October 01, 2018 3 min read
It could have happened on virtually any bike on the slopes of Kicking Horse, British Columbia on July 1, 2010. I don’t blame the particular brand or model of bike I was riding, but the non-drive-side chainstay broke just behind the clevis, setting up a wobble on a landing that put me over the bars and left me in the dirt. I had to be carted off the mountain, semi-conscious, with a broken collarbone and a concussion.
During the many weeks of healing that followed, I was left to wonder exactly what had happened. My riding buddy had just missed seeing the crash, and my memory of how it happened remains a jumble of random images to this day.
Nevertheless, the crash got me thinking. I had spent decades designing and customizing two and four-wheeled vehicles, most recently as part of the design and development team for the Motoczysz E1pc racing motorcycle. I knew there were lessons from vehicle design that could bring additional stability and more precise control to mountain bikes.
Since the advent of useful rear suspension over 25 years ago, tremendous work has been done to managerear axle path, and multi-link suspension systems are now fully accepted by most riders for their handling advantages and reliability. But what about the front?
Telescoping forks are amazingly well-developed nowadays, especially considering how simple they are in principle, and we regularly ride and love bikes equipped with them.
Telescoping forksdo have limitations, however:
Although these aren’t deal-breakers, for bicycle design teams it has been a constant challenge to do something about the limitations of telescoping forks, and there is only so much that can be done before the results of their efforts hit a plateau. Riders have witnessed that plateau for many years, as innovations in fork design nowadays offer at best a few percent of performance gain per year.
To gain sensitivity, up to 40% reduction in brake dive, and increasing stability as the suspension is compressed (we call this Stability on Demand), there was no choice but to create a complete linkage chassis. The result is the Structure SCW 1 27.5” enduro bike, now available forpre-order. We’re so confident you’ll love your SCW 1, we offer a two month money-back guarantee and a lifetime warranty on frame and bearings. Think of it as the ultimate demo program.
Photo: Brian Park / Pinkbike
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