The fork has been great and survived well despite some playing around at hopping over curbs and riding down the odd short sets of stairs from time to time. I actually got one of these Mosso forks about 3 to 4 years back to convert my short trip shopping and errand bike over to rigid. And that is the length that you want to match for a rigid fork. So if you want to measure it for fitting a rigid fork then check what it is now and then deduct 15mm for sag. But keep in mind that there is always some sag when you get on the bike. And to keep the steering geometry reasonably close to original you want to not get a lower or higher A-C length than about 20 to 30mm different from what you have now. You'll want to measure that axle to crown distance before you go shopping for a new fork. If it says 26xN.nn then it's a 26 inch mountain bike wheel.įor picking out a new fork the important dimensions are the steer tube length and the axle to the top of the crown dimension. If it says 700xNN something then it's a 700c wheel and tire.
The best way to tell what wheel size you have is to look at the tire size. Makers often recycle the name but with different bikes.