Re: Re:
ishaw":1tfsnh48 said:
I've got a s works enduro which might work as it has an adjustable linkage which adjusts the geometry/bb height. With longer forks up front/bigger wheel, might the useful.
Fork/frame compatibility will be your biggest challenge. Most retroish frames have 1 1/8 straight steers. Most decent 27.5 forks are tapered.
I'm currently doing a bit of reading into the Marin TARA system on the older Alpine Trail, which allows linkage adjustment for shock travel, and I'm wondering if that will provide a bit of bottom bracket/geometry adjustment, albeit with possibly a bit of travel sacrifice.
You're absolutely right though, choice of newer forks is drastically limited by a straight steer, and anything decent is pretty pricey. Rockshox seem to offer the most choice when shopping new, which is okay, but I'd prefer some Fox on the build. I'm still trawling through the bay for older options, but not finding too much at the moment. The forks could well be the sticking point of the whole affair.
shedobits":1tfsnh48 said:
Tried a 29er fork and wheel on my 26" on one 456, on paper it should have worked but the ride was a bit too like a chopper so I put things back as they were after just one long ride.
I figured, given the phenomenon seems to be 29/27.5, the 27.5/26 might work a bit better as the size difference is relative. The jump to 29/26 seems quite big. I can imagine that felt a bit chopper-ish.
shedobits":1tfsnh48 said:
I can still see the advantage of a big front wheel rolling over stuff
d8mok":1tfsnh48 said:
my mate had 26F 24R at the time on his Kona roast and always reckoned it was easier to jump and manual like that.
Supposedly there are a few advantages, but predominantly it comes down to grip and steering, bigger wheels offering more grip through contact and more wheel to roll over stuff, like shed says. Steering wise, in theory, bigger wheels on the front and smaller on the rear should oversteer, which is arguably easier to negotiate in fast corners than understeer. If you're going to throw yourself into a berm at silly speeds, it's probably better to lose the back wheel first, that way you can get some good drift into the corner, as oppose to losing the front wheel then reminiscing on the run in an A&E waiting room.
Jumping and manuals may be easier due to the shift in geometry - you'd have more clearance over the saddle, thus giving you more room to negotiate the jump take-off? I've never been able to manual very well at all, only when riding at speed, and even then, not for any real distance, this will likely be high up on my 'stuff to try out if/when I see this idea through' list!
The History Man":1tfsnh48 said:
:shock: Is this 29/26? It looks biiiiiiiig on the front. How does it ride? And how are you riding it? Those bars look relaxed (unless that's a perspective thing), but you've got the nobbles on?! Do you have an off-road commute, or is there something else happening here?
Max Headroom":1tfsnh48 said:
Interesting idea - not a new one, didn’t Cannondale do similar with 24 and 26 inch wheels?
Did they? I'll see what I can find - you can't remember what frame/year etc, can you?
S