alpinestar222
Devout Dirtbag
Hi,
I'm Hoping someone can advise me as I'm looking to put a new/old suspension fork on my Kona and I believe the Head angle to be around 71 degrees.
As it would originally have had an Indy C fitted at something between 60mm to 70mm travel would a 100mm travel be too much? or within the limits of turning it into a hog. I'm led to believe that the rule of thumb is 1 degree per inch increase in travel? this would leave me with an effective head angle of 69.6degrees (without sag)
Is anyone running a 100mm on a Cindercone? if so I'd be keen to hear how it rides.
I will probably get the answer "Get Project 2's" I know that would be the decent and honourable thing to do but I'm running my old Cro-Mega rigid and would like the kona to be sprung.
Having just sold up my downhill bike and gear at the weekend I am now fully converted back to hardtails, largely due to seeing some of the great bikes posted on this site and possibly that it just feels great to ride them.
I'm Hoping someone can advise me as I'm looking to put a new/old suspension fork on my Kona and I believe the Head angle to be around 71 degrees.
As it would originally have had an Indy C fitted at something between 60mm to 70mm travel would a 100mm travel be too much? or within the limits of turning it into a hog. I'm led to believe that the rule of thumb is 1 degree per inch increase in travel? this would leave me with an effective head angle of 69.6degrees (without sag)
Is anyone running a 100mm on a Cindercone? if so I'd be keen to hear how it rides.
I will probably get the answer "Get Project 2's" I know that would be the decent and honourable thing to do but I'm running my old Cro-Mega rigid and would like the kona to be sprung.
Having just sold up my downhill bike and gear at the weekend I am now fully converted back to hardtails, largely due to seeing some of the great bikes posted on this site and possibly that it just feels great to ride them.