What is your favourite angle of dangle? Do you ever look at this as the headline figure to choose your bike, why? Do you run a 'slack' bike a frame size maybe a tad too small compared to the ideal jey-core fit?
Bike Forum
Looking for a fight, why do you care about headangle on your trail bike?
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Posted 1 year ago #
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Poor troll.
Posted 1 year ago # -
68 deg 130mm travel, just suits the way i ride.
Posted 1 year ago # -
no favourite number without a fork length to go with it, but i know how i like a bike to feel so that's all i'd look for, the chance that it's close to 'right'.
slack = confident. you can have too much of both and some need more than others.
"Do you ever look at this as the headline figure to choose your bike, why?" - i hope not as printed angles aren't much use in reality
Posted 1 year ago # -
69.078656799 does me.
Posted 1 year ago # -
45 degrees here
Posted 1 year ago # -
Posted 1 year ago # -
Posted 1 year ago #
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Meaningless unless you know the offset or the trail figure.
Posted 1 year ago # -

24.5 and guaranteed to be faster than the average STW'er
Posted 1 year ago # -
no idea what mine are
so no, I don't care
Posted 1 year ago # -
72° as I like toe overlap.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Mine's 71 on my do-it-all bike. Could do with being a bit slacker but it's fine now I'm riding with proper technique.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Rather depends on what I am riding. Hardtail is about 70 degrees through to 224 at 64 with a spectrum in between. Horses for courses.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Just to be different I think the seat angle makes more difference, & yes I enjoy a good fight
Posted 1 year ago # -
Blimey what a dreadful troll.
You could ride round it even with a 65 degree head angle.
IIRC Solamanda is the one that's obsessed with head angles
Posted 1 year ago # -
slack = confident. you can have too much of both and some need more than others.
Posted 1 year ago # -
On which axis are you measuring from?
22 Degrees from horizontal for me....Posted 1 year ago # -
it's not the angle i care about as such,
i do care about the weight share between the front and rear wheel, and the amount of 'trail'. and etc.
all of these things are affected by head angle, so as a quick guide it's a useful number.
i'm not very good at riding bikes, i need all the help i can get, a steep and racey xc bike may climb like a goat, but will give me the willies if i point one downhill - in no small part because of all the weight the geometry places over the front wheel.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Never mind frame head-angle and fork length - what about tyre size, tyre pressure, amount of headset spacers, length and rise of stem, rise of bars..... these are all things that matter if you want to be successful and attract girls.
Posted 1 year ago # -
I don't care about any measurements, materials or components on bikes. I just trawl scrap yards searching for random lumps of tubing that I can sit on, drag it to the top of a hill, kick off with my feet and hope that gravity does the rest. On muddy days I tend to just sit there, stuck, but at least it gets me out of the house.
Posted 1 year ago # -
IIRC Solamanda is the one that's obsessed with head angles
Not really. I've noticed a pattern with riders using bikes a size too small wanting a slacker headangle. One might think they'd get the same feeling from the correct sized (longer) bike as that allows them to get the weight further back and achieve the same stability on steeper terrain.
Posted 1 year ago # -
Weight further back might not give you stability, it makes the front end light and wandery.
Posted 1 year ago # -
David are you talking about me? :-)The larger size frame is like a barge, TT is too long and I'm not actaully very tall, just have long legs and short body.
My pitch now has to do everything, so the ability to wind my forks out for a fairly slack head angle is great for DH. As a bonus it makes me very fashionable in conjuction with my a camelback!
Posted 1 year ago # -
David are you talking about me?
Not specifically but to be fair you're using your trail bike for uplift days!
Posted 1 year ago # -
Soon to be my only bike, bar the commuter.
Posted 1 year ago #
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