When testing electric mountain bikes, a good rule of thumb is to ride first and ask questions later. It’s good to free your mind and feel the joy before you try to understand the complicated engineering that goes into these increasingly sophisticated beasts.
But halfway through my first test of the Slash+ 9.7 SLX/XT, my ride was so nimble, flowy, and quiet—so unlike the maiden voyages I’ve had on other e-MTBs I’ve tested—that I couldn’t wait to dive in. I needed to know all the technical details of how Trek managed to build an electric mountain bike that feels and sounds so much like an acoustic bike.
Flip Chip
Let’s start with the basics: Trek took the frame geometry and suspension of their popular Slash acoustic enduro bike and added a motor and battery. Then they offered the electric mountain bike version in two builds—the higher-end $12,000 Slash+ 9.9 XO AXS T-Type, and the $8,000 Slash+ 9.7 SLX/XT, which is the one I tested.
The build on the 9.7 has a carbon frame, a Fox suspension package with 170 mm of travel in both the front and rear, and a Shimano XT groupset. The bike is a mullet, with a 29-inch wheel in the front that rolls over big stuff and a 27.5-inch wheel in the back that makes it lighter and more maneuverable.




