longer rides or sportives in the near future. Although don’t be perturbed this this. The bike is lovely and nippy when pushed. I even managed to beat my boyfriend up a short, snappy climb on a recent ride! This is in part thanks to the 100 Alpha aluminium frame which is both light and strong.

Gear shifting on this bike was absolutely fantastic. Unlike the majority of other bikes in this price range, the Lexa S offers a double instead of a triple (two chainwheels, not three). This is then matched with a nine speed cassette. This set up makes it quicker and more efficient to find the right gear eliminating clunky gear changes and allowing you more time to focus on enjoying yourself.

The Shimano Sora shifters were easily reached thanks to the female specific geometry of the bike. And I am glad to report that my bizarrely small hands reached the both the brakes and the gears with no problems whatsoever.

To further enhance the comfort of the ride, the Lexa S is equipped with carbon forks, which not only contribute to a lighter bike are also fantastic when it comes to absorbing shock, thus lessening the pressure on your arms and upper body.

The bike also comes equipped with a female specific saddle that suited my hardened backside just fine, but this is one element of the bike that you might want to upgrade. After all finding the perfect saddle will contribute no end to the enjoyment of your ride.

It is very hard to complete a review on the Trek Lexa S without passing comment on the look of the bike. Let’s just say there were more than a few oohs and ahhs when this one was taken out of the box. The sleek black on the bike has a subtle glitter through it giving the bike an extra special feel without being too girly.

Overall this is a really smashing bike. For £650 it really does offer incredible value for money. The women’s specific geometry, light aluminium frame, carbon forks and streamlined appearance make this bike feel special to ride. I honestly do not think you can go wrong with this one.

Price: £650

Available from: Trek

 Also worth a read: 

How to: Get the best road bike for your budget

Can your winter commute form part of your training?

10 things all female cyclists are guilty of saying

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trek lexa s blue book

  • Rider Notes

2011 Trek Lexa S

trek lexa s blue book

An aluminum frame race bike with mid-range components and rim brakes. Compare the full range

For This Bike

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A bike with lower gearing will be easier to ride up steep hills, while a higher top end means it will pedal faster down hills.

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Sep 2011 · Michelle Arthurs-Brennan

We test the second-from-bottom model from Trek's new women-specific cycle range

Great all-rounder

Women-specific components

Comfortable ride quality

Read Review

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Last updated June 29 Not listed for 2,485 days

Trek Lexa SLX: First ride review

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Trek Lexa SLX

Trek Lexa SLX

You can trust Cycling Weekly. Our team of experts put in hard miles testing cycling tech and will always share honest, unbiased advice to help you choose. Find out more about how we test.

Nigel Wynn

Words Derri Dunn | Photos Rupert Fowler

Last year, Trek’s ground-breaking Domane race bike made tidal waves on the pro scene. With its IsoSpeed section set in a carbon frame, the back end was decoupled, making for a much more comfortable and effective endurance bike for racing on tough terrain, like the cobbled Classics of Belgium.

We just love trickle-down technology here at Cycling Active, so we were pretty delighted to spot aluminium Domanes at Trek’s new product launch for 2013, starting at just £1,000. But something’s missing — there are women-specific carbon Domanes, but has Trek forgotten the girls with shallower pockets and aluminium aspirations?

Thankfully not. It turns out there is a women’s aluminium Domane and here it is — it’s called the Lexa SLX. The reason for this Domane travelling incognito is that Trek wants to give its women’s bikes their own distinct identity, rather than just making smaller versions of the unisex models in different colours. Accordingly, the Lexa SLX does not have an identically specced Domane stablemate, though it’s very similar to the Domane 2.3, but without the carbon seatpost and costing £50 less, as you’d expect.

Classy, cool and comfy

Domane technology apart, I’ve long been a fan of Trek’s take on women-specific design. It’s adept at tailoring all the right bits — bar, saddle and of course frame size — without doing anything too peculiar to the geometry of the bike in the process. The extremely compact Bontrager VR-S handlebar is probably my all-time favourite women’s bar and fantastic if your hands are small and your finger reach short. I also like the flat, dense compound of the women’s saddle, with nothing too complicated or fussy going on, but it does look and feel a little low-rent compared to the overall finish of the rest of the bike.

