Author Topic: My IP-057 project  (Read 12678 times)

cmh

Re: My IP-057 project
« Reply #30 on: January 01, 2016, 09:11:49 PM »
Hi Carbon_Dude.  Yes I know the forks are designed for 160mm and you need the spacer to get to 203mm which I am already using.  But given that, why have niner then put on a limit of 185mm?  Are the 203mm too powerful for the forks? Or is there another reason?

Possibly Niner wants to limit the torque load on the fork to what a 180mm rotor can impart to the leg of the fork.  Having the larger 203mm rotor may have contributed to your initial failure.

I'm thinking it was a contributing factor as well - Niner forks are built sturdy as hell, I know several guys who have them and they all say the same thing - STIFF. If Niner is limiting rotor to 185mm on that fork, and you're a big guy adding 10% more braking force higher up on a Chinese fork, that might be an issue.

As a point of reference, I'm 6'3" and 220, more with riding gear and such, and I ran 203mm on my Rumblefish for a while, with a 185mm rear. After a while, I switched back to 185/160 (what came from the factory) and didn't notice any lack of stopping power. While the 203mm has numerically increased stopping power, it's not massively different, and I've had zero complaints about a 180/185mm front - and I never use more than one finger for braking. Pretty sure I could survive a 160/160 setup if I wanted to get weight weenie, which... yeah, no. :)

Without a maximum rotor size specified, it's not something you could have known unless you saw it elsewhere and knew to ask the question - so hopefully they'll still help you out, but you might wanna step down that rotor size at least one step.

IoC

Re: My IP-057 project
« Reply #31 on: January 04, 2016, 01:20:12 PM »
Hi Carbon_Dude.  Yes I know the forks are designed for 160mm and you need the spacer to get to 203mm which I am already using.  But given that, why have niner then put on a limit of 185mm?  Are the 203mm too powerful for the forks? Or is there another reason?

Possibly Niner wants to limit the torque load on the fork to what a 180mm rotor can impart to the leg of the fork.  Having the larger 203mm rotor may have contributed to your initial failure.


+1 to all of this. Too large of a rotor for the fork.

I've never even seen anyone go beyond 160 on a rigid carbon fork. I did a bikepacking race this year with some steep technical stuff and ran a carbon Niner fork with mechanical brakes and didn't have any issues (on a metal bike loaded with camping gear and 100oz of water). With those (look to be) XTs you should be fine at 185, but I'm willing to bet even 160s would work.

I'm thinking it was a contributing factor as well - Niner forks are built sturdy as hell, I know several guys who have them and they all say the same thing - STIFF. If Niner is limiting rotor to 185mm on that fork, and you're a big guy adding 10% more braking force higher up on a Chinese fork, that might be an issue.

As a point of reference, I'm 6'3" and 220, more with riding gear and such, and I ran 203mm on my Rumblefish for a while, with a 185mm rear. After a while, I switched back to 185/160 (what came from the factory) and didn't notice any lack of stopping power. While the 203mm has numerically increased stopping power, it's not massively different, and I've had zero complaints about a 180/185mm front - and I never use more than one finger for braking. Pretty sure I could survive a 160/160 setup if I wanted to get weight weenie, which... yeah, no. :)

Without a maximum rotor size specified, it's not something you could have known unless you saw it elsewhere and knew to ask the question - so hopefully they'll still help you out, but you might wanna step down that rotor size at least one step.

carbonazza

Re: My IP-057 project
« Reply #32 on: January 04, 2016, 02:25:28 PM »
Here is a discussion about the rotor size and fork strength: http://bicycles.stackexchange.com/questions/16963/disc-brake-rotor-size-and-forks-strength
There is a reply(in yellow) from a fork builder saying to not use a 203mm rotor, or the fork may break.

cmh

Re: My IP-057 project
« Reply #33 on: January 05, 2016, 02:55:27 PM »
TIL stackexchange has a bikes section. Huh.