Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

TECH NEWS

Fox's new Adventure Cross suspension fork revealed on Instagram

Do gravel and adventure bikes need suspension? Fox is developing a suspension fork

A photo shared on Instagram has confirmed that suspension manufacturer Fox is developing a short travel suspension fork for the adventure and cyclocross market. 

It was first spotted a little while ago but the crop of the photo made it hard to say for sure it was a Fox, but this latest photo shared by a US framebuilder confirms our suspicions. 

We still don’t know a lot about the fork, other than it looks remarkably similar to the company’s current 32 cross-country product. It appears to only be offering a small amount of travel as it’ll need to be compatible with the geometry of current gravel bikes. How much travel it will offer we don’t know, but guesses are that it will be similar to the 30mm that the Cannondale Slate Lefty fork provides. 

The blue dial on the top left of the fork could be an adjuster for the compression, and it’ll most likely function as a lockout lever. Fox does offer travel adjust TALAS on some of its mountain bike forks so could it be looking at a travel adjustment feature here? Longer travel for very rough sections and short travel when it’s smoother? 

Other notable details include the 15mm thru-axle, which is the same as found on Fox mountain bike suspension forks. But the road market has rapidly switched to 12mm so has Fox been caught out before it’s even released a new product?

Chris McGovern, who posted the photo on Instagram, shared this comment in response to the many replies he has had. 

“I do think there is some merit to an adventure gravel bike, or whatever you want to call it, having suspension. You can run lower volume tires and still gain the suspension but keep the speed of rolling less tire. Instead of just throwing on bigger tires. Might be something to it. We do a lot long ass rides up here that you can really roll, that might have some gnarly sections in them….”

Do you agree? Think Fox is tapping into a new market here bringing a suspension fork to the gravel and adventure bike market? There have been previous attempts at road suspension forks, most notably with RockShox and Bianchi many years ago, but technology has moved on a lot since then so maybe the time is right to reassess suspension on a road bike? 

Gravel and adventure bikes are certainly leaning ever closer to mountain bikes, and have already borrowed mountain bike tech like disc brakes, thru-axles and wider tyres, so why not suspension and dropper posts too? One thing is for sure, the traditional boundaries between road and mountain have never been this blurred, not since John Tomac put drop handlebars on a mountain bike. 

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

Add new comment

10 comments

Avatar
Morat | 7 years ago
1 like

The headshok was great! Smooth, no flex, great steering. Of course mine was stolen before it had chance to wear out  2

Avatar
Dnnnnnn | 7 years ago
4 likes

Bring back the Girvin Flex-stem!

Avatar
dreamlx10 | 7 years ago
4 likes

Of course they need suspension forks, then they'll need riser bars etc etc, then they'll be called Mountain Bikes.

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet replied to dreamlx10 | 7 years ago
3 likes
dreamlx10 wrote:

Of course they need suspension forks, then they'll need riser bars etc etc, then they'll be called Mountain Bikes.

//cdn.skim.gs/image/upload/v1456338783/msi/Whoa_bcgxiv.gif)

 3

Avatar
therevokid replied to dreamlx10 | 7 years ago
0 likes
dreamlx10 wrote:

Of course they need suspension forks, then they'll need riser bars etc etc, then they'll be called Mountain Bikes.

 

Doesn't one of the Specialized road range already have risers / wing bars and discs ...

 

Avatar
SingleSpeed replied to therevokid | 7 years ago
1 like
therevokid wrote:
dreamlx10 wrote:

Of course they need suspension forks, then they'll need riser bars etc etc, then they'll be called Mountain Bikes.

 

Doesn't one of the Specialized road range already have risers / wing bars and discs ...

 

 

Is that the one with the Cannondale Headshock?

Avatar
StraelGuy | 7 years ago
0 likes

Is that the one that uses the fibre glass leaf springs? They look really cool.

Avatar
SingleSpeed replied to StraelGuy | 7 years ago
0 likes
guyrwood wrote:

Is that the one that uses the fibre glass leaf springs? They look really cool.

 

The very ones, i've just taken them off one bike in favour of going back to SID's but if I did get a gravel bike they would be my first upgrade.

 

http://www.laufforks.com/lauf-grit/

 

And yes they make any bike you have look badass!

Avatar
SingleSpeed | 7 years ago
1 like

Lauf forks are the perfect fork for this, I've been running them on MTB for a couple of years and they have limitations but for a Gravel Road bike would be none!

Avatar
StraelGuy | 7 years ago
0 likes

If they can keep the weight, and stiction, down I can see these being quite popular. I'd certainly consider them for my winter / do everything bike.

Latest Comments