sdcoffeeroaster
Active member
I've decided that no matter what I do to my Rhythm 29" front forks they are just very harsh, especially on washboard surfaces. The resulting vibration and shock is very hard on my wrists and upper body at the ripe old age of 71. So I've been researching a replacement. At first I stuck to Fox products but I've now come to realize that the Rockshox 2021 Ultimate Lyrik is the very best option for me. The 2021 model in particular has made hand/wrist/arm fatigue reduction a goal. From all accounts they have done a great job. So that decided, what about offset? I currently have my 2018 Jam2 C set up with 2.6" tires front and back, reverse mullet with stock 140mm travel in the back and 150mm front (bumped from 140mm). That results in a fork angle of about 65 degrees, slacker than the 66.5 stock with a wheelbase of about 1209 mm for medium, 1202 mm stock.
For the past decade the "golden" advice has been to use a 51mm offset for a 29" front fork to reduce some of the added trail from a 29" setup. Trail has increased even more as bikes become more slack with modern designs. But the latest current advice goes a bit contrary to this with offsets for 29'ers now trending lower to 44mm or less adding even more trail but reducing the overall wheelbase somewhat and maybe the twitchiness. Maybe it depends on the type of riding you do a lot? The increased trail adds to the straight line stability but my worry is that if I go from 51mm to 44mm the bike will be more difficult to turn on slower flow type trails. All the articles on this say this is not the case and that's really got me confused right now. They try to explain the why of this but for my more moderate riding style (not a crazy fast downhiller) I'm just not convinced of their reasoning yet. Any thoughts on this out there? I'm ready to cut lose on the Lyrik Ultimate but just don't know if it's 44mm or 51mm I want. I suppose the differences might be very subtle and I won't notice anyway?
I ran this thru the Yojimg trail and flop calculator (Bicycle Trail Calculator | yojimg.net) and found that I now have approximatel 102mm of mechanical trail and that would go to 111mm with the 44mm offset. The flop value came out to be 43mm now and 47mm with the 44mm offset. I don't really understand how much "flop" is too much before the bike becomes noticeably difficult to turn on slower corners like switchbacks. Maybe I'm over analyzing this but being a mechanical engineer leaves me little choice. Pray for me or help if you can, lol.
For the past decade the "golden" advice has been to use a 51mm offset for a 29" front fork to reduce some of the added trail from a 29" setup. Trail has increased even more as bikes become more slack with modern designs. But the latest current advice goes a bit contrary to this with offsets for 29'ers now trending lower to 44mm or less adding even more trail but reducing the overall wheelbase somewhat and maybe the twitchiness. Maybe it depends on the type of riding you do a lot? The increased trail adds to the straight line stability but my worry is that if I go from 51mm to 44mm the bike will be more difficult to turn on slower flow type trails. All the articles on this say this is not the case and that's really got me confused right now. They try to explain the why of this but for my more moderate riding style (not a crazy fast downhiller) I'm just not convinced of their reasoning yet. Any thoughts on this out there? I'm ready to cut lose on the Lyrik Ultimate but just don't know if it's 44mm or 51mm I want. I suppose the differences might be very subtle and I won't notice anyway?
I ran this thru the Yojimg trail and flop calculator (Bicycle Trail Calculator | yojimg.net) and found that I now have approximatel 102mm of mechanical trail and that would go to 111mm with the 44mm offset. The flop value came out to be 43mm now and 47mm with the 44mm offset. I don't really understand how much "flop" is too much before the bike becomes noticeably difficult to turn on slower corners like switchbacks. Maybe I'm over analyzing this but being a mechanical engineer leaves me little choice. Pray for me or help if you can, lol.