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Touring on Carbon Fork
I was wondering if anyone ever tried any long distance touring with a carbon fork. I was thinking of putting one on my bike to reduce weight, but wasnt sure how it would handle the distance and weight of gear.
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I personally have not. I would have no issues using a bike with a carbon fork to tour, and a handful of touring bikes are configured that way (e.g. Jamis Aurora Elite). That said, a few caveats.
1) If the carbon fork does not have mounts for a rack (like the Specialized Tricross fork does), I would avoid putting a rack on it. The brake bosses may not be strong enough, and I'd be highly reluctant to use p-clamps, as it'd be easy to over-torque and possibly crack the fork. 2) There is really no reason to switch to a carbon fork. The weight savings are negligible in a touring context. |
As dude with long name said, it's perfectly fine if you're not planning on mounting racks.
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Actually, as I learned a couple days back, the Old Man Mountain website has a customer-submitted picture of a carbon fork with a rack. Not that I think that it's the best idea, but at least according to Old Man Mountain it can be done. With normal p-clamps, the clamp would probably break before the fork did. My main concern would be that the p-clamp jiggles out of place when you change a flat or make any similar field adjustments.
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=168097 Other than that, you should prefer cyclocross-type forks over regular road forks. Personally, I don't see the point of replacing a fork on a touring bike just to save weight. |
putting less stuff on the bike is a real good way to take weight off before it goes on. How much would it reduce your total weight? 8oz-12oz out of 150,200,250lbs?
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I clamp tons of stuff to my fork, so I would never use a carbon fork. Actually, I probably wouldn't use one even if that weren't the case -- I don't like plastic, sucky crap ;)
j/k No, you'd probably be just find with a carbon fork. Just be wary of mounting things to it. |
I had carbon fork on a touring bike, but swapped it for a steel one after reading a report on this forum about a guy whose carbon fork failed catastrophically while descending a hill.
A better way to save 8 or 12 ounces is to leave a T-shirt at home. |
I have a carbon cyclocross fork on my touring bike. Seems to ride a bit smoother than the aluminum fork it replaced, plus it can mount a disc brake. I don't use a front rack, though.
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Originally Posted by acantor
(Post 11405913)
I had carbon fork on a touring bike, but swapped it for a steel one after reading a report on this forum about a guy whose carbon fork failed catastrophically while descending a hill.
Millions of cyclists use carbon forks; they don't spontaneously explode on descents. They're perfectly safe, again as long as you don't attach a pair of p-clamps and over-torque them. |
Originally Posted by Bacciagalupe
(Post 11409606)
So if I tell you stories of dozens of metal forks and frames that broke, what would you do next...?
Millions of cyclists use carbon forks; they don't spontaneously explode on descents. They're perfectly safe, again as long as you don't attach a pair of p-clamps and over-torque them. |
Originally Posted by sstorkel
(Post 11409505)
I have a carbon cyclocross fork on my touring bike. Seems to ride a bit smoother than the aluminum fork it replaced, plus it can mount a disc brake. I don't use a front rack, though.
Originally Posted by Bacciagalupe
(Post 11409606)
Millions of cyclists use carbon forks; they don't spontaneously explode on descents. They're perfectly safe, again as long as you don't attach a pair of p-clamps and over-torque them.
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On one of my rides, I've used one. Has worked fine. Saved over 3 pounds vs. the shock fork that it replaced.
http://i299.photobucket.com/albums/m...obow7/good.jpg |
The mass in the front bags does a fine job of taking the edge off rough roads ,
I hardly see the advantage of a Carbon fiber fork. It will certainly lighten your wallet .. Its Your money.. I'd rather save the money for the actual trip expenses .. |
Originally Posted by fietsbob
(Post 11411354)
It will certainly lighten your wallet ..
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still havent used it, but my tricross does have the fittings for a front rack.....have been told different amounts of weight to put on the fork (one said 10 lbs, read somewhere else more) so who knows, but I would be careful and play it safe with both torquing the rack on, as well as loading bags with clothes and such that keep the weight down (but as I have said before, I prefer a light end anyway, to keep the steering from becoming too heavy, jsut for fun in downhill turns)
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