Trek Lexa SLX

But that’s mostly because the overall finish of the rest of the Lexa SLX is really rather swish. Black and gold makes quite a statement. Metallic bar tape isn’t for shrinking violets, and in this case it walks a fine line between flash and gaudy, happily managing to just stay the right side of that line, thanks to understated frame graphics.

And of course there’s nothing wrong with a bike looking a bit brazen, as long as there’s plenty of go to back up the show, and the ride of the Lexa SLX was no disappointment. I can’t say I noticed any groundbreaking new sensation from the IsoSpeed area, but this is probably part of its strength — it is, as Trek promises, very comfortable. It would be disconcerting if ‘decoupling’ the seat tube from the rest of the bike led to any great movement in the frame, but power transfer still felt plenty direct.

Overall, the frame feel is nimble and compliant, but there’s no sensation of harshness at the fork or saddle end. You could ride all day over potholed urban roads and not feel too jangled.

For all its brooding good looks and rather fancy technology, the Lexa SLX has still been positioned firmly within Trek’s ‘endurance’ — read ‘sportive’ — category and accordingly the geometry sports a relatively high front end, though if you’re a nervy descender like me simply removing a couple of spacers from under the stem positions more of your weight forward for better stability when the road points down.

Practical performer

Though it’s pricy and special enough to be a ‘best’ bike, the Lexa SLX actually makes a pretty nifty fast commute bike. Its angles are relaxed enough to allow you to find a sensible posture for riding in traffic, and it has removable fender mounts on the fork — so it can be your ride to work bike but still look the part when you’re leaving them for dust at sportives and club rides.

In short, it’s a really good inbetweener; a good bridging bike for women who want a bit more than just a bargain basement heavy winter hack, but still don’t want to hand over thousands for a precious carbon super-racer. It’s a little bit special, but still utterly practical when it comes to all the real riding you could throw at it.

Of course, unless you’re making some kind of statement about your Olympian credentials, you might want to swap that glitzy bar tape for something more demure so it looks the part if the Monday to Friday rat run is your only racetrack.

Specification

Trek Lexa SLX

£1,150

Frame 200 Series Alpha aluminium

Fork Trek IsoSpeed carbon

Groupset Shimano 105 shifters, front and rear; Shimano Tiagra 50/34 chainset and 12-30t cassette

Wheels Bontrager aluminium

Tyres Bontrager R1 700 x 25c

Saddle Bontrager Affinity 1 WSD

Stem Bontrager Race Lite

Seatpost Bontrager Race Lite

Handlebar Bontrager VR-S

Sizes 47, 50, 52, 54, 56cm

Size tested 50cm

Weight 9kg (19.6lb)

Alternative

Trek Domane 2.0 £1,000

If you have the misfortune of being male or only having £1,000 to spend, fear not, Trek’s unisex Domane 2.0 enjoys all the same lovely IsoSpeed frame technology as our Lexa SLX. To trim the fat to the magic one-grand mark it sports a Shimano Tiagra triple groupset. With sizes going down to 50cm, all but the shortest women will also be able to enjoy the Domane 2.0, though of course you won’t get the benefit of the women-specific Bontrager bars and saddle.

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Nigel Wynn worked as associate editor on CyclingWeekly.com, he worked almost single-handedly on the Cycling Weekly website in its early days. His passion for cycling, his writing and his creativity, as well as his hard work and dedication, were the original driving force behind the website’s success. Without him, CyclingWeekly.com would certainly not exist on the size and scale that it enjoys today. Nigel sadly passed away , following a brave battle with a cancer-related illness, in 2018. He was a highly valued colleague, and more importantly, an exceptional person to work with - his presence is sorely missed. 

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First look: Trek’s 2016 road bike range

Currently, all of the Madones are high-end, the most affordable (it’s all relative!) model being the £4,500 Madone 9.2 (above) with Bontrager Paradigm Elite tubeless ready wheels and a Shimano Ultegra groupset. 

Trek Madone 9.5.jpg

The 9.5 is £6,000. The extra money gets you Shimano’s flagship Dura-Ace groupset and Bontrager’s Aura wheels.

Trek Madone 9.9.jpg

Go to £9,000 and you can have the Madone 9.9 (above) with Bontrager’s very fast Aeolus 5 D3 wheels and the electronic Di2 version of Shimano’s Dura-Ace groupset. 

