Telescopic suspension forks may have done a lot to make mountain biking easier and more enjoyable, but they’re not exactly light or mechanically simple ... at least, not when compared to rigid forks. Icelandic entrepreneurs Benedikt Skulason and Gudberg Bjornsson decided to do something about it, and together created the Lauf leaf-style fork. It has no moving parts, requires no maintenance, and weighs just 980 grams – a typical suspension fork weighs more in the neighborhood of 1,400 to 1,900.
Here’s how it works ... the main fork legs are made out of carbon fiber, and look pretty normal (apart from the backwards jog they take at the bottom). The wheel axle is mounted through a couple of other carbon fiber bits known as springers, one on each side, located behind those legs. Diagonally bridging the gaps between the fork legs and the springers are four “springstacks” – two on each leg. Each one of those springstacks in turn consists of three stiff-but-flexible ribbon-like leafs, made from what is described as “high-performance composites.”
It is those springstacks that absorb the bumps, allowing the front wheel to move up and down independent of the fork legs.
The current version of the Lauf fork features just 60 mm of travel, so it may not be enough for non-cross-country riders – conventional trail-riding forks typically start around at least 110 mm. It also can’t be adjusted for the weight or riding style of individual riders. Instead, buyers choose from three different models, each one pre-tuned to a different stiffness.
Finally, riders of bikes with 26-inch or 650B wheels are out of luck – the Lauf is made only for 29ers. In fact, at this point, it isn’t even available to consumers or retailers. Skulason and Bjornsson do hope to have it available as an option on certain makes and models of bikes by next year, however.
It can be seen getting put through its paces in the video below.
You guys should find a short rocky downhill slope, free-wheel down it, and see how much further these things roll out at the end, than a regular shock.
The only way I can see fork being marketed with no moving parts is if the springers and springstacks are sold as a separate unit as part of the hub on the wheel.
Nope - material flex isn't a "moving part".
The idea of flex as suspension isn't new - "softail" mountain bikes have relied on inherent flex in the frame for years, admittedly usually in "pivotless" designs, with the actual shock-absorption being provided by a small shock or elastomer, and flex in the (often flattened) chainstays replacing bearing pivots.
Cannondale's Speed Save technology relies entirely on flex, however.
Having some small experience of carbon fibre as a material, I'd prefer Lauf to use titanium plates rather than carbon fibre - titanium doesn't fail catastophically the way carbon fibre is wont to do...
The damper is the "absorber" part of the "shock absorber". You really need that part. Spring only = bouncy bouncy crash bang ouchee.