What about the Birdy? You see them every now and then on german streets, about as frequent as you can spot a brompton. I'm still curious how it actually rides
What an awesome thread! Never knew there were so many designs of linkage forks. One omission though: The Lawwill Leader! First read about them in 1992, never saw one with my own eyes. I think they were later manufactured by Control Tech, no idea on the earlier models.
What about the Birdy? You see them every now and then on german streets, about as frequent as you can spot a brompton. I'm still curious how it actually rides
Although there's no reason for them not to work fine as a suspension fork, or at least take the edge off things, I think the main motivation on the Birdy was to get that pivot point on the leading link as far back as possible.
This allows the front wheel to get a good fold under the main frame without the pesky sideways hinge that Brompton etc have:
What an awesome thread! Never knew there were so many designs of linkage forks. One omission though: The Lawwill Leader! First read about them in 1992, never saw one with my own eyes. I think they were later manufactured by Control Tech, no idea on the earlier models.
The OP did mention them in passing, so I didn't put them on my list.
A familiar setup...here's mine on the RS-1 :
The original Lawwill Leaders had a welded or brazed steel fork legs, with the standard shock mounted onto a pivot on the underside of the handlebar stem and a swingarm linkage at the crown to control fore/aft movement.
The paired, but out-of-parallel and different length linkages give a vertical axle path, so almost no change in trail throughout travel.1990/91
This changed to the machined crown, linkages and aluminium legs of the Leader2 when Control Tech got on board. Proprietary shock rigidly mounted to the crown, with a pivot/eye at the bottom of the shock:1992
Then there is the Leader3, which is pretty similar except for the side plate trunnion mounting for the shock, so now has a rigid unicrown front fork, with a pivot on the shock body to allow it to rock fore/aft slightly during travel. More rigid and avoids the side loadings on the shock shaft:
Mert Lawwill ran a few different brands of disc brake on his prototypes, including Shimano and MountainCycles ProStop.
The one on the blue RS-1/Leader2 is the later Hope mechanical that Fisher adopted for their bike, rather than the p**s poor ProStop that was used at the start of production.
I think they are all Risse shocks.
The Leader2 one at least...Risse serviced mine only a few years ago and were happy to see it still working after almost 30 years.
Love it! Thanks for the comprehensive overview, definitely my favorite linkage fork (albeit just from the looks). I remember being baffled by the Fisher RS 1, that looked like the future.