Trek Madone Race Shop Limited.jpg

The super-high-end Madone Race Shop Limited (above) tops the range. It comes with the same components as the Madone 9.9 but the Race Shop Limited is built around a 700 Series frame rather than 600 Series – the same version used by the Trek Factory Racing professional riders.

If none of those builds or finishes is exactly what you want, you can use Trek’s Project One system and have a Madone in your dream build. Prices start at £5,450, depending on your spec. We had one made for review and it was a fabulous ride, but it costs! 

Trek boasts that the Emonda has been “the lightest production road line ever” since its introduction in mid-2014.

The Emonda range covers three different carbon-fibre frames – the S, the SL and the SLR – and an aluminium model (see below). Each of those frames comes in various different builds, and some come in women’s specific versions.

Trek Emonda S 4.jpg

The most affordable carbon-fibre Emonda is the S 4 (£1,100, above), made from Trek’s 300 Series OCLV carbon. It gets a tapered head tube and an oversized bottom bracket for stiffness and is compatible with Trek’s DuoTrap computer sensor that integrates into one of the chainstays. It’s built up with a Shimano Tiagra groupset.

Trek Emonda S 5.jpg

The S 5 (£1,300, above) looks a really attractive options. It’s built around the same frame and fork but its groupset is the next level up in Shimano’s hierarchy, 105 – and we’re big fans of Shimano 105 here at road.cc .

Trek Emonda S 6.jpg

The £1,600 S 6 (above) gets a higher level again: Shimano Ultegra.

The Emonda SLs are made from a higher level of carbon fibre – Trek’s OCLV 500 Series – have wide BB90 bottom brackets and full-carbon forks. They also have seatmasts rather than standard seatposts to save weight and improve comfort.

Trek Emonda SL 5 Womens.jpg

The most accessible of the Emonda SLs is the 5, available in both men’s and women’s models (above), equipped with a Shimano 105 groupset and Bontrager Race tubeless ready wheels. 

Trek Emonda SL 6.jpg

We very much like the look of the £2,100 Emonda SL 6 which comes in a Shimano Ultegra build while the top-level SL 8 (£2,900) is available in either Dura-Ace or Red – each the top level offerings from Shimano and SRAM respectively.

The SLR Emondas are the lightest of the bunch. Trek claims that the 700 Series OCLV carbon-fibre frame weighs just 690g. That’s astonishingly light. 

Trek Emonda SLR 6.jpg

The Shimano Ultegra-equipped SLR 6 (£4,300, above) is available in either an H1 or and H2 fit (see above), so you can pick the setup that works best for you.

Trek Emonda SLR 8.jpg

The same is true of the SLR 8 (above, £5,800) which comes with Shimano Dura-Ace components.

Trek Emonda SLR 9.jpg

If you want electronic shifting, the £8,000 SLR 9 (above) is a real stunner with Dura-Ace Di2 and Aeolus 3 D3 TLR wheels from Trek’s in-house Bontrager brand. 

Trek Emonda SLR 10.jpg

Trek claims that the top level Emonda SLR 10 (above) weighs an incredible 10.25lb (4.6kg) in a 56cm frame and H1 fit. The boutique build includes superlight wheels and a carbon saddle from Tune and an integrated bar and stem from Bontrager. How much? Um, sadly it’s £11,000!

A year after the introduction of the carbon-fibre Emondas, Trek introduced an aluminium version. It’s not quite as lightweight as the carbon ones but it’s still pretty darn light and fast, and the ride quality is very good.

The alu Emonda features a tapered head tube for accurate cornering and it comes in Trek’s H2 fit – performance-orientated but not extreme. The welds are almost invisible to the point that you’d be hard pressed to see that this is an aluminium bike at first glance.

Trek Emonda ALR 4.jpg

The Emonda ALR 4 (above, £900) is fitted with a Shimano Tiagra 10-speed groupset but we think that the £1,100 ALR 5 (below) is the pick of the bunch.

Trek Emonda ALR 5.jpg

It has a full Shimano 105 groupset, a full carbon fork and a very good Bontrager Paradigm Race saddle. 

Trek Emonda ALR 6.jpg

The ALR 6 (above), which we have reviewed here on road.cc , comes equipped with Shimano Ultegra and it’s another aggressively priced model at £1,400.

