Finally got a few rides on this thing and it's pretty amazing.
For the chassis; lots of fore/aft stiffness. Front wheel braking seems extra effective, like there is less chassis flex happening compared to a traditional fork.
Ran it through some rock gardens and did not notice any vagueness or deflection.
The air spring is very unique. Not only is it adjustable from 150-180mm in 1mm increments, but when you attach the pump it actually connects and equalizes the positive and negative air chambers. This lets you effectively adjust the negative chamber pressure. If you have it in the stand and attach a pump, it will equalize at full extension and have minimal negative pressure and top out slightly like a preloaded coil spring. If you attach it when the bike is on the ground, you can push down slightly and equalize the chambers at a slightly higher negative pressure/volume. This will make it feel more like a current Fox 36 air spring where the fork sags 10mm or so under it's own weight and is super soft off the top.
It comes with 3 different size caps for adjusting the positive chamber volume, running the lowest volume currently at 84psi and it's quite progressive.
Damper is in the middle for LSC, and wound pretty far out for rebound. Feels damn good, to the point that it makes the rear feel like crap (haven't had that from a fork in a long time). Currently testing out three different shock tunes and the fork is better than all of them. The damper is a sealed bladder type, have not pulled it apart yet.
$700 dollars cheaper and a pound and a half lighter than the dentists favorite "most advanced suspension fork".
For the chassis; lots of fore/aft stiffness. Front wheel braking seems extra effective, like there is less chassis flex happening compared to a traditional fork.
Ran it through some rock gardens and did not notice any vagueness or deflection.
The air spring is very unique. Not only is it adjustable from 150-180mm in 1mm increments, but when you attach the pump it actually connects and equalizes the positive and negative air chambers. This lets you effectively adjust the negative chamber pressure. If you have it in the stand and attach a pump, it will equalize at full extension and have minimal negative pressure and top out slightly like a preloaded coil spring. If you attach it when the bike is on the ground, you can push down slightly and equalize the chambers at a slightly higher negative pressure/volume. This will make it feel more like a current Fox 36 air spring where the fork sags 10mm or so under it's own weight and is super soft off the top.
It comes with 3 different size caps for adjusting the positive chamber volume, running the lowest volume currently at 84psi and it's quite progressive.
Damper is in the middle for LSC, and wound pretty far out for rebound. Feels damn good, to the point that it makes the rear feel like crap (haven't had that from a fork in a long time). Currently testing out three different shock tunes and the fork is better than all of them. The damper is a sealed bladder type, have not pulled it apart yet.
$700 dollars cheaper and a pound and a half lighter than the dentists favorite "most advanced suspension fork".
Edge - Intend
One of a kind upside down fork for enduro riding. This fork will give you all the confidence you need for your next race or KOM hunt.
www.intend-bc.com