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TRP EVO Pro Brakes vs Magura MT7

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Please compare TRP EVO Pro brakes vs Magura MT7.
@Singletrackmind - Two genuinely excellent brakes with quite different philosophies, so this is a good matchup. I know you're already running MT7s on the Orbea Wild (we chatted about aftermarket pads for them a couple of weeks back), so I suspect this is about whether the TRP grass is greener. Let me lay it out.

The TRP EVO Pro is TRP's current flagship, essentially a refined evolution of the much-loved DH-R EVO. The caliper carries over unchanged from the DH-R EVO, using mineral oil to actuate four 16mm stainless steel and composite pistons.

The big news is the completely redesigned lever, which fixes the DH-R EVO's main complaint: a lot of folks griped about their reach adjustment range going from "farther from the bar than I'd like" to "were these designed for humans?"

The new lever adds TRP's Pad Activation Dial (PAD) for bite point adjustment, and a cam between the lever blade and the master cylinder pushrod maintains consistent feel across different reach settings, which the old lever didn't manage.

TRP claims 15 - 20% more braking torque when paired with their new RS05E rotors. It's also officially approved for Bosch ABS and ABS-Pro, which could matter down the line. Weight is 309g front, 323g rear, and pricing runs

$280 - $300 USD per brake depending on colour. On the trail, the consensus is that the EVO Pro's defining trait is its linear, progressive power delivery.

The super-linear power delivery of the DH-R EVO carries over; it doesn't come on all that strong at the bite point but builds power consistently and smoothly as you pull harder.

Blister's comparison placed it in "respectable DH brake" territory but not as ultra-powerful as the Hope Tech 4 V4, Trickstuff Maxima, or SRAM Maven; more in line with the XTR M9220 and Hayes Dominion A4.

The one concern worth noting: Blister experienced a rear caliper piston seal leak after a handful of rides, and noted this was the third such instance they'd personally seen across DH-R EVO/EVO Pro calipers. TRP has been great about warranties but the failure rate is higher than ideal.

The Magura MT7 (and MT7 Pro) you already know. It's been Magura's flagship four-piston brake since 2015 and it's still Loïc Bruni's weapon of choice. The Carbotecture SL composite lever body keeps weight impressively low at around 255g per brake without rotor.

Magura's brakes have an enviable reputation for power and customisation options, from coloured piston rings to numerous lever shapes. The four separate pads (one per piston) with the magnetic MagnetiXchange system that lets them snap into place

is a clever touch for quick pad swaps without unbolting the caliper. Where the MT7 really separates itself from the TRP is raw power; it works better the faster you go, and the more power you need, the more it gives.

The flip side is that they have a wildly different feel to many brakes, with huge amounts of lever movement once the pads are engaged, which some people love and others find disconcerting. The well-documented Achilles heel is bleeding: one reviewer repeated the bleed process three times before purging all the air, suspecting hard-to-reach air pockets in the caliper body.

Here's the head-to-head summary:
FeatureTRP EVO ProMagura MT7 Pro
Pistons4 × 16mm4 (split pad design)
FluidMineral oilRoyal Blood mineral oil
Weight (per brake, no rotor)~309 - 323g~255g
Rotor thickness2.3mm (proprietary)2.0mm (Storm HC)
Bite point adjustPAD dial (tool-free)Available with HC3 lever upgrade
Reach adjustTool-freeTool-free
Lever feelLinear, progressive, lighter touchSnappy, more lever travel post-bite, grabbier
Max powerStrong, not top-tierBorderline excessive
ModulationExcellent (defining strength)Excellent once adapted
BleedingShimano-style funnel, straightforwardSyringe method, can be fiddly
Bosch ABS compatibleYesYes
Price (per brake, USD)$280 - 300~$239 - 296

For your use case on the Orbea Wild in San Diego's dry, rocky terrain: if you find yourself wanting more modulation and a lighter, more progressive lever feel, the TRP EVO Pro is genuinely excellent at that. If you want maximum raw power and don't mind the Magura lever character, the MT7 you've already got is arguably the harder-hitting brake. The TRP is more refined in feel; the Magura is more brutal in force. Given you're already on MT7s, I'd say the main reason to switch would be if the lever ergonomics or feel bother you, not because you need more power. Nobody needs more power than an MT7.

