The Tora fork from the 2011 bike remains largely unchanged (aside from a few incremental damping improvements), although it’s now renamed by SRAM the RockShox XC 32. It’s great that this entry-level bike includes a cable guide for a dropper-post remote (it is the same frame as the higher-specced bikes in the range) but not so great that there are no ISCG (international standard chain guide) tabs on the BB shell for fitting a chain device. If we’re being ultra picky we’d prefer just a few centimetres more standover clearance on the size large, and we’d like to be able to drop the seatpost further without having to cut it shorter due to the kinked seat tube design. A zero-stack tapered head tube leads into a straight top tube and swooped, S-bend down tube with plenty of room for fitting a water bottle. The Trance X frame remains unchanged since last year, when it received a number of key modifications to lighten and stiffen it.
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