Hi everyone, I thought I'd throw this to the sharks and see if I come out with any limbs...
First of all, I love disc brakes. They work and work and work and don't mess around, no matter how cruddy and wet the world is. I particularly like Shimano's hydraulic discs as they're very easy to work on and have plenty of feel and power. On a trip a few months ago I ended up on some vicious muddy and rocky downhills when my route planning failed to take into account that not all bridleways are tarmacked. I mean, how inconsiderate of them! ;-) If I hadn't had a disc brake on the back I'm not sure I could have stopped... Sure, you can fit V-brakes and tungsten carbide rims, but I'm not sure they'd cut it in situations where the the mud is up to your nipples.
I also like 'rigid' steel forks. They feel good, don't suffer brake dive, track wonderfully and last forever. I've had a Raven Nomad for just over a year now and the forks supplied are absolutely superb. I'm not a heavy bloke or an abusive rider, but I'm always keen on a little 'air' when I can get it and the forks have flown over a few speed bumps. With no problems.
I like carrying stuff in low-rider panniers on the forks. It balances the bike and makes sense to distribute weight front and rear. Admittedly on my last cycle camping trip I was too lazy to fit my low-riders (not sure why I didn't get round to it in the last year...) but the bike handled fine with all my stuff piled on the back.
Now comes the crunch: I want all three of these things! I want disc brakes on the front and back and have the ability to have lowriders on my forks. I'm sure we've all read Thorn's and Andy Blance's stance on the matter, which is certainly justified: on standard fork dropouts that face downwards, a disc brake could certainly force the wheel out and ensure you'd be using your face as a brake. having said that, I use a Kona Project II rigid fork with a disc brake on another bike and certainly brake very hard on that and haven't had any trouble. I think it shold be fine if you just make sure your wheel is in securely.
I've noticed that Fox forks have slightly forward facing dropouts to ensure that disc brakes forces acting on the axle don't force it out of the dropout.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Any body seen any nice steel forks that can resist the forces associated with disc brakes, and take lowriders, and not be too heavy, etc.?
I'd love to hear from y'all!
George