Guide to Fat Bike Front Disc Spacing: 135mm Forks, Rear Hubs, and Rotor Alignment
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Early fat bikes introduced unique hub and fork standards that are still problematic today, especially when working on bikes with 135mm fork spacing, like those used on older Surly-style frames. These setups allowed front and rear wheels to be interchangeable, but they used rear hub standards in the front, which affects both rotor spacing and brake setup.
If you're servicing or upgrading one of these bikes, here’s what you need to know to get the hub, fork, and disc caliper lined up correctly.
Why 135mm Front Fork Spacing Exists
Before dedicated fat bike front hubs were common, some manufacturers designed forks with 135mm spacing so that riders could use a rear hub up front. The idea was simple but clever: if your rear freehub failed on a long ride, you could swap the front and rear wheels and keep going.
To make that work, the fork was designed around the rear hub’s rotor spacing, not the standard front.
Rotor-to-Dropout Spacing: The Key Measurement
For proper disc alignment, it’s not just hub spacing (O.L.D.) that matters, it’s the distance from the disc rotor to the left fork dropout.
Modern front standard: 10.5mm rotor-to-dropout
Older 135mm offset fat bike forks: 15mm rotor-to-dropout (rear-hub spacing)
This difference is why some 135mm hubs don’t line up correctly in older fat bike forks. Some manufacturers now produce 135mm “front” hubs that use front rotor spacing (10.5mm), while others use rear rotor spacing (15mm). If the fork and hub don’t match, your rotor won’t line up with the caliper.
Fork Types and Adapter Requirements
There were a few fork variations in circulation, each with its own brake adapter needs.
135mm Offset Fork (curved leg)
Rotor spacing: 15mm (rear standard)
Hub: Rear hub or rear-style 135mm hub
Caliper adapter: Rear
Designed for front/rear wheel interchangeability.
135mm Non-Offset Fork (straight legs)
Rotor spacing: 15mm (rear standard)
Hub: Rear hub or rear-style 135mm hub
Caliper adapter: Rear
Still uses rear caliper interface but cannot be interchanged with a rear drive wheel.
135mm Front Hub Compatible Fork
Rotor spacing: 10.5mm (front standard)
Hub: Front hub 135mm
Caliper adapter: Front
Fork uses modern front wheel and fork spacing.
Common Compatibility Pitfalls
Some modern 135mm front hubs use front rotor spacing (10.5mm) and won’t work properly in forks designed around rear spacing (15mm).
Conversely, older 135mm rear-style hubs won’t align in newer 135mm forks that expect front rotor spacing.
The hub’s rotor spacing and the fork’s caliper mount standard must match, not just the width.
Quick Reference
|
Fork Type |
Hub Type |
Rotor Spacing |
Caliper Adapter |
|
135mm Offset |
Rear hub |
15 mm |
Rear |
|
135mm Non-Offset |
Rear hub |
15 mm |
Front |
|
135mm (Modern Front) |
Front hub (135mm) |
10.5 mm |
Front |
If you’re replacing a hub or fork on an older fat bike, don’t rely on the hub spacing alone. The rotor-to-dropout distance and the caliper adapter type are what determine whether the system will actually line up and work.
When in doubt, measure the rotor spacing on your hub and check what your fork is designed for. A mismatch of just a few millimeters can lead to rotor misalignment, brake rub, or a setup that simply won’t bolt together.
Need help sorting out which hub or fork fits your bike? Send us the fork type and hub details, and we’ll help you find a compatible setup.