If you order that, pick me up a REAL MAN SADDLE too.El_Chimichanga said:How about this one? Looks like it would work pretty good. I think I can order it direct.
Torque Wrench
If you order that, pick me up a REAL MAN SADDLE too.El_Chimichanga said:How about this one? Looks like it would work pretty good. I think I can order it direct.
Torque Wrench
Thats a given for Don, but the Snack pack thing is really funnybiker3 said:Okay its for certain, you have no life.
Brian :nuts:Brian HCM#1 said:Thats a given for Don, but the Snack pack thing is really funny
I do when my life and limb is depending on it. I don't "torque check" either. I just use it for assembly. Torque checking leads to over torqued bolts and breakage. It was $70 for a Craftsman micro torque wrench and $20 for the beam style for cranks and stuff. Cheap insurance I think.ChrisRobin said:Who the christ actually checks every single bolt with a torque wrench???
That is awesome. I wish I had a picture of my Go-Ride belt buckle, it's off the hook. Maybe tomorrow.Curb Hucker said:pffft get with the times Kevin, If youre cool like me you already have the Go-ride Snackpak, Go-Ride Liquor, and Go-Ride Hydraulic Oil
Yes ,can we also say Avalanche, "Fork" poof,and made in USA ...dhtahoe said:It seems to me no matter who makes a DH fork it has to have a design flaw or two because we want a affordable DH fork. Then someone like Fox develops a sick DH fork that works and has REAL metal parts in it, and everyone bitches about price.
Sorry, but what does "fork" poof mean? and why is fork in quotes? I'm sure you meant something when you typed that, I just can't figure it out.gus said:Yes ,can we also say Avalanche, "Fork" poof,and made in USA ...
i think he's trying to say it has no faults, despite it being heavier than every single race fork....El_Chimichanga said:Sorry, but what does "fork" poof mean? and why is fork in quotes? I'm sure you meant something when you typed that, I just can't figure it out.
Seedy race car garage lingo (at better shops, the kind that has hot chili going on in the back" i.e. Carol Shelby) ,for stuff amateur race mechanics can work on w/o tourqe wrenches and not F_cK up...but yes get torque wrenches ..good luck..El_Chimichanga said:Sorry, but what does "fork" poof mean? and why is fork in quotes? I'm sure you meant something when you typed that, I just can't figure it out.
problem is a 3 piece structure isnt efficient. You can get alot more strength from a one-piece unit, you just have to design the damn thing right.ioscope said:I don't think cast lowers are a good idea at all. Look at their problems: braces break, dropouts break, one-peice non-rebuildable. With older forks, and USD forks, the dropouts, brace (on old monsters for instance) and outer legs are different parts, so if one ****s up, it can be replaced. Same old stroy with cryofit stantions.
Oh what I should have said was race fork. Not Scaled down moto fork that only people who sit down and let their bikes ride them. A fork that fit three things:gus said:Yes ,can we also say Avalanche, "Fork" poof,and made in USA ...
And people bitch about fork prices now! Yeah lets go back to hand machining fork legs. Then we can have $2100 dollar Mr T's again. Remember back in 96-99 when RS and zokes made the first DC DH forks. Remember why we could not get them. BECAUSE IT WAS NOT COST EFFECTIVE!!!ioscope said:I don't think cast lowers are a good idea at all. Look at their problems: braces break, dropouts break, one-peice non-rebuildable. With older forks, and USD forks, the dropouts, brace (on old monsters for instance) and outer legs are different parts, so if one ****s up, it can be replaced. Same old stroy with cryofit stantions.
Aren't stratos forks all machined? I'd show you a close up pic of the lowers, but crap I can't find my fork...I think it is hiding under some used tires, keeping them company.dhtahoe said:.... Yeah lets go back to hand machining fork legs...
And they are just about out of business.Bacardi said:Aren't stratos forks all machined? I'd show you a close up pic of the lowers, but crap I can't find my fork...I think it is hiding under some used tires, keeping them company.
they are pretty stiff for wrap-around / bolt on arch...
Nope, I stay up all night playing halo with Transcenddhtahoe said:Do you ever sleep young man???
now now, you know thats theres more than just pure manufacturing costs involved.BigHit-Maniac said:Bike parts in general are an absolute RIP OFF. You know damn right a derailleur only costs the company about $5.00 each to make, yet they charge $55-$200 for them. (just an example).
