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2023 MTB World Cup Lenzerheide Mountain Bike Mountain Bike World Cup RockShox Tech Tech news #wordpress #wordpress-post-id-14421 #post-format-standard
New lighter-weight RockShox SID spotted with Flight Attendant terrain-sensing module

New lighter-weight RockShox SID spotted with Flight Attendant terrain-sensing module

Flight Attendant would render manual lockouts obsolete, while updated crown should shave some weight.

Several RockShox-sponsored cross-country athletes at this weekend’s UCI World Cup round in Lenzerheide, Switzerland – including the elite men’s XCO winner, Nino Schurter – were equipped with a new version of the company’s flagship SID short-travel suspension fork. 

Headlining the updates is the addition of the company’s Flight Attendant electronic suspension module, which automatically adjusts the compression damper based on inputs received from the onboard terrain sensor and pedaling sensor. Given how the system is used on longer-travel bikes, the SID-based Flight Attendant system should switch the damper to the fully open and most active setting when the rider isn’t pedaling, and various increments of firmer settings when the system detects the rider is pedaling or climbing. 

There are also manual modes should the rider prefer more control, all of which are accessed with a series of buttons on the control module.

The Flight Attendant module sits atop the fork crown on the damper side, replacing all knobs and switches with a push-button controller. Photo: Piper Albrecht.

Riders running Flight Attendant on the new SID who are on full-suspension bikes would also have been on Flight Attendant-equipped RockShox rear shocks, which feature their own wireless electronic compression damper and similar automatic adjustments. Each module is powered by its own battery, the same one SRAM uses on other AXS wireless components.

Interestingly, not every RockShox-sponsored rider was using Flight Attendant, which suggests it’s either still being refined prior to launch or that some riders just continue to prefer a cable-actuated manual setup (which would also be slightly lighter).

Regardless of the reasoning there, most SID forks at Lenzerheide also sported new forged aluminum crowns that were much more aggressively machined, presumably to decrease weight.

We have no official comment from RockShox just yet, but given Flight Attendant is already on the market for longer-travel bikes – and what ultimately amounts to a modest update to the crown – we expect the new SID version(s) will be release imminently.

The Flight Attendant module is powered by the same battery SRAM uses for other AXS components. Photo: Piper Albrecht.
Cable-actuated manual lockouts like this one have been the norm in XC for decades, but those days may be coming to an end. Photo: Piper Albrecht.
The other side of the new SID appears to use the same DebonAir air spring cartridge as the current version, although any potential internal changes are obviously hidden. Photo: Piper Albrecht.
The new SID's forged aluminum fork crown is much more aggressively machined than the current version, presumably in an effort to shave a few grams. Photo: Piper Albrecht.
The difference between the new (left) and old (right) SID crowns are more apparent in this side-by-side image. The lower legs appear to be carried over. Photo: Piper Albrecht.

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