ExpoCoverage , Forks , Parts

2012 Fox Factory Team Forks and Shocks with Kashima Coating

Fox has been busy this past year, and they have revamped the product line, added a long travel 29er fork, and titanium crown/steerer fork, tweaked the FIT damper, changed seals, and added Kashima to rear shocks.

The new family grouping covers their entire suspension line, and everything is now divided into three entities, Factory, Performance and Evolution.

  • FACTORY - Best: has their latest, greatest and most advanced technology
  • PERFORMANCE - Better: FIT on 32, open bath on 36 and 40, less advanced technology and adjustability
  • EVOLUTION – Good: entry level, open bath forks, simpler technology

Kashima
The Kashima coating was introduced last year for aftermarket only, and they have now opened the doors (or flood gates) for OEM usage, so you’ll be seeing the fancy gold color on significantly more bikes. The coating has been tweaked, and it should appear as a darker color, and be slightly more slippery. Only the Factory series will have the coating, and it has now been added to the FLOAT RP23, DHX Air and DHX RC4 rear shocks, including portions of the air sleeves (RC4 is shaft only). For manufacturing reasons, the coating has to be added to both the inside and outside of the air sleeve, so thing’s slide on a smoother surface internally.

Forks
The other unique new fork is the FLOAT Ti, which has a one piece cast titanium 6-4 (Ti-6Al-4V) crown and steerer. It will be available in FIT Terralogic, FIT RLC and FIT Remote, all with either 100 or 120mm of travel, 9mm or 15mm axle, and tapered steerer. The forks weigh between 2.91 lbs to 3.46 lbs, and will come with a very trick Kashima coated top cap, titanium bolt and expansion plug.
[Update 4/19 - Ti Pricing: FIT RLC $1240-$1275, Terralogic $1290-$1325, FIT Remote $1275-$1310]

For the long travel 29er market, they created a new 34mm stanchion group, which has 140mm of travel. The fatter lowers and bigger arch, will assist in reinforcing the tall 29 inch system, offering more stability and rigidity in the stressed induced environment of the longer travel. It comes in FLOAT FIT RLC and TALAS FIT RLC (140/110) Factory versions (RL in Evolution), and is available in only 15mm thru axle and tapered steerer.
[Update 4/19 - 34 29er Pricing: Factory TALAS $1030, Factory FLOAT $970]

Fox has tweaked the FIT damper with new internals, and the new seal head has less stiction at the start of its stroke. They had a simple demo unit to compare the 2011 and 2012 dampers, and in direct comparison, it was definitely a noticeable feel, and felt much smoother, without any notchiness. They have two tunes for the FIT, a cross country one for 120mm or less (firmer tune), and a trail for 140mm and greater (plusher tune).

[Update 4/20 - clarification on the FIT tunes, direct from the FIT designer Sante Pelot]
“The trail tuned 130mm+ travel dampers are for FIT RL and FIT Remote only (because the user cannot adjust their low-speed compression setting as it is set at the factory). The trail tune is still firmer in low-speed compression than last year’s FIT RL or FIT Remote so that it is less wallowy/brake-divey than previous model years. For all FIT RLC, RL and Remotes we reduced the high-speed compression damping from last year so that the fork is less harsh on square-edge hits and drops to flat. But RLC’s are the same exact tune whether it is 80mm or 160mm of travel (because the user can adjust their low-speed compression setting to wherever they want it).”



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  • Francois says:

    Amazing work Brian! I rode the Kashima fork and shock on the new Ibis SLR bikes. It bobbed a lot :)

    Seriously, these shocks have so much less stiction than anything out there that it is a new riding experience. They move all the time!!! They are very active and they will give bikes problems if not properly designed to have a pedaling platform. The Ibis was moving under medium pedaling with the shock wide open. I was afraid to get out of saddle. But it gave the Ibis a ton of traction and descending was like buttah. It was a whole new experience.

    I gave the shock and fork a couple clicks of compression/platform damping and all was good. It was just impressive to now have the option to have so much plushness when called upon.

  • Tyler says:

    I wonder why Fox hasn’t created a single front shock design if they are serious about reducing stichion. After all, the Cannondale Lefty design has less stichion then any “fork” design. Patent issues, maybe?

  • Kevinsmith says:

    Funny how Fox has fixed the stickson issue that they claim didn’t exist in their Fit forks. I had a New 2011 sent back twice because the stickson was crazy bad. It came back better the 2nd time but was still noticeable. They claimed they had not heard that complaint before. Even was mentioned in a review of the fork by a major publication. Funny how they fixed a non-existent issue. Prices are getting more obscene every year.

  • guitarjohn21 says:

    $1300 for a fork!!! Crazy…. Who goes into a store and drops that kind of cash on a bike part? seriously……

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