The Radavist · 21 de mayo de 2026 · por Travis Engel
Sage Opens Pre-Orders For FAF Titanium Full-Suspension Frames
When you see a cool-looking steel or titanium full-suspension frame floating around the Sea Otter Classic expo grounds, you often can’t tell if it’s something that’s commercially available or if it’s just someone’s graduate thesis. The Sage FAF we saw at this year’s event certainly feels like a fini…

When you see a cool-looking steel or titanium full-suspension frame floating around the Sea Otter Classic expo grounds, you often can’t tell if it’s something that’s commercially available or if it’s just someone’s graduate thesis. The Sage FAF we saw at this year’s event certainly feels like a finished product, and it just reached a major milestone.


Sage has been around since 2012, positioning themselves as a premium-tier manufacturer working exclusively in titanium. Since 2014, Sage’s frames have been made in their Portland-area facility in Oregon using American-sourced tubing. And for the past three years, they’ve been incorporating 3D-printed dropouts and chainstay yokes. The FAF ups the ante with 3D-printed suspension-linkage hardware, and is the culmination of Sage’s off-road evolution. But it still wasn’t technically for sale … Until today.

Sage is now taking pre-orders for the FAF, which is actually just a working title. The final name, full geometry, and exact price won’t be revealed until the Made show this coming August, with delivery expected in Q1 of 2027. The specifics Sage has shared thus far are that it’s a 115mm rear-travel, 120mm front-travel flex-stay frame with a 66° head angle and an aggressive XC disposition. Sage also shared a price range, and it’s pretty shocking. But try to reserve judgement until we’ve covered some of the details..


The FAF has been in development for three years. At one point, it was going to use carbon tubes and titanium lugs. But the prototype didn’t meet their demands for lateral stiffness. Anyway, Sage is a titanium brand. They’ve been welding the stuff for over a decade. And they have a head start in the growing field of builders using 3D-printed frame elements.

Sage founder, David Rosen, is a bit of a nerd on the subject. He’s a bit of a nerd in general, as we learned when he pointed out that the simplified owl logo etched on his frame or embossed on his dropouts took inspiration from the Recognizer, a giant floating sentinel from the movie, Tron. Rosen told us about some secret sauce in the 3D printing process used on the FAF that we can’t even talk ab…
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