Forget the what siz...
 

[Closed] Forget the what size wheel debate....

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Has anyone else suddenly realised that there's been a silent revolution in steerer size? Whilst we've all been worried about 26" wheels becoming obsolete the manufacturers have been slowly and surely removing the old straight 1-1/8" steerer option from all of the their "trail" and "enduro" forks.

I have an alpine 160 that I'm particularly fond of that has developed a problem with the Fox 36's....seems like my only options for replacements are BOS, X-Fusion and Marzocchi. I'm not slagging their offerings more a general observation that whilst needlessly worrying about 26" future compatibility and supply, a bunch of suspension manufacturers have quietly discontinued support of the 1-1/8" standard....


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:22 pm
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I think most of us have, yes.


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:24 pm
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yup what he said


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:27 pm
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I think most of us have, yes.

...and embraced it all


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:28 pm
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Yup, you aren't the only one to notice.


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:36 pm
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Yes we've noticed. It will be used forks for me for a while yet. I have a straight steerer frame yet to be built up.


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 12:38 pm
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Yep, it was part of the reason I caved in and bought a completely new bike. As much as I hate being a lackey to the marketing men who have made an infinite number of minuscule 'improvements', nothing on my old bike was upgradeable.

For an average trail/mountain biker

While 1 1/8" straight used to be gnarly enough, now I need tapered.
While 20 mm maxle used to be lightweight enough, now I need 15 mm.
While HT2 outboard bearings used to be stiff enough, now I need press-fit.
While a QR rear wheel used to be stiff enough, now I need 13somethign mm bolt-through.
While wheels used to be round and approx 26" in diameter, now they don't roll well enough and I need a 29er or 650b.


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 11:32 pm
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Now that explains why my bike looks funny I thought it was just a way to make the bike slacker by using a spacer in the steerer


 
Posted : 18/06/2014 11:55 pm