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YAY! Another "what do I want?" thread! Gravel fork edition
Getting a new bike. Front fork will take up to a 38. Thinking about upgrading it to something that can at least match the rear 42, if not exceed it. Going to be running the Fulcrum RR5 disc wheels.
I know nada about forks. Carbon preferred. Suggestions? |
#2
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Most forks rated for a 38 tire (e.g. enve GRD, Columbus gravel) have a ~380mm axle-to-crown measurement. Most forks rated for 40+ tires have a ~395 axle-to-crown measurement. To swap one of the former for one of the latter will significantly alter the fit and handling of your bike.
If you have a 44mm external cup lower headset, you could swap to an inset headset and use a Ritchey straight steerer fork. That still has the ~395 a-c, but you'll lose ~10mm from the headset so you'll be closer. Some people aren't fond of the aesthetics of straight steerers in large headtubes, so if you're one of them, you might not like that option. Alternatively, your current fork might be conservatively rated at 38. I know of people who have fit true 40-42mm tires, and they're fine as long as it's not too muddy.
__________________
Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#3
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#4
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Personally, I lean towards forks with a fork crown mount for a dyno light or front rack. Unfortunately this is not common, but off the top of my head I know Whisky, Spork, and Fern x Allygn have this.
This may be have mounts than you need, but Bikepacking has a list of forks with bottlecage mounts: https://bikepacking.com/index/forks-...e-cage-mounts/ |
#5
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Depends on what you want out of the bike. Location says NoVa, and a 38-40mm tire is plenty for the local stuff. If you want more clearance, there's lots of options - do you need mounts of fenders? That will drive some of the choices. Whisky and Ritchey make nice forks without mounts, with mounts there's options like the Rodeo Labs spork.
I think there's likely not much difference in any of the forks and most of us would fail the pepsi challenge if we tried a couple on the same bike. |
#6
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__________________
Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#7
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seems to me that all the good forks are 395 A-C, so I would just pick one of them.
I usually build my own forks, but when I designed my all road fork it just naturally fell out that it was 395 A-C |
#8
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#9
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rodeo labs spork does it all, looks backordered forever though
https://www.rodeo-labs.com/shop/fork...abs-spork-3-0/ |
#10
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Salsa makes a nice fork that has lots of clearance. I fit a 1.95 mountain tire in the one on my old Warbird. I am currently running a Whisky fork on my Firefly and it looks like it would have plenty of clearance for a 42mm tire.
Lots of good options out there, but these two forks work well and should easily have the clearance needed. Sent from my LGL722DL using Tapatalk |
#11
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Salsa makes a lot of forks, are you talking about the Waxwing deluxe?
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Sent from my LGL722DL using Tapatalk |
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