Hi -- Enough buyers of Ride1Up Ltd's and 700's are out there that I'm sure there are fork questions.
In keeping with the Fn'F theme, I'm in the process of replacing my fork and here's my two-cents/ information/ opinion/ a bit of research/ long-term hands on view - limited in experience for sure. If you know something I don't or I'm incorrect about, let me know.
Unfortunately there's no RST owners manual or links to one.
First question is which fork is it?
So, let's end the speculation. Here's the factory (2018) catalog showing our
Asteria RST 28.6 TNL on page 57. My tape says we have the 80mm travel version.
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I replaced my pump's broken gauge and found I was running about 50psi.
Dump a sixer in the front basket, first small bump it'd lock out of it's own - so I'd saved 'it' the work and locked myself.
Fast forward/ new gauge: Trial and error.
The sweet spot is 1.9 - 2.1lbs rider weight per every 10psi. pressure.
200lb you = 95 --105psi ... etc.
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At 2350gms, the 'Economy' model, '28.6 TNL' is
heavy - the RockShox Judy Gold I've in mind is1700gms).
Being a straight steering tube type,
upgrade selection is limited (no FOX).
However, straight tubers get more bang for the buck and $4 - 500 will get you a top-end fork, whereas for tapered tube types +$700.00 is a medium entry point.
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From day one, my RST's rebound (what there is) stuck and shuddered; the stiffness adjustment changed itself; setting sag was near impossible; and the maintenance kits are unavailable (except for hacking something else similar) that I can find.
But buyers wouldn't pay a $350 price increase for a 'Judy' - if it was even possible at the assembly point.
The RST finish is (flat black) durable; no detectable flex. I use
It's a great
entry level fork that while holding the bottom line low for consumers, is fine for weekend Farmer's Market cruises, absorbs pavement and smaller hits just fine, fitting the functions of most of users.
So I (Crash Dummy) must 'a broke it. Now it won't hold 70psi pressure.
I'll take it out to
jump a few curbs test tomorrow, then check and
dump this sucker go forward with logical improvements.
Other considerations when replacing is how much do you really want? As a member pointed out to me 'a solid axle type means changing the wheel'. We use skewers and logging roads is not my in future.
I'd like to hear from pros that know more.
Someone w/ knowledge 'bout a Recon gold straight tube ? Is it worth the extra cash - if I can find one?
Ride on, ride on !!!
Fn'F