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Pashley Forks


Mike Winton.

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How do you think the people that side hop to the left feel when it comes to every other frame/fork? Then again I s/h to the left and have a DD bike and have never hit my discs doing it. If you side hop to the right you can run any other fork, you don't have to run these.

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Tim Steadman (he tests for Pashley) was saying how he preferred it on the right. Not only is it on the 'other' side (which doesn't really make much difference), it's also on the top of the fork so it's harder to bash the caliper. He also reckoned the braking felt more positive or something, I don't know about that.

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You are all wrong.

Braking with normal disc mounts causes the hub to come out of the dropout due to the reaction force on the braking. Try it yourself if you use a front disc. Tighten the QR very mildly, or let it completely loose. Ride along at a very slow pace to avoid crashing and pull your front brake. Your axle will come out of the dropout at the disc side and your tire will rub your fork.

With the new pashley forks the disc mount is on the front of the fork leg. It doesn't matter what side it's on, but the right side makes it work with normal calipres. When you brake now, the axle will be forced upward in the dropout due to the reaction force from the disc brake. If you do the test again with the loose QR, you will notice that your wheel barely moves at all when pulling the front brake.

This is also why a lot of mountain bike forks have 20mm or 15mm through axles. To avoid wheel wobble from heavy braking actions at high speed.

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You are all wrong.

Braking with normal disc mounts causes the hub to come out of the dropout due to the reaction force on the braking. Try it yourself if you use a front disc. Tighten the QR very mildly, or let it completely loose. Ride along at a very slow pace to avoid crashing and pull your front brake. Your axle will come out of the dropout at the disc side and your tire will rub your fork.

With the new pashley forks the disc mount is on the front of the fork leg. It doesn't matter what side it's on, but the right side makes it work with normal calipres. When you brake now, the axle will be forced upward in the dropout due to the reaction force from the disc brake. If you do the test again with the loose QR, you will notice that your wheel barely moves at all when pulling the front brake.

This is also why a lot of mountain bike forks have 20mm or 15mm through axles. To avoid wheel wobble from heavy braking actions at high speed.

INTERESTING STUFF!

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Depends what tricks you're doing, on gaps to front and sidehops surely it's gonna be stronger? But I understand what you're saying seeing as apparently it's designer for hooks :S

Yeah i tend to change my forks just for hooks lol, who needs a better brake when hooking :S stupidly random, id rather have a good brake on a gap to front rather than a hook, but not like it would make much difference if youve got a 200mm mono trial/bb7.

Mat

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