Like most bikes at this price point, all of the Emonda ALR models come with compact gearing (smaller than standard chainrings) to help you get up the hills. 

The Domane is Trek’s endurance race bike that sits alongside the Madone and the Emonda (above). This is the bike you’ll see most of Trek’s professional riders aboard on the cobbled classics like Paris-Roubaix because of the way it copes with lumps and bumps. 

The frame features an IsoSpeed decoupler (see above) that allows the seat tube to move independently of the top tube and the seatstays. It can pivot back and forth to soak up vibrations and cancel out bigger hits from the road surface. 

The Domanes also come with IsoSpeed forks that are designed to add more comfort to the ride, and they’re built to an endurance geometry, meaning that the position is a little more upright than normal to put less strain on your back.

Trek Domane 2.0.jpg

The Domane range opens with the £900 2.0 (above) that centres on a 200 Series Alpha Aluminium frame and a carbon fork. The 10-speed Shimano Tiagra groupset includes a compact chainset and an 11-32-tooth cassette, giving you some small gears for climbing long, steep hills.

Trek Domane 2.3.jpg

Pay £1,100 for the Domane 2.3 (above) and you can upgrade to a Shimano 105 groupset.

All the other Domanes are carbon-fibre. The 4 Series bikes get oversized BB90 bottom brackets and tapered head tubes for stiffness, along with almost invisible mudguard mounts. As well as standard rim brake models, this series includes disc brake bikes for more stopping control in all weather conditions.

Trek Domane 4.0 Disc.jpg

The cheapest of these is the £1,400 Trek Domane 4.0 Disc (above) which is built with a 9-speed Shimano Sora groupset and TRP’s HY/RD cable-operated hydraulic disc brakes. 

Trek Domane 4.3.jpg

The 4.3 (above) looks like a winner to us. With a reliable Shimano 105 groupset, it’s priced at £1,500. 

Trek Domane 4.5 Disc.jpg

The 4.5 is available in both rim brake and disc brake versions (above). The bikes’ Shimano Ultegra components are the same whichever model you choose but the 4.5 Disc (£2,200) has Shimano RS685 hydraulic disc brakes that operate on 160mm rotors rather than the  Shimano 105 rim brakes of the standard Domane 4.5 (£1,800).

The 5 Series Domanes are made from a higher grade of carbon-fibre and feature seatmasts rather than seatposts, the idea being to add comfort and save a little weight. 

Trek Domane 5.2.jpg

The £2,200 Domane 5.2 (above) is a Shimano Ultegra model that looks like good value for money while you can have the £3,000 5.9 in either top-level Shimano Dura-Ace or with electronic shifting courtesy of Shimano’s second tier Ultegra Di2. The choice is yours.

Go up to the Domane 6 Series and you shift from 500 Series OCLV carbon to 600 Series which is a little lighter and stiffer.

Trek Domane 6.2 Disc.jpg

The 6.2 is available in rim brake and disc brake (above) versions – £2,900 and £3,200 respectively – the disc brakes in question being Shimano RS685 hydraulics. These are Ultegra-level, matching most of the rest of the spec.

Trek Domane 6.5.jpg

The £3,900 Domane 6.5 (above) has a full Shimano Dura-Ace group along with a lightweight Bontrager Paradigm Elite TLR wheelset, while the 6.9 Disc (below, £6000) gets Shimano’s Dura-Ace Di2 electronic shifting, RS785 hydraulic brakes, and Bontrager Affinity Elite wheels.

Trek Domane 6.9 Disc.jpg

The rim brake version of the 6.9 (below, £7,200) gets that same Di2 shifting, the higher price being down to Bontrager’s aero Aeolus 3 D3 wheels that we’re reviewed here on road.cc . They’re fast and they handle well whatever the conditions.

Trek Domane 6.9.jpg

You can choose your own spec and finish for both the Domane 4 Series and 6 Series through Trek’s Project One scheme.

The 1 Series contains Trek’s entry-level road bikes. They’re made from Trek’s 100 Series aluminium (the Emonda ALRs are 300 Series) and they have eyelets for fitting mudguards and a rear rack. That’ll come in handy if you intend to commute by bike year-round.

