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Old 03-May-2009, 21:33
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Originally Posted by chris.p
Adding preload to the spring will not stop it bottoming out, all it does is change the ride height and stops the initial high speed dip on the nose, the spring will still compress the same distance wether you preload it or not.

If the springs are the right weight for your given weight then decrease the air gap by adding more oil, but before doing any of the above, check that the sag is correct first.


Chris.

So............he may need bigger springs........but try a little pre load first.......which may decrease the sag on the front to say 20mm....... and achieve his aim..........or are we saying different things!!!!!!!!!
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Old 03-May-2009, 21:39
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Preloading a progressive spring can make a difference as you should move the setting futher along the curve that relates to the spring rate.
But without changing springs you ideally need to increase the amount of travel available which is what preloading will do. putting it back up the curve leaving more to play with as the biggest factor is available travel

If you haven't got the correct springs for your weight and style of riding then forget about the ideal sag figure

By adding say 10mm of preload and therefore reducing sag you will have another 10mm of travel to help soak up the forces, if the average rate of a progressive spring is 0.75kg/mm that extra 10mm of preload will allow for 15kg of load to be applied before they bottom out.

If fork travel is 130mm and the ideal spring rate for you is 1kg/mm then with a static sag of 30mm it would take a load of 200kg to use up the remaining 100mm of travel.
If spring rate is 0.75kg/mm it only takes a load of 150kg to bottom out the forks, but if sag is only 20mm then it would take 165kg to use the 110mm trave and bottom the forks, not the ideal 200kg but closer to it


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  #13  
Old 03-May-2009, 21:40
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andyb
So............he may need bigger springs........but try a little pre load first.......which may decrease the sag on the front to say 20mm....... and achieve his aim..........or are we saying different things!!!!!!!!!

I agree Andy as you posted this while I was typing my reply above


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  #14  
Old 03-May-2009, 21:44
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Old 03-May-2009, 21:55
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andyb
So............he may need bigger springs........but try a little pre load first.......which may decrease the sag on the front to say 20mm....... and achieve his aim..........or are we saying different things!!!!!!!!!


It is very easy to get mixed up on suspension, I know I do, but from what I have gleaned and put into practise over the past few years has helped me understand suspension better than before, but I still have a long way to go.

To answer the above, if it takes 100kg to fully compress a 100kg spring, no matter wether you preload the spring or add no preload, the spring will still fully compress. By adding preload all you are doing is stopping the spring moving for part of that 100kg pressure ie if you preload the spring by 25kg, it will not compress untill over 25kg has been put on it, after that it will compress at the same rate as it would have done if there was no preload on it.

The only way you can alter that is by changing the airgap or the spring weight.

The air gap only works for the last part of the forks compression, to little an air gap and the forks will feel as if they are bottoming out before they do and to much will allow the forks to bottom out.

Compression damping alters the speed the fork spring will compress, to much compression and the forks will feel harsh, to little and the forks will feel to soft.


As you can see it is like juggling 4 balls or more, they all have to work equaly or it all goes wrong.


Chris
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Old 03-May-2009, 22:10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chris.p
As you can see it is like juggling 4 balls or more,


Chris

Paul only has 2, that's why he has an 848 and not a 1098/1198


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  #17  
Old 03-May-2009, 22:21
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I have some . . .

Quote:
Originally Posted by bradders
have been out today and the cable tie I fitted is right at the bottom. I know its not sliding down, you can see where the slider is going to, I am just using all the travel!!

so how do I sort this? bike seems to ride well, and is super planted even on the bumpiest roads, but need to get some travel back, so is it up the preload, or stiffen compression, or both?

there is too much sag, so I will be upping the PL anyway, just want to know if I need to do more

thanks

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  #18  
Old 03-May-2009, 23:23
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The main thing about spring rate is that it is a measure of how much the spring is compressed by a given weight. which is why the amount of suspension travel is oh so important.

Then you have to look at what is going to use up your suspension travel and spring accordingly.
For road riding I would pick a shock with 65mm of travel over one with 60mm of travel any day, same goes for the front forks and a good match/balance between the two is also a factor as both wheels will encounter the same size of bumps at the same speed although the rear wheel normally has more mass so needs the shock to be sprung a bit stiffer so nowing your linkage ratio helps, although playing with the Nitrogen pressure in the shock can have a similar effect to playing with your front fork air gap.

the more travel you have the lighter spring you can use and the less force the rebound damping has to deal with

But as Paul is talking about his standard 848 forks and wanting to get more of the travel back I would try increasing the preload and worry more about remaining suspension travel followed by loaded sag and not worry about unloaded sag.

I have ridden a lot of miles with Paul, seen him ride my DD bike and know how hard he rides and if he keeps bottoming those forks it wont be long before he makes a dent in the scenery somewhere


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  #19  
Old 03-May-2009, 23:31
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skidlids

I have ridden a lot of miles with Paul, seen him ride my DD bike and know how hard he rides and if he keeps bottoming those forks it wont be long before he makes a dent in the scenery somewhere

Let's get it sorted then, we don't want that









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  #20  
Old 04-May-2009, 00:10
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Do not confuse Fork travel with the overall travel of a progressive spring

A progressive spring could go from 0.6kg/mm to 1.2kg/mm over a distance of 180mm

So has an average spring rate of 0.9kg/mm

Lets assume the rate of change of the spring is linear (gets more complicated if its non linear)
Now if your fork only has 120mm of travel, without any pre-load the travel will use the 0.6kg/mm up to the 1.0kg/mm part of the spring, giving you an average of 0.8kg/mm, so softer than the spring average.
Now if you pre-load the spring by 30mm you end up using the 0.7kg/mm to 1.1kg/mm part of the spring giving you an average of 0.9kg/mm the same as the spring average.
Now if you pre-load the same spring by 60mm you use the part of the spring that is in the 0.8kg/mm to 1.2kg/mm giving an average spring rate of 1.0kg/mm resulting in stiffer than the total spring average.


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