Being able to service stuff at home is a must so Cane Creek is a no go.
Well, that's a you thing, not a product capability thing. Doesn't make the Kitsuma any less capable for needing specialist attention.
The MRP Lift is tunable at home so you don't need to pay someone to do it for you, just swap the shims about, I just emailed them with what I wanted and they sent me a list of which shims and what order to fit them.
I can take it apart in less than 20 minutes to service every year so that some saves me that cost. If that means it's no better than our definitions of better are very different.
If I'm going to the bike park I can swap out the shim stacks in minutes to run more damping, much better than standard stuff that just preloads the stacks but adds harshness.
It's similar to how you don't just add tonnes of preload to a coil shock you get the correct spring.
I didn't say it wasn't
better I said it doesn't really do anything that a custom-tuned fork wouldn't do. You clearly like to tinker, so that's why you favour something like the MRP.
I wouldn't swap out my Charger 3.1 or GRIP X2 for one, as both those dampers can be tuned to get excellent results. But if I had a base model fork and was thinking of upgrading the damper, then the MRP certainly has its appeal and that's where I think it comes into its own.
What are the shortcomings of the vivid coil?
Go ask a suspension tuner if they would recommend one...
From what I have heard from friends who work at suspension tuners, Touchdown seems to go wonky far more often in them than it does on the Air and it is tricky to get a good tune on them as there are some complications with the way the damping circuitry is designed. Ultimately it's a perfectly adequate shock with a very soft, mushy vague feeling that people often mistake for being plush, but nothing special in the grand scheme of things.
If a bike comes with one, you can get it feeling okay with some tuning and possibly replacing some internals, depending on your weight and riding style. But for anyone considering buying one new, unless the price is
literally too good to turn down, you can get far better performance for the same money from a shock outside of the usual OEM world.
As an example,
this is a steal for someone with a frame that fits it. But yes, you'll need to send it off every year to have it serviced. And
some people won't like the colour options for the coils...