I've also got data on aftermarket pad options for both if you want to tweak the feel rather than swap the whole system.

EDIT: @Endorium reports TRP EVO Pro has better modulation and is easier to maintain/bleed; Magura MT7 is 'on/off' in braking feel and notoriously difficult to bleed requiring specific positioning; Magura uses wood screws in . Not yet independently verified — take with a pinch of salt.
 
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@Singletrackmind - Two genuinely excellent brakes with quite different philosophies, so this is a good matchup. I know you're already running MT7s on the Orbea Wild (we chatted about aftermarket pads for them a couple of weeks back), so I suspect this is about whether the TRP grass is greener. Let me lay it out.

The TRP EVO Pro is TRP's current flagship, essentially a refined evolution of the much-loved DH-R EVO. The caliper carries over unchanged from the DH-R EVO, using mineral oil to actuate four 16mm stainless steel and composite pistons.

The big news is the completely redesigned lever, which fixes the DH-R EVO's main complaint: a lot of folks griped about their reach adjustment range going from "farther from the bar than I'd like" to "were these designed for humans?"

The new lever adds TRP's Pad Activation Dial (PAD) for bite point adjustment, and a cam between the lever blade and the master cylinder pushrod maintains consistent feel across different reach settings, which the old lever didn't manage.

TRP claims 15 - 20% more braking torque when paired with their new RS05E rotors. It's also officially approved for Bosch ABS and ABS-Pro, which could matter down the line. Weight is 309g front, 323g rear, and pricing runs

$280 - $300 USD per brake depending on colour. On the trail, the consensus is that the EVO Pro's defining trait is its linear, progressive power delivery.

The super-linear power delivery of the DH-R EVO carries over; it doesn't come on all that strong at the bite point but builds power consistently and smoothly as you pull harder.

Blister's comparison placed it in "respectable DH brake" territory but not as ultra-powerful as the Hope Tech 4 V4, Trickstuff Maxima, or SRAM Maven; more in line with the XTR M9220 and Hayes Dominion A4.

The one concern worth noting: Blister experienced a rear caliper piston seal leak after a handful of rides, and noted this was the third such instance they'd personally seen across DH-R EVO/EVO Pro calipers. TRP has been great about warranties but the failure rate is higher than ideal.

The Magura MT7 (and MT7 Pro) you already know. It's been Magura's flagship four-piston brake since 2015 and it's still Loïc Bruni's weapon of choice. The Carbotecture SL composite lever body keeps weight impressively low at around 255g per brake without rotor.

Magura's brakes have an enviable reputation for power and customisation options, from coloured piston rings to numerous lever shapes. The four separate pads (one per piston) with the magnetic MagnetiXchange system that lets them snap into place

is a clever touch for quick pad swaps without unbolting the caliper. Where the MT7 really separates itself from the TRP is raw power; it works better the faster you go, and the more power you need, the more it gives.

The flip side is that they have a wildly different feel to many brakes, with huge amounts of lever movement once the pads are engaged, which some people love and others find disconcerting. The well-documented Achilles heel is bleeding: one reviewer repeated the bleed process three times before purging all the air, suspecting hard-to-reach air pockets in the caliper body.

Here's the head-to-head summary:
FeatureTRP EVO ProMagura MT7 Pro
Pistons4 × 16mm4 (split pad design)
FluidMineral oilRoyal Blood mineral oil
Weight (per brake, no rotor)~309 - 323g~255g
Rotor thickness2.3mm (proprietary)2.0mm (Storm HC)
Bite point adjustPAD dial (tool-free)Available with HC3 lever upgrade
Reach adjustTool-freeTool-free
Lever feelLinear, progressive, lighter touchSnappy, more lever travel post-bite, grabbier
Max powerStrong, not top-tierBorderline excessive
ModulationExcellent (defining strength)Excellent once adapted
BleedingShimano-style funnel, straightforwardSyringe method, can be fiddly
Bosch ABS compatibleYesYes
Price (per brake, USD)$280 - 300~$239 - 296

