MikeD
Senior Retro Guru
However, the Pahoehoe is an alu ("freeride") hardtail
Or is that not what you meant? ;-)
However, the Pahoehoe is an alu ("freeride") hardtail
MikeD":1jkv30su said:However, the Pahoehoe is an alu ("freeride") hardtail
Or is that not what you meant? ;-)
MikeD":132h62xw said:Fair enough Although I don't think you mean "mutually exclusive" ;-)
I don't think it'll be a problem. The Pahoehoe's not all that beefy. Besides, what you attach to the front won't make much difference to how the back behaves ;-)
You seem to know quite a lot about what I think, mean and want to say.
The overall feel of the bike will change with a rigid fork, and a rigid frame with little or no bump compliance will feel even more harsh with a rigid fork. We are talking about the overall feel of the ride and not just how what you throw on the front will affect the way the rear reacts to bumps.
I'm simply pointing out a possible downside for him to consider.
Yes, it's identical to a Kula (ie., in current Kona nomenclature it would be called a Kula de Luxe, just as the Muni Mula became the Kula) and it's a very light frame designed as an XC race bike.jupiter":142qujks said:I'm going for the Salsa fork (still don't really trust carbon for forks, daft I'm sure). As for the frame, it's easton ultralite same as the Kula of the same year just built up with cheaper/burlier parts.