Some of the Trek hybrids and comfort bikes have springs in the brakes to make the mushy. They just never will feel solid like a good brake should.
Oil is good, grease is better.
2007 Peter Mooney w/S&S couplers/Terry Butterfly
1993 Bridgestone MB-3/Avocet O2 Air 40W
1980 Columbus Frame with 1970 Campy parts
1954 Raleigh 3-speed/Brooks B72
Those springs are only on the Navigators and maybe some of the lower level hybrids like the 7000, but not sure. A 7.6fx should have good solid brakes.
I think the idea on the Navigators is to soften the power of the front brake so people can't send themselves over the handlebars. Those bikes are made for occassional riders.
Oil is good, grease is better.
2007 Peter Mooney w/S&S couplers/Terry Butterfly
1993 Bridgestone MB-3/Avocet O2 Air 40W
1980 Columbus Frame with 1970 Campy parts
1954 Raleigh 3-speed/Brooks B72
When I bought my commuter project, a Fuji Newest 3, the brakes were horrible. Tectro cheapos with cheap pads, crummy rims and those 'cyclocross' bar top levers didn't make matters better. So when I changed out stuff with my left over parts, I kept the brakes but lost the bar-top levers, changed the brake pads to Koolstops, switched the cable housing to Shimano, and put on my spare wheelset with Mavic rims and braking feel improved dramatically. I was going to buy brakes at some point, but now I don't have to. They work fine. I suspect the biggest improvement was dumping the crap pads for the Koolstops; the salmon wet/dry up front, and the standard black in the rear.
I see the Trek has Tectro brakes- I would suggest changing out the pads with Swisstop or Koolstops as the Tectro pads suck IMO.
Tzvia- rollin' slow...
Specialized Ruby Expert/mens Bontrager Inform RXL
Specialized SWorks Safire/mens Bontrager Inform RL
Giant Anthem-W XT-XTR/mens Bontrager Inform RXL
Fuji Newest 3 commuter/mens Bontrager Inform RL
Novara E.T.A commuter/mens Bontrager Inform RL
I have koolstop salmon on my Tektros. Loooooooove them.
Catrin, if it's only that the two bikes feel different don't worry about changing anything. But if your Trek (it's what, 3 months old?) doesn't stop when you want it too and you're whaling on the brakes but the bike is still rolling, then you will want to do something about it.
Did you take the Trek in to get its cables adjusted a month or so after you bought it?
When the cables on a new bike stretch, things can get sloppy.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Since getting used to caliper brakes (on my road bike and mixtes), v-brakes feel mushy... I think it has to do with the amount of cable travel. Your surly has canti brakes, right? Those are shorter pull than the v-brakes on the trek, and probably account for the difference..