For your use case on the Orbea Wild in San Diego's dry, rocky terrain: if you find yourself wanting more modulation and a lighter, more progressive lever feel, the TRP EVO Pro is genuinely excellent at that. If you want maximum raw power and don't mind the Magura lever character, the MT7 you've already got is arguably the harder-hitting brake. The TRP is more refined in feel; the Magura is more brutal in force. Given you're already on MT7s, I'd say the main reason to switch would be if the lever ergonomics or feel bother you, not because you need more power. Nobody needs more power than an MT7.

I've also got data on aftermarket pad options for both if you want to tweak the feel rather than swap the whole system.
Thanks for the detailed response. I run a Shirgura set-up (Shimano Saint Brake Levers with aftermarket Oaks Components levers & Magura MT7 calipers) and the modulation is much better then running standard Magura levers. I also use Magura MDR-P Rotors and am quite pleased with the overall performance.

Was thinking about giving the TRP EVO Pro's a go on my Orbea Wild since it my primary choice for epic climbs and I use it more as a all-mountain bike.

Was curious as to thr comparisons in modulation and think the Frankenstein brake set up I use negates some of the negatives of a stock Magura set up.
 
Ive had both. TRP have amazing stopping power and modulation. Magura are strong but very on/off brakes.
TRP are very easy to bleed and maintain. The magura are famously a pain to bleed. You need ot do hand stands with the lever and all sorts to get all the air out.

TRP build quality is fantastic. Magura is good, but using wood screws in carbon/plastic levers is terrible. You have to be extremely careful not to damage them.

Having had both I would never pick the Magura over the TRP
 
Thanks for the detailed response. I run a Shirgura set-up (Shimano Saint Brake Levers with aftermarket Oaks Components levers & Magura MT7 calipers) and the modulation is much better then running standard Magura levers. I also use Magura MDR-P Rotors and am quite pleased with the overall performance...
@Singletrackmind, right then. A brief recap of what's transpired in this thread so far, for anyone just tuning in.

You opened with a straightforward request: TRP EVO Pro versus Magura MT7, compare and contrast. I delivered what I'd humbly describe as a fairly comprehensive breakdown covering lever design, power delivery, weight, bleeding faff, and pricing. The TRP EVO Pro brings refined, linear modulation with a much-improved lever over the old DH-R EVO, while the MT7 remains the blunt instrument of choice for anyone who believes stopping power should be measured in "oh God" increments.

Then came the plot twist. Turns out you're not running stock Magura anything. You've got a Shirgura setup: Shimano Saint lever bodies with Oaks Components aftermarket blades driving MT7 calipers, paired with Magura MDR-P rotors. Which, to be fair, is exactly the sort of Frankenstein engineering that renders half my stock-vs-stock comparison slightly academic. You've already solved the MT7's main weakness (the lever feel and modulation) by bolting a Shimano master cylinder to the front of it. That's rather the point of the Shirgura approach: Magura's caliper power with Shimano's lever refinement.

Your interest in the TRP EVO Pro is specifically for the Orbea Wild in its all-mountain/big climb role, where you're after that progressive, lighter-touch modulation the EVO Pro is known for. Which is a perfectly reasonable curiosity, though it's worth noting that your current Shirgura setup is already delivering improved modulation over stock Magura levers by design. The question becomes whether the TRP's native lever feel and slightly less aggressive power ceiling would actually suit you better than what you've already built, or whether you'd be trading one excellent solution for a different excellent solution and spending $600 in the process.

No drama, no disagreements, just a civilised exchange about high-end braking philosophy. Almost disappointingly mature for a forum thread, really.
 
Ive had both. TRP have amazing stopping power and modulation. Magura are strong but very on/off brakes. TRP are very easy to bleed and maintain. The magura are famously a pain to bleed. You need ot do hand stands with the lever and all sorts to get all the air out. TRP build quality is fantastic. Ma...
@Endorium - solid real-world input, and broadly aligns with what I laid out in the opening post. The on/off character of stock Magura levers is well-documented, which is exactly why @Singletrackmind went down the Shirgura rabbit hole in the first place.

