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Converting 26" Suspension to Rigid Fork
Have a Trek 26" aluminum frame that I picked up pretty cheap. It's a new 2013ish 4 series, but it takes a standard 1 1/8" fork.
My question is--it originally was spec'ed with a 100mm suspension fork (did not come with a fork when I got it). I'd imagine the axle-to-crown was somewhere around 475mm. How important is it that I get as close as possible to this number? It's just going to be a knock-around bike to ride with the kids and such, but I don't want to screw up geometry so bad that it becomes difficult to ride. Plus a rigid 26" bike will take me back to the types of bikes I rode as a kid, so I thought it'd be a fun build. |
I did this exact thing with a Giant Boulder. The Surly 1x1 fork is designed around 100mm suspension. Check the spec and have at it. If sag is taken into account, Surly should be right there.
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That's actually the exact fork I was looking at. I'll check with the LBS as every place online shows it out of stock.
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You can replace a suspended 26" fork with a rigid 29er fork, put a bigger wheel up front. It's called a sixty-niner
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Not really my cup of tea. I think there was a reason that never caught on.
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Originally Posted by tkm
(Post 18910298)
I'd imagine the axle-to-crown was somewhere around 475mm.
How important is it that I get as close as possible to this number? 20 to 25% sag is commonly used on suspension forks. A suspension corrected fork with 440mm to 455mm axle-to-crownis what you'd want. I don't want to screw up geometry so bad that it becomes difficult to ride. The Kona P2 is another fork you might want to look at: http://www.bikeman.com/KON-P226RD.html |
'Suspension Corrected forks' are Made to Not drop the Head tube angle and alter the steering.
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