sorry not sure if this covered under warrantyThanks for your help. For those kind of operation you need nearly 500€ and a lot of skill.
Do you now if Fox gave a sort of warranty of this kind of problem ?
Luca
sorry not sure if this covered under warrantyThanks for your help. For those kind of operation you need nearly 500€ and a lot of skill.
Do you now if Fox gave a sort of warranty of this kind of problem ?
Luca
I just spent two weeks riding big mountain bike parks with 2021 Fox 38 Factory. On long, rough and fast tracks my hands were getting so hammered that I actually had to stop to rest for a while. This after I had done a lower leg service just a few days before. What completely reversed the situation was that I took ALL high speed compression away (set the HS fully open). It was immediately a night and day difference, and brought that "glued to the ground" feeling out of the fork! Now in hindsight I only regret that I wasted some of the best riding days of the year with the Santa Cruz and Fox recommended suspension settings for my weight. Going forward, Instead of HS, I think I'll just put additional volume spacers into the air side to prevent bottoming out on big drops and flat landings.
You literally only need some 20wt lower lube, some 5wt PTFE lube, some SRAM Butter and a couple of plastic crush washers. In terms of tools, you’ll need a shock pump, a flush-ground socket, some hex keys and some split-ring pliers.Trust you, but i only search for original fox parts, thats the clue i think
Luca
I maybe a little late, but I had the same problems and sent them off to be stripped down. The forks were harsh, no matter what I did with fully open settings . It turned out there was enough grease in the chamber to service 50 forks.
Now they're super compliant on small bumps, no harshness either.
My settings are far from fox recommendations too!
230lbs rider
Fox 38 180mm
114psi
20%sag
LSC 12 from closed (clockwise)
HSC 6 from closed
LSR 7 from full clockwise
HSR 5 from full clockwise
Tyre : 29x2.5WT assegai DD 22psi
The fork now offers loads of grip, smooth compliance and poppy feeling when hitting jumps an no more wrist problems.
A few friends on the same forks seem to run more rebound than fox suggest and it works for them too.
It was that bad I couldn't ride for more than a couple miles before the wrists started hurting so I had no choice but get them sorted. After researching the issue online, it seems this has been a problem for several years ?.Similar weight to you and I'm wondering if over time it would breakdown the grease or does it just have to be taken apart? For a fork that expensive we shouldn't have to send it off for anything. I wonder if its just a batch of them or are they all coming that way? I have the option to go with a 38 or zeb and I want to drop the fork on and start riding asap.
Ok great to hear!It was that bad I couldn't ride for more than a couple miles before the wrists started hurting so I had no choice but get them sorted. After researching the issue online, it seems this has been a problem for several years ?.
I loved the Zeb but honestly now the 38 is sorted, it's loads better.
Anyone reading this, highly recommended you dial in a few clicks more rebound too!
Yeah, this issue has been going on for a long time. Whoever builds these forks for Fox consistently screws this up, and Fox doesn't have the QA processes or the interest to reject them. If they just pulled a few forks at random and inspected/tested them properly this would have ceased to be an issue long ago.It was that bad I couldn't ride for more than a couple miles before the wrists started hurting so I had no choice but get them sorted. After researching the issue online, it seems this has been a problem for several years ?.
That's good to hear. My 38 isn't as bad as it was when I made the original post (increasing fork pressure reduced sag and actually helped performance), but it's still nowhere near the Zeb. I haven't yet had the time to set the fork aside and take it apart, so hopefully it'll turn out to have been packed with grease and easily sorted.I loved the Zeb but honestly now the 38 is sorted, it's loads better.
Nice. Are you running any tokens?Two rides in on Vorsprung Secus and it has transformed this fork. Super plush as I had hoped. I would have gone straight to coil, but those were backordered longer. No need now.
Nice. Are you running any tokens?
As an aside, if you notice the fork losing pressure, one of the bolts at the footstud assembly of the Secus sometimes isn't torqued right from the factory, resulting in a very slow leak. Spraying some soapy water around it will help spot any issue.
….. I’m chasing that pillow plush feel / with out bottoming to easy
Well done. I believe the problem for most is the harder tune the brands tend to specify for the forks whereas the standard factory tune is medium. That stiffer tune coupled with one or two tokens means the recommended air pressure for anyone other than a heavyweight or a pro downhiller is much too high. My Fox 38s on my Whyte E180 are medium tune throughout but even so my air pressure is below the Fox recommendation and I go for c 27% SAG and very little HSC............unless I am expecting bigger drops in which case I dial up HSC a couple of clicks and match that with more rebound. In both setting the fork is super plush but with good ramp and no bottom out.Big thanks to @MBag85 for all the help and advice set up on my 38’s ? zero tokens - 20% sag with just over 100psi after a good few cycles every 20psi when inflating and there now like butter ??
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...not in my experience.........but then they probably have a big stock of air springs to sell!!I had a chat with one of the reps at Diaz Suspension Designs. They said that the 38s have basically no support for the first 10mm of travel, so a 160 fork basically rides like a 150. They advised sizing up the air spring to compensate.
I disagree with this and would avoid going to them moving forward. I've had 3 bikes all with 38s and stantion is always true and as stated.I had a chat with one of the reps at Diaz Suspension Designs. They said that the 38s have basically no support for the first 10mm of travel, so a 160 fork basically rides like a 150. They advised sizing up the air spring to compensate.
Rockshox air spring sat down 10mm under its own weight prior to the arrival of the 2021 Debonair...............maybe he is confusing it with that?I disagree with this and would avoid going to them moving forward. I've had 3 bikes all with 38s and stantion is always true and as stated.
Given there's a couple mm at most that sits in the fork by design , I've always felt support throughout travel.
Seems a worrying statement for any reputable tuning company to make...
Good to know. For what's it's worth, mine sags about 5mm on the bike's weight alone with the front end propped up slightly in the stand, so while their 10mm claim seems a little high, what I'm seeing does seem like a lot of sag without a rider.I disagree with this and would avoid going to them moving forward. I've had 3 bikes all with 38s and stantion is always true and as stated.
Given there's a couple mm at most that sits in the fork by design , I've always felt support throughout travel.
Seems a worrying statement for any reputable tuning company to make...
Have you already checked this?My 38 sags about 10 mm on the weight of the bike, too. How do I have to consider this in setting up my sag/air pressure? Is it part of the sag setting?
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