The 5-day Andes Pacifico enduro race just started in Chile, but Dave Trumpore has already spotted a few previously unseen components. The most notable is a BlackBox labeled RockShox Lyrik. The fork appears to have the same low-speed compression adjusting dial as the current model, but the secondary dial isn't the typical three-position version that we're used to seeing. Does this mean the high-speed compression adjustment found on past models of the Lyrik will be making a comeback?
Send 'em in for warranty?
I looked, they make splined sockets with 12 splines in that size.
For the rest of us, we need to be content with new names for things that don't mean anything - DebonAIR, Rapid Recation, AcidReflux and dummy dials because even though we can spend 1200$ on a fork we can't be trusted to set it up.
HTLT uses a 200x57 I think? There’s a 210x55 metric size Rockshox shock with standard fitment I believe. Not a million miles off. Yes I’m aware 10mm at the shock equates to like 25mm at the rear axle but there are ways to make it right if you have the means.
But for SC those means are probably just that they moved the shock mounts to work properly with a metric shock. Perhaps they’ve also tweaked some other geometry issues? Doesn’t seem like SC though, they’d usually save such tweaks for a redesign but I suppose the HTLT was a bit of a rehash to begin with?
Could be they’ve added some reach back that was lost when they went LT, made a little more room for a longer shock and made the LT even moar LT?
Still doesn’t seem like SC to do this sort of incremental change but I did think it was odd when they brought out the LT in the first place which is basically a bodged Hightower.
They were all shouting out loud how metric is the way better standart to go for shocks.
I find it hilarious that my 40 Float and Lyrik both had these adjusters and you didnt feel a difference- the X Fusion for 200€ performs better than these two and you feel the difference between every click.
Wavy washer for my Boxxer? A 50 cent part they could have mailed to me in an envelope... What a hassle!
If I had the money I'd ride fox or just custom cartridges and never touch another rockshox "damper" as long as I live. Rockshox would be better off reverse engineering an avi cart this point.
I do ride Sram brakes, drivetrain AND suspension after all. I have a boxxer with motion control in it right now, so really I'm just bitter that I can't afford a charger damper yet.
Now that being said, and not necessarily in my defense, I am interested in the reasons for why mountain bike suspension dampers in forks are just now beginning to catch up with what is decades old technology in other industries. Comparing a racetech emulator and a motion control damper I can't help but wonder how much cost and effort is required to produce at that level of precision and, respectively, if that much cost cutting was of true value to any consumers. As it is I've "ported" the orifice on my Boxxer to the point where the blue dial is only for looks, and reshimmed it with a much softer, though larger, speed stack. It FINALLY doesn't try and break my wrists as I ride. Stock as a downhill fork for anything but jumps motion control damping is utterly useless.
I don't have the pertinent details or know *#$% about manufacturing at that scale, or any scale for that matter, there could be very good reasons Motion control looks the way it does and plastic was turned to in so many cases. Smarter people than me know.
on the other hand, look at the dampers in manitou forks. well made, shimmed dampers in open baths, with hydraulic bottom-out - all the things that people pay $500 to Avalanche racing to "fix" their rockshox forks.
even Manitou's cheapest, lowest end fork uses an open bath and comes with shimmed compression and rebound dampers. meanwhile, even some of RS' more expensive forks still come with their motion control dampers, which, at best, can be described as "not completely horrible".
I'll also put on my tinfoil hat and wonder if that's why we didn't get a full axle to crown shot of the one on the Nomad in the first photo?
To me the fork looks just like the one used in the stock Nomad but I can't find the offset of that.
@nvidia: At Christmas sale you'd be able to find both carbon and non-carbon Pikes, for example. And voi la - the difference would still be big.
It's not craftmanship, it's CNCing a billet instead of making a composite/alu spider and putting stamped cogs on it. Guess which one is more technologically advanced and requires more complex tooling? And Shimano cogs are made of various sorts of steel then ti depending on a model.
Carbon in forks is useless for the most part. Marginal gains at maximal costs can be achieved making carbon CSU. It's fully motivated in RS-1 then maybe in arch on DVO. Considering how much Enduro bikes are tossed around (even just to put the bike on the ground with rocks around, against other bikes on shuttle) putting any carbon there is just asking yourself for trouble.
P.S. how the hell did we end up discussing cassettes while starting out with carbon CSUs for forks?!?!?!
$70 Is a drop in the bucket of costs. That's one maxxis or schwalbe tire here.
Sram cassettes are one of the few instances where i feel the cost is justified. My preferred 11s setup was an x1 casette with m8000 shifty bits.
10 speed shimano/sram the shimano were better.
My m8000 cassettes sound like you're plucking a can every time you shift, don't shift as well and the steps are horrible on the wide spread cassettes.
Yes the x1 casettes are expensive. This year I ended up just getting GX eagle because it was only $80 more for the whole setup because i needed a new casette and RD. I can't be mad about the x1 casette as it lasted 3k miles over 3 years. Sometimes I'd go through 2 10 speed xt casettes in a single season.
Gx 12s shifts better than my 11s x1/shimano and won't be as expensive to replace. Sometimes change is good.
Takes 3 full revolutions backpedaling to knock my chain off the largest eagle cog. Just sayin'
Nope, riding an ancient bike without boost
Oh, everybody
Oh, everybody
Everybody
Oh, everybody
Oh, everybody
Everybooooddyyyyy!"
Ya, the whole eastern half of CO is flat, but that's not where the trails are. Yes I have and your point by that? I was just hinting that maybe all of the decisions aren't made in Chi town. . . I've said too much
Oh shit, shots fired. Obviously I need to travel more to learn what mountains are. I have heard that John Denver is full of shit.
compare this to, say, the eastern sierra, which rises from 4K feet up to 14K in just a few miles, and I can see what the guy was getting at.
none of this changes the fact that there is tons and tons of steep stuff in colorado, no matter what it feels like in some spots