XCR
Origin
XCR fills the mid-OEM fork slot between the entry XCM (coil only, aluminium lowers) and the premium Epicon/Auron. It's the fork on your first 'real' hardtail or entry full-suspension bike — above basic, below enthusiast. SR Suntour described the XCR 32 Air as 'first offering of an air-sprung fork in XC/MTB category' — suggests coil XCR predated the air version. Giant Talon, Specialized Rockhopper, Trek Marlin (older models), Scott Aspect, Cannondale Trail (entry), many $500-1,500 hardtails worldwide RockShox Judy Silver (OEM), Fox Rhythm 34 (step up), Manitou Markhor (budget) With ~10M forks/year, XCR is one of SR Suntour's highest-volume products — used on millions of OEM bikes globally
Specifications
- Weight
- kg
The verdict
- Price: $229.99 for air spring with lockout and rebound — very competitive
- Magnesium lowers — distinguishes from pure budget aluminium-lower forks
- QSP sealed cartridge — low maintenance
- Internal travel adjust (80/100/120mm) — versatile for different frame specs
- Hydraulic lockout — useful for XC mixed terrain
- Adjustable rebound — meaningful tuning for rider weight
- Boost axle option — modern wheel compatibility
- Kids' 24" version available — rare in XC air fork market
- 2-year warranty
- Made in Taiwan (magnesium lowers production line)
- Steel stanchions (nickel plated) — heavier than aluminium, less stiff
- ~2,400-2,455g — heavy for XC use (Fox 32 SC = 1,276g; RockShox Judy Gold = ~1,790g)
- No external compression adjustment
- No remote lockout (lever only, crown-mounted)
- Rebound damping 'not very light-rider friendly' — sluggish rebound at low pressure/rider weight (kid's version user review)
- Stiction noted — needs break-in period
- Limited aftermarket upgrade path vs Fox/RockShox ecosystem
- Not suitable for trail/enduro — XCM/XCR category only
Who it’s for
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