SRAM Maven B1
Intended Use: Gravity
Fluid: Mineral Oil
Pistons: 4 x 18 mm
MSRP:
- Maven Silver: $265 / €290 / £260 per brake
- Maven Ultimate: $299 / €325 / £290 per brake
Stated Weight:
- Maven Bronze: 381 g per brake
- Maven Silver: 379 g per brake
- Maven Ultimate: 363 g per brake
Intro
The original SRAM Maven brakes were a massive, massive step up from the Code — formerly SRAM’s burliest gravity brake — in terms of outright power and heat management, but a lot of folks found their lever feel to be stiff and wooden, and their power delivery to be very on / off. The new second-generation Maven brakes are meant to keep the excellent power of the originals while offering a lighter lever feel and easier modulation. Here’s what is (and isn’t) new:
Design & Features
The new Mavens look very similar to the originals, and most of their high-level design details haven’t changed a ton. Apart from some slight tweaks to their finishes, the new brakes look nearly identical to the originals, and they use the same pad shape, mineral oil fluid, bleed kits, and so on.
The first, and probably most significant, change is that the new Mavens use a different lever cam that’s meant to make the initial part of the stroke much lighter, while delivering slightly higher leverage for more power deep in the stroke. The original Mavens used a cam with very low initial leverage to move fluid quickly at the start of the stroke and keep the free stroke short, but it also made for a firm lever feel through the free stroke; the new cam is said to nearly cut the initial breakaway force at the lever in half.


As with the original Mavens, the Maven Ultimate gets titanium caliper hardware in place of the stainless steel bolts on the Maven Silver, but the calipers are functionally identical otherwise. The Maven Bronze caliper forgoes the banjo fitting on the higher-end versions for a non-adjustable inline fitting. The Maven Base, which already had four 18 mm caliper pistons and doesn’t use a swinglink cam in the lever, carries over unchanged.
Some Questions / Things We’re Curious About
(1) A lot of folks, myself included, found a lot to like about the original Mavens, but didn’t get along as well with their lever feel. Have the new Mavens really maintained the excellent power of the old ones while making big improvements in feel and modulation?
(2) How do the new lever and cam perform in the first-generation brakes, with their bigger caliper pistons? Is the power bump noticeable? And how does the lever feel shake out?
Bottom Line (For Now)
The updates to the new Mavens sound great on paper, and we’ll have some impressions on them up on the site very soon. Stay tuned to find out how the new brakes stack up and how the lever upgrade kit performs in the original versions.
