Öhlins has bolted a stiffer, motocross-derived crown onto its DH38 downhill fork, promising sharper steering for World Cup racers — and a $475 (~R7 800) bolt-on upgrade path for everyone else.
What Öhlins actually changed
The crown is the upper structure of a dual-crown downhill fork — the alloy clamp that ties the two stanchions to the steerer tube and, ultimately, to your handlebar. It's the single biggest lever on how directly your steering inputs reach the front wheel, which is why a stiffer crown is such a meaningful change on a 200 mm race fork.
Öhlins says the redesigned piece draws inspiration from motocross technology and was developed in close collaboration with its factory downhill team, then validated through extensive World Cup testing. Crucially, it's sold as a standalone, bolt-on crown for the DH38 platform — so existing fork owners can buy the stiffness upgrade without replacing the whole fork.
The new crown, by the numbers
Source: Öhlins / Bikerumor
“The result is a crown that not only enhances performance but gives riders the confidence to ride faster and more aggressively.”
Öhlins frames the redesign as a step-change rather than a tweak: it claims "a significant increase in stiffness, resulting in sharper handling and more precise steering response." The trade-off is mass — the new crown is 65 g heavier than the part it replaces. On a downhill race bike that already weighs north of 16 kg, that's a rounding error against the handling gains, but it's worth noting that Öhlins has not disclosed the actual percentage stiffness improvement, only that testing proved it "significant."
That chases an industry-wide trend: as DH speeds climb, brands keep stiffening front ends to stop the chassis twisting under hard braking and in off-camber holes. Reviewers have long rated the DH38's chassis among the stiffest in the class, so a deliberately stiffer crown is a pointed move at the very front of the field.
By the numbers
View data table
| Claimed weight (g) | |
|---|---|
| Previous crown | 490 g |
| New DH38 crown | 555 g |
The fork it bolts to: Öhlins DH38 m.2 (Air)
| Öhlins DH38 m.2 (Air, TTX18) | |
|---|---|
| Travel | 200 mm |
| Wheel sizes | 27.5" / 29" |
| Stanchion diameter | 38 mm |
| Damper | TTX18 cartridge |
| Low-speed compression | 16 clicks |
| High-speed compression | 3 clicks |
| Rebound | 16 clicks |
| Claimed weight | 2,820 g (w/ bolts & axle) |
| Axle | 20 × 110 mm Boost DH |
| Brake | 200 / 203 mm disc |
| Price | ~$1,800 (~R29 700) USD |
Specs: Öhlins
How the 38 mm platform rides
The crown is brand-new and hasn't been independently tested yet, so don't trust any "review" that claims to have ridden it. What we can point to is a deep bench of real-world testing on the DH38 fork it upgrades and on Öhlins' 38 mm chassis family more broadly — and the recurring theme in that coverage is exactly what this crown doubles down on: stiffness and steering precision.
What testers say about Öhlins' 38 mm forks
Independent verdicts from across the cycling press — follow each link for the full review.
On the DH38 dual-crown fork
“The increased stiffness really made a difference on steeper trails and under heavy braking.”
Read the full reviewOn the RXF38 m.2 (enduro 38 mm sibling)
“The RXF38 is brilliantly stiff where it needs to be, without being harsh and fatiguing where it doesn't.”
Read the full reviewOn the RXF38 m.2 chassis
“The fork never felt vague or susceptible to twisting in hard compressions, delivering lots of confidence to push hard.”
Read the full reviewThe case for and against
- Claimed significant jump in lateral and torsional stiffness for sharper steering
- Four offsets (46–58 mm) to fine-tune trail and handling to your frame
- Bolt-on upgrade for existing DH38 owners — no new fork required
- Motocross-derived design, validated on the World Cup downhill circuit
- Built around the well-reviewed TTX18 chassis
- 65 g heavier than the crown it replaces
- $475 (~R7 800) / €499 (~R9 400) is steep for a crown on its own
- Öhlins hasn't published the actual stiffness percentage
- Niche appeal: only relevant to dual-crown DH38 riders
- No independent testing of the new crown yet
A genuine, race-bred upgrade for committed DH racers — but a premium one whose headline stiffness gain Öhlins still hasn't put a number on.
Prices, FAQs and the bottom line
Tap to vote — see how readers lean
Öhlins DH38 crown: your questions answered
Will the new crown fit my existing DH38 fork? +
It's sold as a standalone crown for the DH38 platform, so it's designed as a bolt-on upgrade. Before buying, confirm your fork generation, steerer length and the correct offset with an authorised Öhlins dealer.
Why would I want a stiffer crown? +
A stiffer crown resists twisting under hard braking and in off-camber terrain, so the front wheel goes where you point it. Öhlins claims sharper handling and more precise steering; reviewers consistently rate the DH38 chassis highly for exactly this.
Is the 65 g weight gain noticeable? +
On a 200 mm downhill bike, 65 g at the crown is negligible next to the handling benefit — and DH racers routinely trade small amounts of weight for stiffness and control.
How much is it and where can I buy it? +
It's $475 (~R7 800) USD / €499 (~R9 400) EUR for the crown alone; the complete DH38 m.2 fork is around $1,800 (~R29 700) USD. Both are available now through authorised Öhlins dealers worldwide, with the crown having launched on 7 June 2026.
Sources & further reading
- Öhlins Introduces New, Stiffer Downhill Fork Crown — Bikerumor (Jeremy Benson)
- Öhlins Introduces New Downhill Crown for DH38 (press release) — Vital MTB
- The Downduro Project: Öhlins DH38 m.1 Review — Vital MTB (Johan Hjord)
- Öhlins RXF38 m.2 suspension fork review — BikeRadar (Alex Evans)
- Review: Öhlins RXF38 m.2 and TTX22 m.2 Suspension — The Loam Wolf (Robert Johnston)
- DH38 Crown Set — official product page — Öhlins
This is a focused, race-driven upgrade rather than a headline-grabbing new fork. If you race or ride hard on a DH38, a stiffer, MX-derived crown with four offsets is a logical way to sharpen the front end — and being a bolt-on part, you don't need a whole new fork to get it. Just go in clear-eyed: at $475 (~R7 800)/€499 (~R9 400) it's a premium ask, it adds 65 g, and Öhlins still won't put a number on the stiffness gain. For everyone not racing a dual-crown bike, it's a fascinating look at how far the front of the downhill field is willing to go for a touch more precision.