- Location
- London
thanks for the reply - i did think twice before putting the ally option - am not a fan of ally either though i have had a pricey ally bike.Titanium is too flexi / twangy for forks. some MTB did have Ti forks but they were braced to stop them flexing and looked very odd.
aluminium is numb and has little vibration damping, why ruin a good bike with a cheap fork. that why a heck of a lot of ally bikes above cheapo cost have carbon forks.
steel would work but make the bike heavier. the point of titanium is you get the ride quality and strength of steel, but significantly lighter.
you might not like it, but for a road bike fork, carbon is an excellent material, stiff, light and provides some damping.
I didn't realise weight saving was such a big priority with titanium. Is it?
I take your point about the disadvantage of a titanium fork but can't help wondering how big, for argument's sake, the weight saving between a titanium fork and a steel fork would be. If not a lot, seems that the weight saving an on titanium frame with a carbon fork is being gained by using the carbon.
I do appreciate that carbon forks have certain road buzz qualities but still don't like carbon.
Maybe I should just stick with all steel