Cant remember where it is, prob the rise thread, but someone long stroked one and mulletized it. 170/163, coil w offset bushings and i guess thatd be a couple degrees slacker. Quick to swap the air and 9r rear wheel back on too
Youll know more on that. Like you mentioned, i just saw it on Mike's build. I sent a pm to you. First pm i forgot about the coil fork thing so the 2nd pm is a repeat with the coil fork thing added. Im not super up to date on current coil fork mods. Curious thoughSo like you said in the other thread in theory you could just swap your shock for different days like you would tyres for different terrain kind of thing?
I believe to get 163 on the rear needs the 216x63 size also?
Just a question. In the past ive liked somewhere between 65 and 65.5. With the new fork offset offerings it seems like im not having the wheel flop i had , on a trail bike, when the head angle was less than 65. I guess tge steeper seat angles help control wheel flop on slacker head angles. My decoy doesnt have a super steep seat angle and im now in the 63ish degree range on it and its been a great trail bike and not a ton of reach. Im thinking its the fork offset controling wheel pushThe stock head angle is 65.5 - that's pretty slack already for a trail bike. Much past that you're getting into a sluggish handling front end at "normal" speeds. Are you planning to use your Rise more for bike park and/or DH stuff or more XC-ish stuff? Keep in mind that with the motor and the weight it's already gonna understeer/push a little, and you'll be compounding that by slacking it out more.
Just a question. In the past ive liked somewhere between 65 and 65.5. With the new fork offset offerings it seems like im not having the wheel flop i had , on a trail bike, when the head angle was less than 65. I guess tge steeper seat angles help control wheel flop on slacker head angles. My decoy doesnt have a super steep seat angle and im now in the 63ish degree range on it and its been a great trail bike and not a ton of reach. Im thinking its the fork offset controling wheel push
Good point. The shorter top tube on the decoy also gets the body over the front to control that too.It certainly has an effect. I can't speak to how seat angles control wheel flop, but I'd think that shifts weight bias towards getting more weight over the front wheel, which is needed to overcome the plow/understeer effect.
The stock head angle is 65.5 - that's pretty slack already for a trail bike. Much past that you're getting into a sluggish handling front end at "normal" speeds. Are you planning to use your Rise more for bike park and/or DH stuff or more XC-ish stuff? Keep in mind that with the motor and the weight it's already gonna understeer/push a little, and you'll be compounding that by slacking it out more.
I like the big days out, 30km is a big day out for me ?...but that kind of XC stuff can be pretty gnarly and rocky at times. I like some of the DH enduro appeal as this is where I struggle the most, steep dh tech I can’t manage on my Orbea Wild but I seem to fair much better on the rise with weaker brakes/discs etc.
I’m still open to giving my air a go, or at worst just smashpot the fork but I’m fairly certain better suspension improves your riding ability inline with practice, my performance increased loads on the demo rise bike!
Think a coil setup would suit those kinda trails?Sweet trails! Would love to ride those someday...
I take it your saying 65.5 is best for XC and park/Dh better around 64 kind of thing? Be nice if there would be an easy way to adjust the geo depending in the dayThe stock head angle is 65.5 - that's pretty slack already for a trail bike. Much past that you're getting into a sluggish handling front end at "normal" speeds. Are you planning to use your Rise more for bike park and/or DH stuff or more XC-ish stuff? Keep in mind that with the motor and the weight it's already gonna understeer/push a little, and you'll be compounding that by slacking it out more.
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