It’s only January, yet Interbike 2011 feels like a distant memory. It was there on the show floor that we first laid eyes on the carbon monster that is the White Brother SnowPack. Pictures don’t do the thing justice, its 34mm carbon stanchions are simply massive yet, pick it up, and it feel like nothing is there. Even though we didn’t have a frame yet, we knew we had to get it on a bike to test it out along with the accompanying Paul Components Whub.
Fast forward to the present, and both the SnowPack and the Whub have shown up at the Bikerumor office for some abuse, er, testing.
Find out how the SnowPack came about, as well as full specs on both the fork and the Whub after the break!
We were told back at Interbike that the SnowPack was a collaboration between White Brothers and Chain Reaction Cycles, so to get more on the partnership I went to MRP/White Brothers’s marketing guy Noah Sears, for the answers:
“Chain Reaction Cycles (Alaska, not UK – parent co. of Fatbikes.com and 9:zero:7) really got the ball rolling on the Snow Pack project. They gave us the short-list of features and specs they wanted to see and we took over the project’s design from there. We definitely want to give them kudos for recognizing the market demand for a carbon “fat” fork – they’ve been well ahead of the curve of the “fat” bike trend in general. White Brothers has always been keen to partner with innovative partners and get in on the ground floor of “niche” markets – which was the case with the 29er, then 650b, and now “fat” bikes.”
This resulted in what you see here, a massive but extremely light fatbike fork that looks as capable as any. In order to accommodate different frames, the SnowPack is offered in both 450 and 468mm axle-to-crown lengths, both of which have a 42mm offset. The stock Pugsley fork’s axle-to-crown is 447mm, making the 450mm SnowPack the right fork for for the job.
