Probably the most informative description of the effects of fork trail I have found is on Tom's spectrum site;
Spectrum Cycles | Geometry
Ive gained my best firsthand experience with trail by riding bikes with extreme trail to magnify the effects, make it easier to feel. Try taking an old junker fork and re-raking it to alternately setup a bike with 100mm trail and 40mm trail. Ride them both and feel the extreme of the range (then toss the fork).
Interesting to note that Merckx had a preference for low fork trail number on rough roads, seems rather counter-intuitve as most all modern bikes use a relativly high trail for dealing with rough/offroad conditions (for example, production CX and MTB bikes that are most typically in the 65-80mm trail range).
I noticed a cyclocross magazine pro bike profile recently (maybe it was Johnathan Page's bike??) where he listed that he hauled around a couple of forks with different rake to the races, apparently in order to be able to fine tune the bikes trail to suit different CX course conditions. All I can figure is that on very soft conditions (like sand), the wheel contact point shifts forward as the tire sinks, effectivly making the trail even higher. Is this reason enough to start with a lower trail setting, so that when it sinks a more normal trail is reached? What other CX trail tuning considerations might there be to warrant switching out a fork?
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