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RockShox Inc. is an American company founded by Paul Turner in 1989, that develops and manufactures bicycle suspensions. The company led in the development of mountain bikes . It is now part of SRAM Corporation .
A bicycle dropout (drop out, frame end, or fork end), is a slot in a frame or fork where the axle of the wheel is attached. The term fork is sometimes also used to describe the part of a bicycle that holds the rear wheel, [1] which on 19th century ordinary or penny-farthing bicycles was also a bladed fork.
1989: World's first carbon fork, the EMS; 1989: Kestrel is the first company to use higher stiffness, "intermediate modulus" carbon fiber in the 200 EMS. 1989: World's first all-carbon triathlon bike, the KM40; 1992: First "modern" seat-tube-less design, the 500SCi, demonstrating the structural flexibility offered by composite construction
In 2005, SRAM developed a new fork damper technology dubbed “Motion Control” that allowed users to adjust compression and rebound of the suspension, including a switch to greatly firm up the suspension. RockShox continues to use variants of the Motion Control damper on select models. SRAM Force 1 drivetrain with 10-42 cassette.
The strike was initiated a day before the U.S. presidential election by workers including software engineers, designers and product managers amid stalled contract negotiations over pay and job ...
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Paul Mescal discusses his experience working with Oscar winner Denzel Washington in "Gladiator II," and what it was like to work on intense scenes together.
Everyone gives each other special gifts to say "I love you". Daniel receives a mysterious card and tries to figure out who gave it to him. The sender shows up at school, and it is Daniel's Grandpère. February 9, 2015; Valentine's Day special "Daniel's Love Day Surprise" Daniel and his family celebrate Love Day with Grandpère at their house.