mechanical_vandal
Retro Guru
I bought a FireEye Flame frame off here a little while ago and had built it with a Pace RC41 150mm travel fork (frame specs say between 130 and 150mm travel fork*) but that fork leaked both oil and air so got sent back to the seller. Refund should clear into my paypal account soon.
*I also need a straight 1 1/8 steerer at least 180mm long, would prefer IS disc mount and 9mm QR dropouts
I then bought a Rockshox Tora U-turn fork which looks great, seals and stanchions and everything seem really good but I'm way too heavy (200+ lbs) for the spring in it.
I have a few options and can't decide between them,
1. Buy an extra firm spring for the Tora bringing the total spend for that fork to just a bit over £100.
2. I've been offered a '3 rides old' Fox Vanilla RLC 130mm travel fork on another forum for £120 plus postage but the seller of this reckons it'll need the foam rings re-oiling so I think I'd be another £20 or so in oil, crush washers etc. I've not seen this fork and it's in London but the seller isn't so looking at £160ish (which is pushing the envelope on my budget to it's furthest I think) plus a couple week wait for this option.
3. Buy another fork from ebay. I reckon I'd be better getting an air fork so I can tune it for my weight but I really can't be bothered with another leaky/otherwise problematic fork. I'm struggling to find forks that suit my requirements and match my condition/quality to price ratio. Marzocchi forks appeal to me as I've heard they are easy to work on yourself and I'm watching a couple but they are either purely coil with good damping or Dirt Jumpers that are coil with air preload but supposedly have crap damping that doesn't deal well with actual trail riding. I'm coming from riding nothing but rigids since I got back into mtbing though so not sure I'm going to notice crap damping? There's a DJ2 going for £75 or best offer posted so the price is definitely right on them. I'm not opposed to buying a bolt through fork but if I do that then I need to buy a new hub/wheel which eats into the budget. Same story with a post mount, it'd mean using an adaptor and a larger rotor so that nibbles the budget too.
Am I being unrealistic in expecting to find a decent quality, non-buggered, long travel fork for around £100?
Is the Tora a half decent option given my budget? It seems to get a good right up on bikeradar.
*I also need a straight 1 1/8 steerer at least 180mm long, would prefer IS disc mount and 9mm QR dropouts
I then bought a Rockshox Tora U-turn fork which looks great, seals and stanchions and everything seem really good but I'm way too heavy (200+ lbs) for the spring in it.
I have a few options and can't decide between them,
1. Buy an extra firm spring for the Tora bringing the total spend for that fork to just a bit over £100.
2. I've been offered a '3 rides old' Fox Vanilla RLC 130mm travel fork on another forum for £120 plus postage but the seller of this reckons it'll need the foam rings re-oiling so I think I'd be another £20 or so in oil, crush washers etc. I've not seen this fork and it's in London but the seller isn't so looking at £160ish (which is pushing the envelope on my budget to it's furthest I think) plus a couple week wait for this option.
3. Buy another fork from ebay. I reckon I'd be better getting an air fork so I can tune it for my weight but I really can't be bothered with another leaky/otherwise problematic fork. I'm struggling to find forks that suit my requirements and match my condition/quality to price ratio. Marzocchi forks appeal to me as I've heard they are easy to work on yourself and I'm watching a couple but they are either purely coil with good damping or Dirt Jumpers that are coil with air preload but supposedly have crap damping that doesn't deal well with actual trail riding. I'm coming from riding nothing but rigids since I got back into mtbing though so not sure I'm going to notice crap damping? There's a DJ2 going for £75 or best offer posted so the price is definitely right on them. I'm not opposed to buying a bolt through fork but if I do that then I need to buy a new hub/wheel which eats into the budget. Same story with a post mount, it'd mean using an adaptor and a larger rotor so that nibbles the budget too.
Am I being unrealistic in expecting to find a decent quality, non-buggered, long travel fork for around £100?
Is the Tora a half decent option given my budget? It seems to get a good right up on bikeradar.