Home > Feature Stories

Fox Racing Shox D.O.S.S. Dropper Seatpost Nearing Production

2012 Fox Racing Shox DOSS dropper seatpost
14 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

2012 Fox Racing Shox DOSS dropper seatpostDOSS dropper post is finally really real. Almost.

This one’s a 95% ready prototype. They’re still working out the last 5%, including whether or not it’ll have a Kashima coated option.

Push both triggers and it lowers 40mm. Push both and it drops 125mm. Push it again to release. Technically, you can release it slightly to bring it back up to the half way position, but you’ve gotta have a pretty sensitive trigger finger or weight the seat a little. This one shoots up fairly quickly, but not the fastest return we’ve seen.

Internally, Fox’s Euro guy says how it works is a big, big secret but there are no plastic parts.  I grabbed the saddle and there was virtually no rotational play, which is pretty impressive. If they can keep it that way after a bit of use, it’ll be a real accomplishment.

More pics after the break…


2012 Fox Racing Shox DOSS dropper seatpost

The dual lever lets you push both for short travel or the longer outer lever for full travel.

2012 Fox Racing Shox DOSS dropper seatpost

Their display unit’s cable got pretty frayed but we still managed to make it work for a few photos:

2012 Fox Racing Shox DOSS dropper seatpost

Not shown, they also have a new base level (cheaper) Remote lockout lever for front or rear shocks/forks. Their larger, higher end unit has a slicker release mech, but this one will be cheaper and work with twist shifters like Rohloff and old Gripshift.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

14 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Steve M
Steve M
13 years ago

I hope this things works. Please Fox dont sweat the weight as much as the durability. The Reverb I have been using is pretty poor. Creaky, sloppy, fragile……

boobie
boobie
13 years ago

I have been beating the hell out of my specialized command post, and I weigh 185 lbs (which only seems like a lot when talking cycling) – – and it has developed no play in over a year of use (over 1,000 mtn miles on it).

I haven’t ridden the new lighter model, but i hope it is as durable.

Lars V
Lars V
13 years ago

mmm…. i like the Idea of Fox quality in a dropper seatpost… but i’s NEVER buy it with that crazy remote!

Greg
Greg
13 years ago

seems like rotational play is an issue with all telescoping posts. Why are they still making them round? Even if they stuck with existing round tech for seals, why not make part of the post slide in grooves, or make it an I beam or something so it can’t twist?
Just a thought. I’m not claiming to know better, but it seems like all dropper posts are battling twist, yet they all remain round… If its not round, it won’t twist.

pedalhound
13 years ago

I was hoping for more from this post…what a convoluted lever….and haven’t we learned that the cable going to the head of the post is not good? Sigh…

Steve M
Steve M
13 years ago

Round the way to go for sealing. Cannondale Lefties have solved this problem a while ago.

Bogey
Bogey
13 years ago

Gotta agree with @pedalhound – that remote looks like an April Fool’s day press release. What is Fox thinking? The stupid thing is bigger than the XTR brake lever.

Le Piou
Le Piou
13 years ago

+1 with Steve.
+1lb or +2lbs nobody care as long as it lasts.
I hope it their #1 MRD…

fabricio
fabricio
13 years ago

what´s that lever! plase Fox!!!! you has been doing good products for a while and now are placing a lever that looks like a spoon? come on who cares half travel, full travel or no travel? if someone doesn´t know how to adjust a saddle on the trail is because never need a adjustable seatpost, simple like that.

Mike H
Mike H
13 years ago

-5,000 for the busy triggers. Otherwise, it looks awesome.

Ballclacker
Ballclacker
13 years ago

Two words! “Gravity” “Dropper”

Hoodlum-Z
Hoodlum-Z
13 years ago

Greg, I beams are strong from a construction point of view, as in buildings, but an I beam shape would likely twist more than a tube! An I beam is good at carrying loads, but not so good torsionally.

Mikey D
Mikey D
13 years ago

I’d have to agree with the majority here on the lever. It is too much just for a dropper post. Why do we need TWO levers?? yes, I know what they are for, but I think that feature is unnecessary.. especially in the trade off for having to use that lever…

ONe of the Booths at Inter had, i think, Carl Deckers Super D bike on display and it had a Fox Dropper Proto on there. I don’t know if the levers were still in development at the time, but the cable was run to the left XTR shifter (with the downshift lever cut off). Of course, the bike was running 1×10 so the left shifter was available.

Seriously Fox… drop the two, long, fragile levers and just give us one push button actuation… Oh, and that Kashima like the Super D bike would be super candy..

trail master
trail master
13 years ago

one lever, push half way for partial drop / push all the way for full drop, seems too easy to mess up!!!

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.