Trek 1.1.jpg

Like the Emonda ALRs and many other Emonda and Madone models, the 1 Series bikes are built to Trek’s H2 geometry. This is a setup that’s designed for efficiency and speed, but it’s not quite as low and stretched as Trek’s H1 fit.

There are just two models in the range. The £575 1.1 (above) gets an 8-speed Shimano Claris groupset while the £650 1.2 (below) is built up with 9-speed Shimano Sora.

Trek 1.2.jpg

The Silque is a women’s carbon-fibre bike that, like the Domane and now the Madone, has an IsoSpeed decoupler to add comfort and control. 

Trek doesn’t just change the colour and a few components when putting a women’s bike together, the frame geometry is altered too.

Trek Silque.jpg

There are six different Silque bikes in the lineup ranging from the £1,500 Shimano Tiagra-equipped Silque (above) right up to the £3,800 Silque SSL (below) with Shimano Ultegra Di2 electronic shifting.

Trek Silque SSL.jpg

We think that the Silque SL (£2,200, below) looks like a great bike that’ll prove popular. With a full Shimano Ultegra drivetrain, Bontrager Race tubeless ready wheelset, and women’s specific Bontrager Anja Comp WSD saddle, you’re getting a lot for your money here.

Trek Silque SL.jpg

The Silque SL and SSL are available through Trek’s Project One service from £2,700 and £3,970 respectively. 

The Lexa is Trek’s aluminium road bike range that’s built to a WSD (women’s specific design) geometry.

Trek Lexa SLX.jpg

Three of the four bikes in the range are based around frames made from 100 Series Alpha Aluminium, the same as the 1 Series bikes (above), while the fourth, the £1,000 Lexa SLX (above), uses slightly higher level 200 Series. All the bikes are mudguard and rack compatible.

Trek Lexa.jpg

The cheapest bike in the range is the straight Lexa (above) at £575 but the one that takes our eye is the £650 Lexa S (below). This one has a 9-speed Shimano Sora groupset and tubeless ready tyres from Bontrager.

Trek Lexa S.jpg

For more info go to  www.trekbikes.com .

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trek lexa s blue book

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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Isn't there a Domane 4.3 with disc brakes as well? Hope so, I was going to buy one.

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you can get a 2016 Giant Defy 1 disc for £999 with TRP Spyre mech discs and 105 groupset, aluminium alloy frame and carbon fibre leg/ alloy steerer fork. Not a bad deal...

Avatar

So entry level for Trek with *Sora* & HyRd discs is £1,400 - TBH they could have gone for Spyres and added Tiagra under-bar shifting.

Disappointing that one of the world's largest can't bring a disc bike in closer to a grand - When Merida have the amazing Ride 5000 Disc 2016 with 105/Ultegra & full Hydro for only £550 more. Yes, I say 'only' as the RRP jumps for Sora-> 105/Ultegra & HyRd-RS785 must be close to a grand RRP.

Avatar

KiwiMike wrote: So entry level for Trek with *Sora* & HyRd discs is £1,400 - TBH they could have gone for Spyres and added Tiagra under-bar shifting. Disappointing that one of the world's largest can't bring a disc bike in closer to a grand - When Merida have the amazing Ride 5000 Disc 2016 with 105/Ultegra & full Hydro for only £550 more. Yes, I say 'only' as the RRP jumps for Sora-> 105/Ultegra & HyRd-RS785 must be close to a grand RRP. 

Merida are a pretty monstrously large operation - their wholesale buying power from Shimano, etc. must be almost unparalleled. I'm not that surpried they can offer these specs at that price. Around where I live in NZ, there are an awful lot of people on high end Merida bikes with Di2 and so on who wouldn't have spent what an "equivalent" Specialized (made in the same factory) would have cost. Merida's largest failing in many ways appears to be their rather slack approach to marketing.

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Perhaps this one relevant also: http://www.aviewfromthecyclepath.com/search/label/road%20works%20vs.%20t...

If Kent Outdoors wants to focus on its key water-sports business, then why did they buy a bicycle company less than two years ago?

Also "...but holding up traffic".  "Don't hold up traffic" almost seems to be an axiom in the UK!  There are technical reasons for questioning this...

Pretty sure the post was a sarcastic reply to spangly shiny.

Showing such disrespect towards the judge before sentencing doesn't seem to be the most intelligent of moves.

Joey Barton?

Oh come on. Please tell me you're not being serious with that comment?

