Re: Re:
I didn't know they were alloy. Thought they was made of them proper metals! :?
The would look great on the build that I'm doing, viewtopic.php?f=21&t=309354 , however, I've just seen a pair on eBay go for £170odd quid, so maybe I'll stick with the Manitou bouncy forks I already have.
Mike
rp16v":tksjfldy said:I just managed to pick il some bontrager switchblades in 26" alloy flavour definatley worth a look
I didn't know they were alloy. Thought they was made of them proper metals! :?
dyna-ti":tksjfldy said:Had Pace RC-31's and they were fine.
A little scary at first from listening to all the horror stories from people who had never ridden them but because youre concentrating on picking youre way through the rocks you soon forget theyre there. At that point you realize theyre fine.
They are designed to be strong and absorb the knocks and bumps. Im sure there were many horror stories when Alloy forks first made an appearance on the MTB scene :?
And yes they are considerable stiffer than the equivalent in metal
The would look great on the build that I'm doing, viewtopic.php?f=21&t=309354 , however, I've just seen a pair on eBay go for £170odd quid, so maybe I'll stick with the Manitou bouncy forks I already have.
Granted, however I did see a clip of the Roc d'Azur race on Eurosport the other night, where a rider was walking down a hill carrying his bike. He had snapped his headtube clean off it :shock: Wish I could get the clip to do a link. The frame was either alloy or Ti as it was bare metal. My point is, each material has it's good and bad characteristics.monty dog":tksjfldy said:Yup, carbon is terrible at resisting impacts, I mean if you tried this with alloy or steel, it would leave barely a scratch:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lsDXEEUlRE
Mike