Terrain ahead. Riders behind. Both in view.

For gravel and trail riders

Terrain ahead. Riders behind. Both in view.

The new View Sharp pairs a high-contrast lens that sharpens the surface with TriEye’s largest-ever mirror for what’s behind.

See The View Sharp

Gravel punishes the look back

On washboard, your front wheel goes where your head goes.

Gravel demands your eyes: line choice, surface reading, the washout hiding in the shadow. Look back at the group strung out behind you and the front wheel starts negotiating with the loose stuff on its own.

And gravel is loud. Tires on stone erase the sound of everything behind you — the rider closing, the farm truck, your mate about to come past on the narrow line.

Why the usual tricks fail off tarmac

The look back

Half a second of not reading the surface, on the surface that punishes it most.

Riding on sound

Gravel under your own tires is louder than anything approaching from behind.

Waiting for the pass

Finding out where your group is only when someone appears beside you — on a line wide enough for one.

TriEye The View Sharp with high-contrast lens and the mirror integrated into the lens

The fix

The View Sharp: a bigger mirror, a sharper lens.

The View Sharp is the new generation of The View: an upgraded housing with TriEye’s largest mirror yet, integrated into the lens, angled once with a fingertip.

In front, the High Contrast lens lifts browns and greys apart so ruts, sand and washboard read early — while the mirror keeps the group, the dust cloud and the truck exactly where you can see them. Terrain ahead, riders behind, one pair of glasses.

See for yourself

This is what you see.

A rider seen in the TriEye lens mirror without turning the head
The rider behind me, in the corner of my lens — front wheel still reading the gravel.

Set it once. Then pick your line.

  1. 1

    Set the angle once

    A fingertip at the trailhead. It holds through washboard, roots and hike-a-bike.

  2. 2

    Glance, don’t gamble

    Check the group behind without surrendering the front wheel.

  3. 3

    Ride the narrow line

    Let riders past on your terms — you saw them coming half a kilometer ago.

From the gravel bunch

“Road riding forgives a look back. Gravel doesn’t. This is the first setup that gets that.”

A ride or two and the glance is instinct — exactly like a car mirror, minus the car.

What riders say

★★★★★ 4.8 · 790+ reviews
My second pair. I don’t know how I rode without these — one of the best cycling devices out there.
Chris W., Verified Buyer
The mirror is stable and keeps me from constantly looking behind me. So useful for road cycling.
brandon W., Verified Buyer
By far the best rear-view mirror I’ve found — it doesn’t get in the way and awareness is greatly improved.
Billy L., Verified Buyer

Read the surface. Know the group.

The View Sharp — the biggest TriEye mirror, in the lens, plus a lens built for terrain.

See The View Sharp

Free shipping · 30-day returns · 2-year warranty