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The Trek Lexa is a road/triathlon bike with an aluminum Series Alpha / WSD-tuned IsoSpeed / 100 Series Alpha frame. The frame comes in colors like gunmetal, platinum and Blue  Ink.

Originally released in 2011, there are 9 versions of this bike. Due to the frame materials and other factors, we estimate that this bike weighs around 25 pounds. The Lexa is fully rigid.

The Lexa comes with Shimano components, including a Bontrager stem, a semi-cartridge, integrated, sealed, threadless, semi-integrated, semi FSA headset and Shimano shifters.

The Lexa has 8,11,10,9 speeds and has Sun Race, Shimano SRAM PG-950 rear cogs and a Shimano derailleur.

It comes with Bontrager tires (622mm x NaN) and aluminum Bontrager rims.

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Trek Lexa 4

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

At a glance

- Lexa is a light, fast women’s road bike. Sleek shaping and a carbon fork make Lexa the perfect choice for road rides, triathlons, or however you choose to rack up the miles.

Forget the gym—this sleek, smooth, sexy ride will get you to your goals in record time. Make the ride the best part of your day!

Key Features

- WSD-specific frame is ride-tuned for smoothness and power

- Light, sleek, ride-tuned Alpha Aluminum frame

- Top-level, WSD-specific spec, including a Shimano drivetrain

- Trek’s WSD geometry offers a fast and confident ride

Where To Buy

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Specifications

  • Fork Trek Carbon Road
  • Chain Shimano Tiagra
  • Crank Shimano Tiagra
  • Bottom Bracket Sealed cartridge
  • Front Derailleur Shimano Tiagra
  • Rear Derailleur Shimano Tiagra
  • Saddle Bontrager Ajna Comp
  • Headset 1 1/8-inch integrated, semi-cartridge bearings

Q: How much is a 2017 Trek Lexa 4?

A 2017 Trek Lexa 4 is typically priced around $1,150 USD when new. Be sure to shop around for the best price, and also look to the used market for a great deal.

Q: What size 2017 Trek Lexa 4 should I get?

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IMAGES

  1. Review: Trek Lexa S road bike

    trek lexa s blue book

  2. 2011 Trek Lexa S Compact

    trek lexa s blue book

  3. 2016 Trek Lexa

    trek lexa s blue book

  4. Review: Trek Lexa S road bike

    trek lexa s blue book

  5. Review: Trek Lexa S road bike

    trek lexa s blue book

  6. Велосипед Trek Lexa S Compact Women's (2015) купить в Москве: цена

    trek lexa s blue book

VIDEO

  1. Trek Lexa S 2016

  2. JeSter reviews Star Trek Online’s Terran Lexington Dreadnought Cruiser (T6-X)

  3. 2022 Emtb Shootout

  4. Review 2022 Trek Fuel 9.8 GX AXS Full Suspension Mountain Bike

  5. REVIEW: 2015 Trek Lexa c

  6. Introducing The New Pegasus TRK

COMMENTS

  1. Value Guide

    2017 Trek Lexa 3. 2017 Trek Lexa 3 Women's. 2017 Trek Lexa 2 Women's. 2017 Trek Lexa 4 Women's. Find out how much a undefined undefined bicycle is worth. Our Value Guide is constantly growing with pricing information and bicycle specs daily.

  2. 2012 Trek Lexa S

    Find the value of a 2012 Trek Lexa S new or used bicycle in the BicycleBlueBook.com value guide.

  3. Review: Trek Lexa S road bike

    The Lexa S is the second cheapest of Trek's range of aluminium-framed women's road bikes, as distinct from the carbon-framed Silque, Madone and Emonda ranges. It has Shimano's inexpensive but rather good Sora components and the women's specific WSD geometry 100 Series Alpha aluminium frame is paired up with Trek carbon road forks. The frame ...

  4. Review: Trek Lexa S

    For £650 it really does offer incredible value for money. The women's specific geometry, light aluminium frame, carbon forks and streamlined appearance make this bike feel special to ride. I honestly do not think you can go wrong with this one. Price: £650. Available from: Trek.

  5. 2011 Trek Lexa S

    Trek Lexa S. Sep 2011 · Michelle Arthurs-Brennan. We test the second-from-bottom model from Trek's new women-specific cycle range. Highs. Great all-rounder. Women-specific components. Comfortable ride quality. Lows. Not much.