I know from an inside source that a 2005 888 costs less than $200 to manufactur, yet they charge $1,500 + for the damned things.
So why doesn't Marzocchi just sell $400 forks for a 100% profit direct to consumers?? They'd make millions!!!!Brian Peterson said:As for your $200 figure to produce a 888... I would love to question your source.... But remember, everybody involved needs to make a profit to stay in business. It starts with Marz Italy and goes all the way to the bike shop you make the purchase from. If someone along the line isn't making money, they end up out of business. Basic econ there.
Brian
Hey Brian, I know you work for Marz. I heard it from a guy that has good connections with a Marz rep. He owns a bike shop, and shared the info with me. It may be wrong for all I know, but I do know that there's a considerable mark-up on the forks especially. There's definitely a point of high prices, and insane prices. I could see maybe an 888 asking price at around $850, but not $1,500 +.Brian Peterson said:Wow... I wish we had the kind of margins they see in the medical, insurance, electronics, or jewlery industries.... So does the guy who runs your LBS...
Think about this..... Walk by a jewlery store in the mall.... You will constantly see 50 to 70% off sales... How do you take that much off a price and still stay in business? Volume? Maybe, but doubtful.... High margin to start with? More likely....
As for your $200 figure to produce a 888... I would love to question your source.... But remember, everybody involved needs to make a profit to stay in business. It starts with Marz Italy and goes all the way to the bike shop you make the purchase from. If someone along the line isn't making money, they end up out of business. Basic econ there.
Brian
Um, dude, you're talking to RIDEMONKEY. You really don't want an answer to that question, do you?Brian Peterson said:How anxious would you guys be to shell out money for a product if a picture on a website was all you had to base your purchase on?
True. And let's not forget the cost of tooling and machines used in the manufacturing process.Brian Peterson said:And Mike D comes through with basic econ lesson #2.... Thank you, sir.
Brian
Well, MSRP on an 04 888RC with standard crowns is $1149. Now, what a shop sells it for is their business. If a shop needs to sell a fork at $1500, they may have some high overhead they have to cover.BigHit-Maniac said:Hey Brian, I know you work for Marz. I heard it from a guy that has good connections with a Marz rep. He owns a bike shop, and shared the info with me. It may be wrong for all I know, but I do know that there's a considerable mark-up on the forks especially. There's definitely a point of high prices, and insane prices. I could see maybe an 888 asking price at around $850, but not $1,500 +.
I apologize if *I* was off, I was just going by what I heard.
And here's more advanced econ #1...Repack said:It sounds like people are getting fixed and variable cost confused. It may only cost $200 for machine time, man hours, and materials, but than you have to factor in the $millions (or whatever) spent developing the product and building the machines.
Its like software or video games. I heard that it cost $40million to develop GTA San Andrea's. It probably costa less than $1 to actaully makes the disc. Price is a function of production costs and estimated lifespan. Forks change too often to allow volume to drop the selling price. Its not like cell phones getting cheaper. Verizon (or whoever) does not have to go out and develop new cell towers and replace them every few years.
Brian Peterson said:Zedro,
I read on the internet that if you stick your front wheel between your legs and grab the bars, it makes for a lot of fork flex with inverted forks....
Brian
Touche...MikeD said:Um, dude, you're talking to RIDEMONKEY. You really don't want an answer to that question, do you?
How many pre-orders for the original 888s did you have??
(btw, I'm on an 888 now...had my first ride yesterday, and I have to say I'm impressed. I frankly liked my Manitous better in 02 or so...but the 888 is certainly a breed apart. It just eats **** up.)
I think it is fair to say that almost every product out has it own little "things" you learn to work with. Too often the train of thought seems to be that if Product A worked a certain way, product B works the same way.El_Chimichanga said:Hey Brian, in all reality, how much have you seen this sort of thing on 888's versus other forks? (i.e Super T with QR20+ as the example sean gave us)
I know that I had a pair of boxxers that stripped out when my buddy at a bike shop was working on them, so it's not like it only happens to 888's. I was just curious if I should put a shim or something in there to prevent this from happening.
Also, have you guys looked into doing what Fox did with the pinch bolts on the 36 and 40? I thought that was pretty trick.