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Reebok Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料
Reebok's Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料 is a great example of a gravel shoe (Photo: 101 Degrees West)

What the Heck Is a Gravel Running Shoe and Do I Need a Pair?

Reebok鈥檚 Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料 delivers a road-shoe ride with just enough toughness for dirt

Published:  Updated: 
Reebok Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料
(Photo: 101 Degrees West)

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Reebok Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料 Review

MSRP: $120
Weight: 8.1 ounces () / 9.6 ounces ()
Stack Height:听26.5-millimeter heel / 17.5-millimeter forefoot / 9-millimeter drop

In the cycling world, no one would mistake a mountain bike for a road racer, but, to the untrained eye, it鈥檚 hard to tell the difference between a road bike and a gravel bike. Which makes sense, given that gravel roads are still roads, and they share many characteristics with their paved counterparts, so bikes designed for them should too. Both dirt and paved roads are leveled, smoothed, and mostly absent large obstacles, holes or extreme turns or slopes requiring drastically different frames, handlebars, suspensions, and tires. What differs is the surface, mandating subtle modifications in tread, ride, geometries, and toughness. All of the above could also be said about gravel shoes, a new category that might be best represented by Reebok鈥檚 new Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料.

Up until recently, no one talked about gravel shoes. The closest were trail models whose ride was smooth enough on roads that runners would be happy wearing them from door to trail and back. But most of these cross-over听models felt more comfortable scrambling up hills than on the smooth and level, like a mountain bike with slightly less knobby tires. This year, however, several brands are taking cues from the gravel biking boom by marketing shoes designed specifically for running on gravel roads and paths.

鈥淭he outdoor industry is growing massively,鈥 says Keith Stern, senior product manager at Reebok. 鈥淏ut most people aren鈥檛 going for super-heavy trails. Most are doing light hiking, and a mix of road and light trail running.鈥 The FE4 国产吃瓜黑料 was created for this customer, a shoe that can go off-road, but not very far off, and excels on any smooth surface, whether gravel, dirt, or pavement.

At the shoe鈥檚 core is the same midsole as found in the Floatride Energy 4 road trainer: 26.5 millimeters in the heel and 17.5 millimeters in the forefoot of Reebok鈥檚 Floatride Energy foam鈥攁 TPE-based blend with a soft-and-bouncy ride reminiscent of Boost midsoles, without the weight penalty. Around that midsole, Stern says, 鈥淲e wanted to add only what you need for that light trail.鈥

On the bottom, a nearly full-coverage, grippy-rubber outsole echoes gravel bike tire tread, with smaller, tightly-spaced lugs in the center for a smooth roll on firm sections, and larger鈥攂ut still shallow鈥攍ugs on the perimeter for digging in when needed. On top, the upper is made of a flexible and airy, yet rugged, ripstop mesh made of 100 percent听recycled plastic, with light printed lines reinforcing abrasion-prone areas, and a substantial bumper of sole rubber wrapped up and around the toe. Minimal structure and padding around the heel and collar keep the weight down and the fit close to the foot.

Reebok Floatride Energy 4 国产吃瓜黑料
(Photo: 101 Degrees West)

Since I live four miles from the nearest pavement on the dirt backroads of western Nebraska’s high plains, I have the perfect venue for testing a shoe designed for gravel. I鈥檝e worn the FE 4 国产吃瓜黑料 every day for a week now, mostly on easy runs, with one a bit longer and a few that included up-tempo segments鈥攍ike the morning I got chased by two badgers (you can鈥檛 make this stuff up). I also took them into the Sandhills one day for a less-groomed surface underfoot, following pickup double-tracks between windmills.

Knowing my gravel roads aren鈥檛 always perfectly smooth and stable, I was initially leery of how soft and unstructured the midsole was on the FE4 国产吃瓜黑料. But the softness turned out to add to the shoe鈥檚 agility, as the combination of a relatively low stack height, deep compression, and bouncy firmness at the bottom of the cushioning delivered a sure-footed, stable ground feel. The softness of the foam also created smooth touchdowns on the beveled heel, and its flexibility in the forefoot鈥攔are in the age of rockers鈥攌ept my feet connected and engaged through toe-off. The active ground feel was almost minimalist, but with a soft, contour-coddling landing.

The shoes felt entirely comfortable on hard-packed sections, and the tread had enough bite to dance over loose gravel and sandy spots without drama. When I headed for the hills, the flexible sole continued to handle banked landings and rough footing, but the upper鈥檚 flexibility and roominess left me worried about sliding off. The hold, however, was perfectly adequate on the more groomed surfaces for which it was intended, and, in that context, its light weight, gentle wrap and exceptional breathability were heartily welcomed.

I was able to pick up the pace in the FE4 国产吃瓜黑料, but I wouldn鈥檛 choose them for speed workouts or race day, and the forefoot started to feel a bit too close to the ground when I went past an hour in them. But I鈥檇 reach for them regularly for short to medium-distance runs on any surface where I鈥檇 ride a gravel bike.

Thus, they hit their mark, leaving only the question: who needs a gravel shoe? A road shoe can work on gravel, and might be all you need if you only occasional step off the pavement. But it wouldn鈥檛 be as sure-footed off-road, or as durable, so if you spend much time on the dirt, the FE 4 国产吃瓜黑料 could be worth a look. And at $120, they鈥檙e a downright bargain, particularly for a shoe this versatile.

Check Out the FE4 国产吃瓜黑料 If: You do most of your miles on gravel roads or smooth dirt trails and prefer the ride of a lightweight, low-profile, flexible road shoe.


Similar Models:

Altra Outroad ($140)

Weight:听8.8 ounces () / 10.2 ounces ()
Stack Height:听27-millimeter heel / 27-millimeter forefoot / 0-millimeter drop

One step closer to a trail shoe, with a luggier outsole and slightly more protective and secure upper. Similar bouncy ground feel, with more foam under the forefoot.


On CloudVista ($140)

Weight:听8.4 ounces () / 10.0 ounces ()
Stack Height:听30-millimeter heel / 23-millimeter forefoot / 7-millimeter drop

One step closer to a road shoe, with a responsive, flexible-plated, quick-rolling ride, and minimal lugs on the outsole. Similar light, flexible, breathable upper with minimal control.


INOV-8 Parkclaw G 280 ($180)

奥别颈驳丑迟:听9.8 ounces ()
Stack Height:听29-millimeter heel / 21-millimeter forefoot / 8-millimeter drop

Mostly atrail shoe, with well-padded, snug-fitting upper and more aggressive lugs (although flat-faced and tightly-clustered enough to roll smoothly on the road). Similar flexible sole, with a somewhat firmer, responsive ride.


Hoka Kawana ($140)

Weight:听8.4 ounces () / 10.0 ounces ()
Stack Height:听27-millimeter heel / 22-millimeter forefoot / 5-millimeter drop (women’s)
30-millimeter heel / 25-millimeter forefoot / 5-millimeter drop (尘别苍鈥檚)

Mostly a road shoe with slightly reinforced outsole and upper. Similar soft-and-bouncy ride, with more foam underfoot. Narrower fit and less flexible forefoot roll.

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