When Bontrager introduced their WaveCel helmet tech just over a year ago, it brought with it some impressive claims of safety. Calling it “48 times more effective than standard foam helmets at preventing concussions from common cycling accidents,” the cellular construction flexes, crumples, and glides to protect you from both rotational and linear impact forces during a crash.
Over the years, Trek has been keeping track of every crashed-out helmet they can get a hold of thanks to their Crash Replacement Guarantee. If you crash in your new helmet in the first year, Trek will replace it for free. You get a new helmet, and Trek gets the old one to study as part of their Crash Reconstruction Data Research program. By analyzing the helmet impact data including “impact location, volume centricity, scratch length, and more,” Trek says that they are able to improve their helmet testing to better replicate real world scenarios. Which is part of what the company attributes their Virginia Tech WaveCel 5 star ratings to – which includes every adult WaveCel helmet.
That’s a long way to say that Trek has put a lot of effort into the development of WaveCel. And it’s why initially, you only found the technology on their higher end helmets. Until now. Not only has Bontrager added their most affordable WaveCel models yet at $100, they’ve also just added a new mountain bike model at half the price of the Blaze, and children finally get their own WaveCel tech too.
Jet Youth and Child WaveCel Helmets
For the little ones, Bontrager has added two sizes of the new Jet. The Child model will fit heads from 48-52cm, and the Youth model covers 50-55cm. Both include WaveCel tech and meet ASTM standards which is an advanced certification for youth helmets. Importantly, it uses a smaller headform with a smaller mass to better replicate what would happen to a child’s head during a crash.