The last time I looked at the Boulder Bicycles website, they were
selling low trail forks for $300 or $350. I can't find them now; they
may be out, they may be in the online store, which is closed until
August 3, or it might be because the site is... retro.

I think it makes more sense to get a complete frameset from them, if
you have the funds. A new fork won't change the head angle of your
bike. Half a degree? It won't turn 72 degrees into 74, at any rate.
Some authorities indicate that it doesn't really matter how you get
your magic low trail number, but I don't believe it.

On the cheap: some older American touring bikes have low trail
geometries, but no one would ever mention that in a for-sale ad.

 Philip

 Philip Williamson
www.biketinker.com

On Jul 22, 11:23 am, Seth Vidal <skvi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 22, 2011 at 2:19 PM, cyclotourist <cyclotour...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Seth, you could get a custom fork made for a lot less to check out the low
> > trail thing.
>
> > Could be a fun experiment!
>
> From where? By Whom? I'm completely made of ears if someone has a suggestion.
>
> -sv

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