Stefan Mikes
Gravel e-biker
- Region
- Europe
- City
- Mazovia, PL
I live and ride in a mixed terrain. Yes, you can hit a high quality asphalt but there's more poor asphalt, gravel, fire-roads, forest paths, field roads, cobbles and several other types of uneven surfaces. When I started cycling as a kid then teenager, all bikes had rigid forks and were made of steel so the only suspension available was "get your bloody ass from the saddle and stand on the pedals!" In the current era, both touring bikes of mine (the normal and the electric one) have had SR Suntour Nex coil spring suspension forks. Perhaps the suspension can be set up but I never gave that a second thought: the suspension forks were behaving as expected.
I also pump the tyres to (or almost to) the maximum available pressure as I am a heavy person and also paranoiac regarding the rolling resistance. Whenever I ride onto gravel or similar uneven surfaces, the front wheel is jarring, and I get vibrations from the handlebar in my whole body and I hate it. This kind of vibration appears to be more pronounced with my rear-hub-motor, perhaps because the center of gravity is greatly shifted backwards. Suspension seat post, a good gel/suspension saddle and seat-pad bibs protect my bum very well but the vibration from the handlebar is the real issue. I need to add the tyres are 42-622 or 28x1.6.
Now, after I got me an older model of Specialized Turbo Vado 5.0, I discovered instantly there was an aluminium rigid fork and no suspension seat-post in that model. At first I was scared but then discovered that with 51-622 (29x2.0) tyres pumped to 4 bar/58 psi the ride was very smooth and felt plush even on the worst surfaces where I suffered vibration from the suspension fork.
What is your experience? Many users say the fixed fork makes the ride jarred and the suspension fork is the must for touring but my experience is so different?
I also pump the tyres to (or almost to) the maximum available pressure as I am a heavy person and also paranoiac regarding the rolling resistance. Whenever I ride onto gravel or similar uneven surfaces, the front wheel is jarring, and I get vibrations from the handlebar in my whole body and I hate it. This kind of vibration appears to be more pronounced with my rear-hub-motor, perhaps because the center of gravity is greatly shifted backwards. Suspension seat post, a good gel/suspension saddle and seat-pad bibs protect my bum very well but the vibration from the handlebar is the real issue. I need to add the tyres are 42-622 or 28x1.6.
Now, after I got me an older model of Specialized Turbo Vado 5.0, I discovered instantly there was an aluminium rigid fork and no suspension seat-post in that model. At first I was scared but then discovered that with 51-622 (29x2.0) tyres pumped to 4 bar/58 psi the ride was very smooth and felt plush even on the worst surfaces where I suffered vibration from the suspension fork.
What is your experience? Many users say the fixed fork makes the ride jarred and the suspension fork is the must for touring but my experience is so different?