This weekend at Schweitzer I got many good looks at the fork working on the course. It looked more active then any fork I have seen. Now i'm interested. does anyone know how much $$$ or when it's going to be available to normal people?
I read somewhere that it would be available sometime in October/November. As far as pricing, I haven't got the slightest idea. My best guess is that it would be around $1.4k.66 said:This weekend at Schweitzer I got many good looks at the fork working on the course. It looked more active then any fork I have seen. Now i'm interested. does anyone know how much $$$ or when it's going to be available to normal people?
LOL what kind of answers would you expect to hear from sponsored riders on fully custom, handbuilt prototypes?cali4niabiker said:EDIT: Or perhaps talk to the riders who have the fork? Specifically for pros/cons about the fork performance and comparision to other forks currently on the market....
How can you tell just watching the fork go by? Geometry, rider weight & position, line choice, CoG will all play huge rolls that will make just watching it pointless. Way to many variables to draw any kind of conclusion.66 said:nope. just watched it work. I have a little video that demonstrates it's action next to a couple other standards on the same spot. I also know how my dorado worked on the same spot. after this weekend, i think for next years bike will have the 888 or the fox.
Matt D said:How can you tell just watching the fork go by? Geometry, rider weight & position, line choice, CoG will all play huge rolls that will make just watching it pointless. Way to many variables to draw any kind of conclusion.
Yeah, but you are talking about Pros here.66 said:I'm not saying i have decided that the fork was good just from watching it. but i can say the front wheel was on the ground more of the time then others. it got my attention. say you have a Judy DH on bike 1 and a 888 on bike 2, both bikes ride past you and you watch the way the fork moves, could you tell which one would be a better fork?
Its not so much about the answers that will do the trick. Its a matter of knowing small things like "oh, we've had some problems with it and needs to be tuned..." Stuff like that will give you an idea of how reliable it is. People tend to be honest about it when you ask straight up.Bulldog said:LOL what kind of answers would you expect to hear from sponsored riders on fully custom, handbuilt prototypes?
LOL, how does a fork "look active" ?66 said:This weekend at Schweitzer I got many good looks at the fork working on the course. It looked more active then any fork I have seen. Now i'm interested. does anyone know how much $$$ or when it's going to be available to normal people?
cali4niabiker said:Its not so much about the answers that will do the trick. Its a matter of knowing small things like "oh, we've had some problems with it and needs to be tuned..." Stuff like that will give you an idea of how reliable it is. People tend to be honest about it when you ask straight up.
-CAbiker
are you asking a question or mocking me?Damn True said:LOL, how does a fork "look active" ?
cali4niabiker said:Its not so much about the answers that will do the trick. Its a matter of knowing small things like "oh, we've had some problems with it and needs to be tuned..." Stuff like that will give you an idea of how reliable it is. People tend to be honest about it when you ask straight up.
-CAbiker
A Boxxer looks pretty active when its damper is blown but I wouldn't say it's a good thing.66 said:are you asking a question or mocking me?
if you are asking a question, imagine watching the wheel pattern. it kinda goes up and down, right? maybe by active i mean, it goes up and down more.
66 said:are you asking a question or mocking me?
if you are asking a question, imagine watching the wheel pattern. it kinda goes up and down, right? maybe by active i mean, it goes up and down more.