The New Balance FuelCell SuperComp Trainer v3 is a 47 mm stack, 6 mm drop, 295 g plated trainer that retails in India at ₹17,995. This review is built like a checklist: each spec, each use case, each decision point laid out in order so you can decide whether this is the right shoe for your training week before you spend the money. Read every step. Skip none. The protocol matters because plated trainers are easy to misuse, and a misused trainer is worse than no trainer at all.
Step 1: Confirm the shoe matches your goal
Before any review can help, define what you are trying to do. Plated trainers are a specific tool. They are not daily trainers, not racers, not recovery shoes. They sit in the middle of a three-shoe rotation and absorb the workload that bridges easy mileage and race day.
Ask yourself three questions in order. First, are you training for a half marathon or longer? Second, do you run at least one structured workout each week — tempo, threshold, or progression long run? Third, do you already own a softer daily trainer? If you answered yes to all three, the SuperComp Trainer v3 fits a real role in your week. If not, your money is better placed elsewhere. Start with our gear shoes index to identify the right category before drilling into models.
Why the 47 mm stack matters for Indian conditions
India's road surfaces vary wildly. The same Sunday long run can move from smooth tarmac to broken patchwork to concrete service lanes within 5 km. A 47 mm heel stack absorbs more of that variation than a 30 mm trainer can. For runners building a long-run habit on roads that punish your joints, the cushioning is not a luxury. It is a tool for staying healthy across an 18-week marathon block.
Step 2: Understand what the verified specs tell you
The numbers matter only when read together. Here is what the spec sheet says and what each number means in practice.
Stack heights are 47 mm at the heel and 41 mm at the forefoot, giving a 6 mm drop. The midsole pairs FuelCell PEBA with EVA, providing a softer, bouncier ride than a single-density EVA foam. The Energy Arc plate runs through the midsole. Weight is 295 g per shoe, which is heavier than a pure race shoe but light for a shoe this stacked. Retail price in India is ₹17,995.
What the 6 mm drop means for your stride
A 6 mm drop sits in the middle of the modern spectrum. Runners coming from traditional 10 mm trainers may feel a stretch in the calves and Achilles during the first week. Build into the shoe gradually. Use it for 5 km easy runs in the first week, 8 to 10 km easy runs in the second week, and only introduce workouts in the third week. Calf and Achilles tendons need adaptation time. Rushing the transition is the single most common reason runners get injured in plated trainers.
Step 3: Place the shoe in your weekly rotation
A well-designed rotation has three roles. A soft daily trainer for easy days. A plated or firmer shoe for workouts and long runs. A race shoe for race day. The SuperComp Trainer v3 fills the second role.
For a runner training for a half marathon or marathon in India, a sensible weekly use looks like this. One tempo or threshold session in the SuperComp Trainer v3. One long run in the SuperComp Trainer v3, especially once the run exceeds 18 km. All easy runs in your softer daily trainer. Race day in your race shoe.
When to swap in the SuperComp Trainer v3 versus a daily trainer
Use a simple rule: any run above marathon pace plus 30 seconds per km goes in the plated trainer. Slower runs go in your daily trainer. This protects the plate from being asked to do work it is not designed for — pushing through slow, shuffling steps — and protects your legs from absorbing race-day stiffness on recovery days. If you do not yet own a daily trainer, treat that as a prerequisite before this purchase. Our shoe comparison tool helps you pair shoes intelligently rather than buying overlap.
Step 4: Decide which Indian runners benefit most
The SuperComp Trainer v3 is most useful for three specific runner profiles. First, half marathon and marathon trainees who already log 40 to 60 km per week and need a workout shoe with more cushioning than a race-day flat. Second, runners who race in a carbon-plate shoe and want a training shoe with a similar feel for race-pace work. Third, heavier runners over 75 kg who need maximum cushioning without sacrificing responsiveness on tempo days.
If you are running 20 km a week and just starting out, this is not the shoe to start with. Start with a softer, simpler trainer and graduate into the SuperComp Trainer v3 once your mileage justifies it. Our STRIDD plan generator sets training volume and lets you pair shoes to phases.
Heat and humidity considerations
The FuelCell PEBA foam responds to heat. In Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata summers, the foam softens marginally on long runs above 30°C, which can feel mushier than expected. Plan long runs for sunrise or post-sunset windows during May to September. The shoe performs at its design intent in 15 to 25°C ranges — exactly the conditions of most major Indian marathons in October to February.
Step 5: Compare against the field before buying
The SuperComp Trainer v3 competes against the Saucony Endorphin Speed 4, Asics Magic Speed 4, Hoka Mach X 2, and Puma Deviate Nitro 3 in the plated-trainer category. Each has different geometry, drop, and ride feel. Our super-shoe comparison for 2026 and the dedicated New Balance shoe archive sit one click away. Read both before deciding.
Three filters to apply in your comparison. Drop preference: 6 mm is moderate, lower than most rivals. Weight preference: 295 g is mid-pack for plated trainers. Foam character: PEBA-EVA blend is bouncier than pure EVA, less aggressive than full PEBA race foams. Match the shoe to your stride, not to the marketing.
Where to buy in India
New Balance India sells through their flagship online site and selected offline stores in Bengaluru, Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, and Chennai. Tata Cliq Luxury and Decathlon stock select models. Always verify the model number on the box matches the SuperComp Trainer v3 spec — the v2 is still in circulation at discounts and is a different shoe with different geometry.
Step 6: Build the plan that uses the shoe
A shoe is only as useful as the training plan around it. The SuperComp Trainer v3 earns its place when your week has a workout that needs it. If you do not yet have a structured plan, the shoe will sit underused, the price-to-value ratio will collapse, and you will wonder what the fuss was about.
Build the plan first. Buy the shoe to serve the plan. Start with the STRIDD plan generator, set your race goal, and let the weekly structure tell you when a plated trainer earns its place in your rotation. Pair this review with our broader gear coverage, and the SuperComp Trainer v3 becomes a clear yes-or-no decision rather than an impulse buy.