yes. The only way to accomplish this is to buy a custom, marzocchi bomber cr / fox vanilla that is 210 with a custom 57 - 60mm stroke. The other way to accomplish this is to use a 8.5x2.5 shock, and use 2 (2mm) offset bushings in order to shrink it down to 212x63. this will raise your bottom bracket by about 5mm and steepen the hta slightly. i have seen this done on L and XL - M models and L and M hydro models with a dhx2 and dvo jade.Is there room in the frame movement to install the same eye to eye but bump the shock stroke up a bit?
Keeping it at 29/29
Would 61 be too much?yes. The only way to accomplish this is to buy a custom, marzocchi bomber cr / fox vanilla that is 210 with a custom 57 - 60mm stroke. The other way to accomplish this is to use a 8.5x2.5 shock, and use 2 (2mm) offset bushings in order to shrink it down to 212x63. this will raise your bottom bracket by about 5mm and steepen the hta slightly. i have seen this done on L and XL - M models and L and M hydro models with a dhx2 and dvo jade.
I knew someone would call that out - it's fully compressed and I made sure by sitting on the bike and bouncing - there was no more give. The bump stock without the spring holder actually shifted over the bottom eyelet as there's a gap inside the bumper that doesn't fully wrap around the shaft.@iJak In your photo of your shock/frame you are not compressing the bump stop. Your shock will compress a minimum of 7mm further then what you are showing on a hard bottom out... likely more like 10-13mm. Keep in mind, this is shock travel numbers so you multiply by roughly 2 - 2.5 in order to determine how much additional wheel travel. In this case, i'd expect 14-20mm of additional wheel travel. If you are a shredder and you are running 30-33% sag, I would guess that you will contact your tire into your seat tube.
the only way to accurately check this with a coil on your frame... is to pull the bump stop, which requires removing the lower eyelet. This is actually possible on the dhx2 without re-building the shock... which is rare. The other way to measure it is to set up a video camera, and bounce on the seat with the spring removed. I'd be careful with this as too much and you're going to crash the tire into the seat tube. The other way is to do some measuring and math and figure out what the resulting eye to eye length is when the tire contacts the frame, and measure that against the expected eye to eye at bottom out with the bump stop in play.
Keep in mind that the rise has an incredibly flexy rear end in both M and H models. I would want a minimum of 10mm of clearance to the seat tube at full bottom... if not more. Fwiw, I have ruined frames doing this in the past and messing this up (giant trance frames). it does happen and I have anecdotal experience that the frame will flex more then you think... that was an expensive lesson in long shocking frames. Fortunately, it just hurt my wallet and my pride and not my body.
These type = noAll points noted, I’ll stick to big brands and standard travel, the Rockshox deluxe ultimate coil is available in 210x55
another question. Is it possible to modify a shock with bearing mounts to use standard bushings? Feeling is a no
It’s the first one, going cheap at wiggle. Never MindThese type = no View attachment 105193 , View attachment 105194
this type = yes as it's a bearing insert that sits into the usual lower eyelet
View attachment 105195
Well I’ve just gone for a 210x55 coil but may experiment laterI have been running a 216 X 63 with 2 offset bushings for about 4 months now with 29/29 and love it no issues at all
Cane Creek have just confirmed to me that the older DB Air IL will not fit the Rise. The newer model, released only a few weeks ago, might fit (not yet confirmed)Anyone fitted a Cane Creek DB Air IL to their Rise ?
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.