Another weekend of UCI World Cup track racing kicks off in Hong Kong, and the Italian national team is rolling a new aero carbon Pinarello Maat track bike in their Tokyo 2020 prep. Pinarello is no newcomer on the track with their Bolide HR having set Wiggo’s hour record back in 2015. But now they’re back with an all new Matt, said to be more integrated, thinner & more aero, as well as stiffer & more versatile for a wider range of riders and track disciplines…
2020 Pinarello Maat integrated aero carbon track bike

Like we saw with the new Hope HB.T, in order to qualify to race next summer at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, a new bike must be UCI-approved and then raced in this season’s World Cup. So, as technical partner of the Italian National Track Team Pinarello developed the new integrated Maat in time to get it into this weekend’s third of six rounds of the World Cup. (With the last round in late January, we wouldn’t be surprised to see a couple more new track bikes debut in the next several weeks.)
The new Pinarello is meant to be a more purpose-built & versatile track bike it seems, developed specifically to target Madison & Omnium racing (rather than the previous Bolide HR adapted from the TT bike.) But thanks to an overall stiffness boost, the team will benefit in Sprint races too. That focus gives the Maat geometry that almost sounds to come out of modern trail bikes – “longer toptube and short stems” in order to help athletes get their preferred aggressive forward position on the bikes, while staying within the strict UCI fit regulations.
Aerodynamic & integrated improvements
Integration is a hallmark of most modern aerodynamic bike design, and the Maat follows that mantra with extra fork-to-frame design integration.
The new Maat frame doesn’t look like a huge change from the Bolide HR, carrying over most all of the characteristically swoopy Pinarello shaping, although the previous external fork ‘fairing’ once again becomes a pair of the frame itself. The new track bike does get a revised toptube, that is now slightly sloping, quite uncommon on a modern aero-focused bike, also now with a hidden internal clamp for the proprietary aero seatpost.

Again Pinarello uses Think Asymmetric shaping to balance the stiffness needs of massively powerful track riders, with the real difference in aero needs on either side of the bike. Of course fluid carbon construction makes asymmetric design rather straightforward, so Pinarello started at a super stiff bottom bracket to driveside dropout connection to guarantee maximum power transfer with minimal deflection, and worked backwards from there.
The main carbon material Pinarello uses for the Maat to get that stiffness is hi-mod Torayca T1100 carbon in a 1K weave, much like their top road bikes, and was said to actually lower frameset weight over the Bolide HR.
Integrated & adaptable cockpits
Maat – Tech details
Availability