  6. BikePedia

    Weight: Not Available: Sizes: 47cm, 50cm, 52cm, 54cm, 56cm: Colors: Dusty Blue/Crystal Pearl White, Gloss Berry: Item ID: 3048105

  7. Trek Lexa SLX: First ride review

    Trek Domane 2.0 £1,000. If you have the misfortune of being male or only having £1,000 to spend, fear not, Trek's unisex Domane 2.0 enjoys all the same lovely IsoSpeed frame technology as our ...

  8. Lexa S

    Lexa S. Model 14020031211. Retailer prices may vary. Compare. Color / Black Titanite. Select a color. Select size. This product is no longer available online, but it could be in stock at your local Trek shop! Check in-store availability below.

  9. First look: Trek's 2016 road bike range

    The Lexa is Trek's aluminium road bike range that's built to a WSD (women's specific design) geometry. Three of the four bikes in the range are based around frames made from 100 Series Alpha Aluminium, the same as the 1 Series bikes (above), while the fourth, the £1,000 Lexa SLX (above), uses slightly higher level 200 Series.

  10. Lexa

    The Trek Lexa is a road/triathlon bike with an aluminum Series Alpha / WSD-tuned IsoSpeed / 100 Series Alpha frame. The frame comes in colors like gunmetal, platinum and Blue Ink. Originally released in 2011, there are 9 versions of this bike. Due to the frame materials and other factors, we estimate that this bike weighs around 25 pounds. The ...

  11. 2017 Trek Lexa 4

    The 2017 Trek Lexa 4 is an General road bike. It is priced at $1,150 USD and a shimano drivetrain. The bike is part of Trek 's Lexa 4 range of road bikes. - Lexa is a light, fast women's road bike. Sleek shaping and a carbon fork make Lexa the perfect choice for road rides, triathlons, or however you choose to rack up the miles.

  12. Lexa SL Women's

    Weight. 54cm - 9.44 kg / 20.81 lbs. Weight limit. This bike has a maximum total weight limit (combined weight of bicycle, rider, and cargo) of 275 pounds (125 kg). We reserve the right to make changes to the product information contained on this site at any time without notice, including with respect to equipment, specifications, models, colors ...

  13. Value Guide

    Select the model to see all available years. ‌ 2013 Trek Lexa S Triple. Value Guide; Bike Finder; About Us; Partner; Used Bikes for Sale

  14. Lexa (Compact)

    Lexa (Compact) Model 14000031013. Retailer prices may vary. Compare. Color / Trek Black/Eggplant. Select a color. Select size. This product is no longer available online, but it could be in stock at your local Trek shop! Check in-store availability below.

  15. Value Guide

    Enter the brand to see a list of product families and the years they were made. Our value guide is built on a high-performance predictive analytics platform that uses automated machine learning to analyze and report on millions of transactions. We report three values: Original MSRP, Private Party and Trade-in.

  16. 9th radio centre of Moscow, Elektrostal

    The 9th radio centre of Moscow was a high power shortwave and medium wave broadcasting facility at Elektrostal near Moscow.Its broadcasting frequency was 873 kHz with a transmission power of up to 1200 kilowatts. It was also used as radio jammer of "unwanted" stations.

  17. Elektrostal to Moscow

    Drive • 1h 3m. Drive from Elektrostal to Moscow 58.6 km. RUB 450 - RUB 700. Quickest way to get there Cheapest option Distance between.

  18. www.bicyclebluebook.com

    /value-guide/2011%20Trek%20Lexa%20S/

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

    The life tests started after successful completion of hydraulic tests (hydraulic filling) of the mock-up with the aim to determine RK3+ hydraulic resistance. Life tests are carried out on a full-scale research hot run-in test bench V-440 and will last for full 1500 hours. The aim of tests is to study mechanical stability of RK3+ components ...

  20. 2011 Trek Lexa S Com

    Find out how much a 2011 Trek Lexa S Compact - Women's bicycle is worth. Our Value Guide is constantly growing with pricing information and bicycle specs daily. Value Guide; Buy. Sell/Trade. Bike Finder; Articles; Sign In. Compare; Cart. Sign in; ... 2011 Trek Lexa S Compact - Women's. 2011. 2012.