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Hamer of Mountain Bike Forks?


velorush

Question

Posted

First off, I've been a roadie since my knees went out on me in 1989 (cycling worked to restore my running, but the way). I went into the local shop (BikeWorld in Paducah) to buy a mountain bike, but they wisely steered me toward a road bike as I lived all the way down town and would have had nowhere to ride a mountain bike. I've always had it in the back of my mind to give mountain biking a try, but my darned guitar habit always had me low on funds... :)

Fast forward to last week. There's a second hand shop a block down from work that gets in all kinds of items, typically bought in lots. He keeps a number of cheap used bikes for sale but occasionally there's a diamond in the rough to be found. The few worthwhile bikes he's had in were too small for me, but I continued to look. Last week this shows up:

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It's an absolutely worn out 2006 Trek 6500 in a frame size that fits me and all for a mere 10% of the HFC-approved price. The frame is in fine shape but the brakes, shifters, and more importantly, fork, are shot (the fork being shot was a surprise to the seller and the reason this USA-made bike was had so inexpensively).

The fork is a Manitou Axel Elite, 80mm of travel and no lockout. I began searching for a rebuild kit but ran into some really bad reviews of the fork. I'm now thinking it might be best to replace with an inexpensive 100mm fork with lockout, like an entry-level Rockshox.

Being a devout roadie, I know absolutely nothing about this, but I do need to keep it... frugal... as I don't want to cut into my Hamer / Shishkov fund too deeply. I'm running into air shocks, oil-filled shocks of various varieties... it all seems like a pretty steep learning curve. Experts, what do I do?

11 answers to this question

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Posted

I haven't done mountain biking since I tore my knee up in 2001, but until just before I stopped I always had Marzocchi Bomber's on my bike and loved them. Regrettably, I swapped them out thinking the new RockShox Psylo would be a better fit. First ride out was Noble Canyon which I'd done countless times before and was very familiar with, yet this was the only time I was helo'd off the mountain. I should have stuck with Marzocchi.

Posted

The price range for suspension forks runs about $200-$1000 or so. The sweet spot seems to be about $500 for a decent Fox or RoxShox. You might find a take-off - that's a frequent upgrade for hardcore guys. If you're budget is below $300 you might just consider a rigid fork.

Posted

Thanks for the comments!

Found a cursory guide that was helpful in getting through the terminology, but this in-depth guide on Bike Radar is far better!

Now I know I'm looking for a cross country fork, and that I need to measure the axle and steerer tube diameters (those are fairly standard in road bikes). Lots of good info here.

Posted

Look for a closeout on last seasons forks form some of the big online discounters and buy new.

If the shifters are shot, be careful. The cycling industry has adopted engineered obsolescence and it is hard to get parts for old drive trains.

Posted

Look for a closeout on last seasons forks form some of the big online discounters and buy new.

If the shifters are shot, be careful. The cycling industry has adopted engineered obsolescence and it is hard to get parts for old drive trains.

That's a great idea. I have gotten great deals on bikes and components this time of year due to eoy closeouts.

One of the issues I'm running into is the cantilever brakes vs. disc. The more expensive forks don't have the cantilever mounts, so even if I did want to raid the Shishkov fund and spend that kind of cash (and I'm not) it wouldn't work for my situation.

Performance Bicycle has this RockShox Recon Silver for $250. I'm keeping that in mind as it appears to meet all of the fitment criteria. I'll have to check out some reviews to see if it is any good.

Posted

I put a RockShox Recon Race on my Schwinn Homegrown when I finally replaced the blown out fork on it. Very nice fork, plus it has remote lockout (a little lever on the handlebars). I don't use it so much when actually riding technical trails, but locking out the fork getting to the trails is a nice feature.

272361_2274170572982_6755173_o.jpg

Posted

I put a RockShox Recon Race on my Schwinn Homegrown when I finally replaced the blown out fork on it. Very nice fork, plus it has remote lockout (a little lever on the handlebars). I don't use it so much when actually riding technical trails, but locking out the fork getting to the trails is a nice feature.

Did you have to buy / install the remote lockout yourself? The Performance offer doesn't seem to include that.

Posted

Nope, it came with it. That was one of my primary needs. I think you can get it as an addon, but that also means disassembling the fork to some extent. Check the Rock Shox site (as they should have instructions).

BTW I bought it at least 4 years ago, and it was already really discounted. You won't find one in most stores but might find it floating around. Check JensonUSA.com as they routinely have cheap prices on older funkier stuff.

Posted

On a lark, I decided to call a local bike shop to see if they had any take-offs. Not sure i got their best person on the line as he looked through their parts and informed me they had "an orange one and a black one!" I think I'll call the other shop tomorrow. All of these shops are of course miles away as nothing is really local.

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