ultrazenith
Senior Retro Guru
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A bit of a weird question, but are modern suspension forks any good? I've tried a set of Pace RC 36 this weekend, with disappointing results. Nowhere near enough damping of trail buzz (or cobble stone buzz), decent big hit performance and some extra traction on off road corners, and energy sapping compression when I've tried to sprint out of the saddle. In other words, the suspension didn't solve a problem I wanted to solve, solved one I didn't really care about anyway, and made riding a bit more boring since I'm no longer bothered about getting up for a quick sprint if half my energy's going to be wasted anyway.
However, RC36 is not exactly a great fork anyway, and technology must have moved on in the last 15-20 years. Right? I noticed some of my club ride mates also appeared to have vibrating wrists as well, despite having modern front suspension. Perhaps this is just inevitable - I'd guess it would be hard to make a fork that can damp small amplitude high frequency bumps AND low frequency high amplitude bumps?
All this has made me want to try a good old fashioned flex stem. No stiction, not much travel, no damping, just a bit of damping for those high frequency bumps / trail buzz that saps your energy. Watch this space.
However, RC36 is not exactly a great fork anyway, and technology must have moved on in the last 15-20 years. Right? I noticed some of my club ride mates also appeared to have vibrating wrists as well, despite having modern front suspension. Perhaps this is just inevitable - I'd guess it would be hard to make a fork that can damp small amplitude high frequency bumps AND low frequency high amplitude bumps?
All this has made me want to try a good old fashioned flex stem. No stiction, not much travel, no damping, just a bit of damping for those high frequency bumps / trail buzz that saps your energy. Watch this space.