joglo
Senior Retro Guru
Hi,
i would recommend to keep an eye on the height of the fork.
"fork that work" often mean for a lot of guys something different than 1st gen. or early suspension forks, but as the bike doesn't seem to be adopted yet to suspension forks with more travel than 1st gen forks, you may negatively influence the geometry and center of gravity etc.
Therefore my recommendation would be a fork with max. 60mm travel, ideally less and not higher than 44cm axis to top of crown.
Last but not least, why not trying to use something also time and catalog correct?
The team riders have used back in time RockShox Mag, this is typically 415 or 420mm max.
It was also officially available as an option
i would recommend to keep an eye on the height of the fork.
"fork that work" often mean for a lot of guys something different than 1st gen. or early suspension forks, but as the bike doesn't seem to be adopted yet to suspension forks with more travel than 1st gen forks, you may negatively influence the geometry and center of gravity etc.
Therefore my recommendation would be a fork with max. 60mm travel, ideally less and not higher than 44cm axis to top of crown.
Last but not least, why not trying to use something also time and catalog correct?
The team riders have used back in time RockShox Mag, this is typically 415 or 420mm max.
It was also officially available as an option
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