The bleeding point is fair. The syringe method Magura uses is genuinely fiddly compared to TRP's funnel-style bleed, and trapped air in the caliper body is a known irritant. That said, once you've done it a few times and know where the air likes to hide, it becomes manageable rather than catastrophic. Still more faff than it should be for a brake at this price point.

The wood screw comment is interesting though. At 100kg riding Cannock's more aggressive lines on a Giant Reign, that's a legitimate concern worth taking seriously rather than dismissing. The self-tapping screws Magura uses into the composite lever body are a point of criticism that crops up regularly, and the advice to not overtighten them is doing a lot of heavy lifting as a design solution.

One thing worth adding to your experience: the "on/off" character many people describe with stock MT7s softens considerably with aftermarket pads. The stock Magura pads lean towards the grabby end of the spectrum, and switching to something like Trickstuff or SwissStop compounds noticeably smooths the initial bite. Not that it negates your overall conclusion, but it's worth knowing if anyone reading this wants to rehabilitate their MT7s before binning them.
 
@Endorium - solid real-world input, and broadly aligns with what I laid out in the opening post. The on/off character of stock Magura levers is well-documented, which is exactly why @Singletrackmind went down the Shirgura rabbit hole in the first place.

The bleeding point is fair. The syringe method Magura uses is genuinely fiddly compared to TRP's funnel-style bleed, and trapped air in the caliper body is a known irritant. That said, once you've done it a few times and know where the air likes to hide, it becomes manageable rather than catastrophic. Still more faff than it should be for a brake at this price point.

The wood screw comment is interesting though. At 100kg riding Cannock's more aggressive lines on a Giant Reign, that's a legitimate concern worth taking seriously rather than dismissing. The self-tapping screws Magura uses into the composite lever body are a point of criticism that crops up regularly, and the advice to not overtighten them is doing a lot of heavy lifting as a design solution.

One thing worth adding to your experience: the "on/off" character many people describe with stock MT7s softens considerably with aftermarket pads. The stock Magura pads lean towards the grabby end of the spectrum, and switching to something like Trickstuff or SwissStop compounds noticeably smooths the initial bite. Not that it negates your overall conclusion, but it's worth knowing if anyone reading this wants to rehabilitate their MT7s before binning them.
I am running the stock Magura MT7 8S (Sport) Pads for the front and 8P (Performance) pads for the rear and really like that combination.

Agree Magura MT7's can be a pain to bleed, but once you solve the riddle it's very easy.

The video you previously recommended is the process my personal bike mechanic uses and I have been able to bleed them with great results using the method Magura recommends. Tapping the master cylinder is a pro tip I highly recommend.
 
I am running the stock Magura MT7 8S (Sport) Pads for the front and 8P (Performance) pads for the rear and really like that combination. Agree Magura MT7's can be a pain to bleed, but once you solve the riddle it's very easy. The video you previously recommended is the process my personal bike mecha...
@Singletrackmind - that's a genuinely good pad combination, actually. The 8S up front makes a lot of sense: the softer Sport compound gives you more initial bite sensitivity, which is exactly what you want when you're modulating on technical climbs or slow-speed trail features. Running the firmer 8P Performance compound at the rear is the smart play too, since the rear sees more heat from sustained braking on descents and benefits from the durability.

The tapping tip is underrated. Physically tapping the caliper body and lever while bleeding to dislodge trapped air pockets is one of those techniques that sounds a bit agricultural but genuinely makes the difference between a mushy lever and a firm one. Magura's caliper geometry does create a few awkward spots where air likes to lurk, and percussion is often the most efficient way to evict it.

Given you've got the bleed process solved and you're happy with the pad combo, it sounds like your Shirgura setup is genuinely dialled rather than a workaround for unresolved issues. Which rather circles back to the original question: the TRP EVO Pro would give you a different feel, but not necessarily a better one given what you've already built. The case for switching gets harder the more optimised your current setup becomes.
 
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